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Jun 5, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Analysis June 05, 2026  |  Science & Technology  ·  Environment & Ecology Contents 01ANRF Portal for Patent Filing & Research CapacityPIB  ·  Science & Technology GS 3Essay 02India’s Green Transformation — 12 YearsPIB  ·  Environment, Ecology & Climate Diplomacy GS 3GS 2Essay Article 01 ANRF Portal for Patent Filing & Research Capacity Building Source: PIB  ·  June 04, 2026  ·  Ministry of Science & Technology UPSC Relevance: GS Paper 3 — Science and Technology; Developments and their applications; Indigenisation of technology. Also relevant for GS Paper 2 (Governance, R&D institutions) and Essay paper (India’s innovation journey). Key Numbers at a Glance 38thIndia’s GII 2025 rank out of 139 economies (WIPO) 6thIndia globally in patent filings — 63,000+ applications in 2024 (WIPI 2025) 0.64%India’s R&D as % of GDP vs China 2.4%, USA 3.5%, Germany 3.1% 6th yrConsecutive double-digit patent growth for India — +19.1% in 2024 60.1%Resident patent filing share in 2024, up from 28.1% in 2014 Rs 50,000 crANRF’s planned corpus; 70%+ to come from non-govt & industry sources Issue in Brief Dr. Jitendra Singh announced an ANRF (Anusandhan National Research Foundation)-supported digital portal providing structured training in patent filing and research paper writing for researchers, students, and innovators across India. Announced during a Joint Review Meeting of DST, DBT, DSIR, and MoES — four pillars of India’s science governance — attended by PSA Prof. Ajay Kumar Sood and ANRF CEO Dr. Shivkumar Kalyanaraman. The portal bridges a structural gap — India ranks 6th globally in patent filings (63,000+ in 2024) but its R&D expenditure at ~0.64% of GDP is far below China (2.4%) and USA (3.5%), weakening the research-to-commercialisation pipeline. India ranked 38th in GII (Global Innovation Index) 2025 out of 139 economies — up from 81st in 2015 — and remains the longest-running innovation overperformer for 15 consecutive years per WIPO, meaning it delivers outputs above what its income level predicts. Static Background ANRF (Anusandhan National Research Foundation) was established under the ANRF Act, 2023 as an apex body for R&D strategy, subsuming SERB (Science and Engineering Research Board) established by Parliament in 2008; modelled on the NSF (National Science Foundation), USA. ANRF functions per the NEP (National Education Policy) 2020 framework; targets a corpus of Rs 50,000 crore with over 70% from non-government and industry sources — a structural shift from purely public-funded research. Mission Karmayogi — the National Programme for Civil Services Capacity Building — is now being extended to cover scientists taking up administrative and leadership roles in R&D institutions. India’s IP ecosystem is governed by the Patents Act, 1970 (amended 2005), overseen by the CGPDTM (Office of the Controller General of Patents, Designs and Trade Marks). India is the 2nd largest STEM graduate producer globally after China, generating approximately 40,813 PhDs annually (3rd globally) — yet the research-to-patent pipeline remains structurally underdeveloped, especially in state universities. Key Dimensions Capacity Building: The portal will cover scientific writing, journal publication processes, IP (Intellectual Property) protection, and patent filing procedures — democratising skills currently concentrated in elite institutions like IITs and IISc. Patent Ecosystem Maturity: India granted +149.4% more patents in 2023 (WIPI 2025) vs the prior year; patents in force reached 188,785, up from 76,556 in 2019 — the portal can consolidate this momentum at the grassroots level. Science Administration Reform: Integration with Mission Karmayogi acknowledges that scientists in leadership roles often lack governance, financial, and institutional management skills — a recognised drag on R&D productivity in India. Inter-Departmental Coordination: DST, DBT, DSIR, and MoES were reviewed together; institutions often conduct complementary research in silos without awareness of parallel work — a significant inefficiency in public R&D investment. Science Communication: A coordinated digital outreach strategy was directed across all four departments, including preparations for ESTIC 2026 to showcase India’s scientific achievements to citizens, startups, and students. Critical Analysis India’s GII 2025 strengths reveal an imbalance — 1st globally in ICT services exports, 4th in late-stage VC deals, 11th in unicorn valuation — yet ranked only 52nd in Innovation Inputs, signalling weak upstream research infrastructure that the portal must address. A Parliamentary Standing Committee report (March 2026) found ANRF had zero fund utilisation in FY 2023–24 and 2024–25, spending only 61% of its Rs 2,000 crore budget in 2025–26 — raising serious questions about delivery capacity for new portal commitments. Private sector R&D contribution stands at only 36.4% of total R&D funding in India vs 70%+ in developed nations — a portal alone cannot fix this; deeper regulatory clarity on IP, industry-academia labs, and R&D tax incentives are needed simultaneously. The digital divide within Indian higher education — most of India’s 40,813 annual PhDs are from central institutions — means the portal’s impact will depend entirely on whether it actively reaches state universities and smaller research centres. No measurable KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) were announced — without tracking patents filed or papers published per portal user, it becomes impossible to audit real-world outcomes beyond the announcement stage. Way Forward Make the ANRF portal multilingual and mobile-optimised, with targeted outreach to state universities and smaller research centres — where IP awareness is lowest and the marginal benefit of training is highest. Establish measurable KPIs — patents filed, papers published, IP assets per portal user — and publish annual progress reports, preventing a repeat of ANRF’s zero-utilisation record in its early operational years. Scale R&D expenditure toward 2% of GDP, deploying the Rs 1 lakh crore innovation fund (Union Budget 2025–26) within a clear 3–5 year disbursement timeline for deep-tech research at scale. Link the portal to AIM (Atal Innovation Mission), DPIIT (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade), and SIDBI to create a seamless pathway from research training to patent filing to startup creation and commercialisation. Establish a permanent Inter-Departmental Scientific Coordination Cell with a dedicated secretariat across DST, DBT, DSIR, and MoES — moving beyond periodic review meetings to real-time knowledge sharing. Prelims Pointers ANRF Act Anusandhan National Research Foundation Act, 2023 — subsumed SERB (est. 2008) ANRF modelled on NSF (National Science Foundation), USA GII 2025 — India 38th / 139 economies; 1st in Central & Southern Asia; 1st among lower-middle-income economies GII 2015 — India 81st — climbed 43 positions in a decade India patent filings 2024 ~63,000+ applications; 6th globally (WIPI 2025, WIPO) India R&D / GDP ~0.64% vs China 2.4%, USA 3.5%, South Korea 4.8% Resident patent share 60.1% in 2024 — up from 28.1% in 2014 (WIPI 2025) Mission Karmayogi National Programme for Civil Services Capacity Building — now extended to science administrators Exam Note: ANRF is not under the Ministry of Education exclusively — it is a multi-ministry apex body. SERB (established 2008) has been subsumed into ANRF, not abolished. ANRF’s GII 2025 rank is 38th — the 2024 rank was 39th; do not confuse the two in answers. “India’s research output and patent filings have grown significantly, yet the research-to-commercialisation pipeline remains structurally weak. Examine the challenges facing India’s R&D ecosystem and assess the role of the Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) in addressing them.”GS Paper 3  |  Science & Technology  |  250 words Q. With reference to the Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF), consider the following statements: 1. It was established under an Act of Parliament in 2023 and subsumed the earlier Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB) 2. It aims to generate over 70% of its funding from non-government and industry sources 3. India’s R&D expenditure as a percentage of GDP currently exceeds 2%, comparable to developed nations (a) 1 only(b) 1 and 2 only(c) 2 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 Article 02 Article 02 India’s Green Transformation — 12 Years of Vishwaas, Nirman, and Jan Kalyaan Source: PIB  ·  June 04, 2026  ·  Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change UPSC Relevance: GS Paper 3 — Environment, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Conservation; GS Paper 2 — International Relations (climate diplomacy, ISA, CDRI, IBCA); Essay paper (India’s environmental leadership, development vs ecology). Key Numbers at a Glance 52.57%Non-fossil installed power capacity as of Feb 2026 — target of 40% met 9 yrs early 36%+Emissions intensity reduction from 2005 levels — NDC target (33–35%) met 11 yrs early 3,682Wild tigers (2022) — India holds 70%+ of the world’s wild tiger population 99Ramsar sites as of April 2026 — 3rd globally, 1st in Asia 77%Municipal solid waste processing capacity in 2024, up from 17% in 2014 112Member countries in ISA (International Solar Alliance) — India–France initiative, COP21 2015 Issue in Brief A PIB (Press Information Bureau) release dated June 4, 2026 documents India’s environmental achievements over twelve years under three pillars: Vishwaas (trust in nature’s resilience), Nirman (building ecological assets), and Jan Kalyaan (public welfare through environmental security). India has overachieved all key NDC (Nationally Determined Contribution) targets under the Paris Agreement, 2015 — emissions intensity reduction of 36%+ and non-fossil power at 52.57% — both years ahead of schedule, independently verifiable through CEA data and UNFCCC submissions. India has launched globally significant initiatives — ISA (International Solar Alliance), CDRI (Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure), and IBCA (International Big Cat Alliance) — transitioning from a rule-follower to a rule-setter in global environmental governance. Static Background Environment Protection Act (EPA), 1986 — umbrella legislation for all environmental governance; Wildlife Protection Act (WPA), 1972 — foundation law for Protected Areas, Tiger Reserves, and wildlife corridors (amended 2022). Forest Conservation Act, 1980 — renamed Van Sanrakshan evam Samvardhan Adhiniyam, 2023 — regulates forest diversion; Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act, 2016 established CAMPA. Ramsar Convention (1971): International treaty for wetlands of global significance; India has 99 sites (April 2026) — largest in Asia, 3rd globally after UK (176) and Mexico (144). India is a signatory to UNFCCC, CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity), UNCCD (UN Convention to Combat Desertification), and CMS (Convention on Migratory Species). NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) are India’s climate pledges under the Paris Agreement covering emissions intensity, non-fossil electricity capacity, and carbon sink creation across NDC 1.0 (2015), 2.0 (2022), and 3.0 (2026). Key Dimensions — Forests & Water The ISFR (India State of Forest Report) 2023 — 18th biennial report by FSI (Forest Survey of India), released December 2024 — reports forest and tree cover at 25.17% (8.27 lakh sq. km) against the national target of 33% set under National Forest Policy, 1988; forest cover alone is 21.76% (7.15 lakh sq. km) and carbon stock stands at 30.43 billion tonnes. CAMPA (Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority) funded afforestation of 3.20 lakh+ hectares (FY 2020–21 to 2024–25); Nagar Van Yojana (NVY) targets 1,000 urban forests by 2026–27 — 626 sanctioned with Rs 557.62 crore released as of March 2026. Aravalli Green Wall Initiative targets restoration of 6.31 million hectares across Rajasthan, Gujarat, Haryana, and Delhi; 435 nurseries with 393.24 lakh seedling capacity; 36,025 hectares restored in 2025 alone. Namami Gange Programme — launched June 2014 with total outlay of Rs 42,500 crore (Phase I + II) — has sanctioned 524 projects (Rs 43,030 crore); 218 STP (Sewage Treatment Plant) projects with combined capacity of 6,610 MLD (Million Litres per Day); industrial BOD (Biochemical Oxygen Demand) load fell from 26 TPD (2017) to 10.75 TPD (2024). Gangetic dolphin — India’s National Aquatic Animal — estimated at 6,327 across 28 rivers; NPCA (National Plan for Conservation of Aquatic Ecosystems) covers 165 wetlands including 42 Ramsar sites with Rs 1,088.85 crore released; Wetlands Rules, 2017 prohibit encroachment and untreated effluent discharge. Key Dimensions — Wildlife Conservation Project Tiger (launched 1973): Tiger population rose from 2,226 (2014) to 3,682 (2022); Tiger Reserves expanded from 46 to 58; area ~85,000 sq. km; India holds 70%+ of world’s wild tigers; 23 reserves hold CA|TS (Conservation Assured Tiger Standards) accreditation (December 2023); overseen by NTCA (National Tiger Conservation Authority). Project Cheetah (launched 17 September 2022): World’s first intercontinental translocation of a large wild carnivore — 29 cheetahs from Namibia (8), South Africa (12), Botswana (9); as of March 9, 2026, total headcount reached 53 including 33 India-born cubs from 10 successful litters at Kuno National Park (KNP), Madhya Pradesh. Project Lion (announced August 2020): Asiatic lion numbers grew from 523 (2015) to 891 (2025) — over 70% increase; distribution expanded by ~59%; all Asiatic lions remain in Gir landscape, Gujarat — the world’s only wild population of Asiatic lions. Snow Leopards: SPAI (Snow Leopard Population Assessment in India) 2019–2023 covered 1,20,000 sq. km estimating 718 snow leopards across Ladakh, Uttarakhand, HP, Arunachal Pradesh, Sikkim, and J&K; supported by SECURE Himalaya project (UNDP + GEF, launched 2017); SPAI 2.0 initiated. Project Elephant: India holds ~60% of global wild Asian elephant population; first DNA-based All India Elephant Estimation counted 22,446 elephants; Reserves grew from 26 to 33; corridors expanded from 88 (2010) to 150 (2023). Rhino population grew from ~1,500 (1980s) to over 4,000 (September 2024) — ~170% growth guided by National Conservation Strategy 2019. Key Dimensions — Waste, Coasts & Mangroves MISHTI (Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats and Tangible Incomes): Mangrove cover grew from 4,628 sq. km (2013) to 4,992 sq. km (2023) — net gain of 363 sq. km; Blue Flag certified beaches grew from 8 (2020) to 18 (2025–26) across 7 coastal states and 4 UTs; National Coastal Mission extended for 2025–31 (Rs 767 crore). India’s MSW (Municipal Solid Waste) processing surged from 17% (2014) to 77% (2024); 1,138 legacy dumpsites remediated across 1,048 cities; 877 lakh MT of legacy waste cleared; 7,646 acres reclaimed; DRAP (Dumpsite Remediation Accelerator Programme) launched November 2025 — targets zero dumpsites by October 2026. SWM Rules 2026 (Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026) supersede SWM Rules 2016 — mandate four-stream source segregation (wet, dry, sanitary, special care) and introduce EBWGR (Extended Bulk Waste Generator Responsibility) for large establishments. EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) — producers responsible for end-of-life product management — covers plastic, e-waste, battery, tyre, and used oil; 417.57 lakh MT processed by 4,574 registered recyclers as of March 2026. Key Dimensions — Climate Diplomacy ISA (International Solar Alliance): Jointly launched by India and France at COP21, Paris, 2015; treaty-based intergovernmental body; now 112 member countries — positions India as a global agenda-setter in clean energy transition. OSOWOG (One Sun One World One Grid) proposed by India in 2018; jointly launched with UK as Green Grids Initiative–OSOWOG at COP26 (2021) — promotes cross-border renewable energy sharing. CDRI (Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure): Launched 2019 at UN Climate Action Summit; became an international organisation in 2022 with headquarters in New Delhi — positions India as convener of climate-resilient infrastructure globally. IBCA (International Big Cat Alliance): Became a treaty-based intergovernmental organisation on 23 January 2025; 26 member countries; conserves 7 big cat species — tiger, lion, leopard, snow leopard, cheetah, jaguar, and puma. Mission LiFE (Lifestyle for Environment): Launched 2022 in presence of UN Secretary-General; recognised in COP27 Sharm El Sheikh Implementation Plan, 2022; G20 Green Development Pact adopted 9 September 2023 during India’s G20 Presidency; UNCCD COP-14 hosted by India in 2019 — adopted Delhi Declaration on LDN (Land Degradation Neutrality) by 2030; CMS COP-13 hosted in Gandhinagar, 2020. GCP (Green Credit Programme): Launched under Green Credit Rules, 2023, aligned with Mission LiFE; incentivises voluntary ecological actions; 4,391 hectares of degraded forest land across 12 states identified for eco-restoration as of March 2026. Critical Analysis NDC overachievement is credible — emissions intensity data is verifiable through CEA and UNFCCC submissions; non-fossil capacity of 52.57% is one of India’s most credible climate accomplishments, reflecting genuine structural change in the energy mix. Tiger recovery is independently verified by NTCA’s All India Tiger Estimation — 3,682 tigers in 2022 representing 70%+ of the world’s wild population makes this arguably the most successful large carnivore recovery programme in history. India’s Ramsar site expansion from 75 (March 2023) to 99 (April 2026) is significant, but Keoladeo National Park and Loktak Lake remain on the Montreux Record — the Ramsar register for sites with negative ecological change — signalling that quantity growth must be matched by site-level quality improvements. Namami Gange’s BOD reduction from 26 to 10.75 TPD is measurable, but only Rs 21,340 crore disbursed against Rs 43,030 crore sanctioned (~50%) reveals significant implementation gaps; untreated municipal sewage from smaller towns outside STP coverage remains the dominant unaddressed pollution source. The forest cover 25.17% headline masks a loss of 3,656 sq. km of dense forest cover (2021–2023) per ISFR 2023 — India is gaining quantity (agroforestry, plantations) while losing ecologically valuable dense forest; the 33% target remains 8 percentage points away. Way Forward Adopt independent third-party auditing of forest cover data with stricter canopy density thresholds to separate natural forests from plantations, ensuring transparent reporting aligned with global UNFCCC and FAO standards. Remove Keoladeo National Park and Loktak Lake from the Ramsar Montreux Record through targeted ecological restoration — India’s Ramsar quantity leadership must be backed by measurable site quality improvements. Expand Project Cheetah to Gandhi Sagar Wildlife Sanctuary and Rajasthan grasslands — reducing density pressures at Kuno and building a self-sustaining, genetically diverse population as recommended by the project’s external review panel. Translate NDC ambitions into sector-specific decarbonisation roadmaps for hard-to-abate sectors — steel, cement, agriculture, and shipping — which fall outside the renewable electricity metrics used to demonstrate NDC achievement. Scale GCP (Green Credit Programme) with voluntary carbon market linkages to incentivise citizen-driven ecological action beyond government-led conservation, and accelerate STP coverage under Namami Gange Phase III to smaller tributary towns. Prelims Pointers ISFR 2023 18th biennial report by FSI; forest cover 21.76%; forest + tree cover 25.17%; carbon stock 30.43 bn tonnes India Ramsar sites (April 2026) 99 — 3rd globally, 1st in Asia; Tamil Nadu leads (20 sites); Montreux Record: Keoladeo NP + Loktak Lake Namami Gange Launched June 2014; Rs 42,500 crore (Phase I+II); BOD load fell from 26 TPD (2017) to 10.75 TPD (2024) Project Tiger 3,682 tigers (2022); 58 Reserves; India = 70%+ of world’s wild tigers; CA|TS: 23 Reserves Project Cheetah Launched 17 Sept 2022; 29 translocated (Namibia 8, S.Africa 12, Botswana 9); 53 total; 33 India-born cubs Project Lion 523 (2015) → 891 (2025); +70%; Gir, Gujarat — world’s only wild Asiatic lion population Snow Leopard (SPAI 2019–23) 718 estimated; 1,20,000 sq. km covered; SECURE Himalaya (UNDP+GEF, 2017); SPAI 2.0 initiated Project Elephant 22,446 (DNA-based); 33 Reserves; 150 corridors; India = ~60% of global wild Asian elephants MISHTI Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats & Tangible Incomes; cover: 4,628 → 4,992 sq. km (+363 sq. km) ISA International Solar Alliance; India + France; COP21 Paris 2015; 112 member countries IBCA International Big Cat Alliance; treaty-based from 23 Jan 2025; 26 countries; 7 big cat species CDRI Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure; launched 2019; international org 2022; HQ New Delhi NDC Achievements Emissions intensity: 36%+ (target 33–35%, 11 yrs early); Non-fossil: 52.57% (target 40%, 9 yrs early) Waste Management MSW processing: 17% (2014) → 77% (2024); DRAP launched Nov 2025; SWM Rules 2026 — 4-stream segregation Key Acts EPA 1986 · WPA 1972 · Forest Conservation Act 1980 (renamed 2023) · Compensatory Afforestation Fund Act 2016 · Wetlands Rules 2017 Climate Diplomacy UNCCD COP-14 (India 2019) — Delhi Declaration (LDN by 2030); CMS COP-13 (Gandhinagar 2020); G20 Green Development Pact — 9 Sept 2023 Exam Notes: Asiatic lions exist ONLY in Gujarat’s Gir landscape — not across multiple states. IBCA covers 7 big cat species — not 5. Project Cheetah’s total headcount of 53 includes births and deaths — current living count is 44. The 25.17% forest cover figure includes tree cover outside forests (agroforestry, orchards) — India’s actual forest cover alone is 21.76%. Ramsar site count is 99 (April 2026) — questions may still cite outdated numbers. “India’s conservation model integrates species recovery with landscape-level ecosystem management and proactive global diplomacy. Critically examine India’s achievements and remaining challenges in biodiversity conservation and climate governance over the past decade.”GS Paper 3  |  Environment & Biodiversity  |  250 words Q. Consider the following pairs regarding India’s Wildlife Conservation Programmes and associated facts: 1. Project Cheetah — World’s first intercontinental translocation of a large wild carnivore; launched September 2022 2. IBCA (International Big Cat Alliance) — Covers 7 big cat species; became a treaty-based organisation on 23 January 2025 3. SPAI (Snow Leopard Population Assessment in India) — Estimated 718 snow leopards across India over 2019–2023 4. Project Lion — Asiatic lions are now distributed across multiple states of India (a) 1, 2 and 3 only(b) 1, 3 and 4 only(c) 2, 3 and 4 only(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

Jun 5, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

UPSC Editorial Digest — World Environment Day Special · June 5, 2026 Editorial Analysis Premium analytical notes for GS answers, essay, interview and revision Contents01 Funding India's Climate Future: A Trillion-Dollar Question Author: Balakrishna Pisupati (UNEP India)  ·  Climate Finance, Green Banking, NDCs, RBI Directions GS 3 — Environment & EconomyGS 2 — Governance & IREssay 02 A National Environmental Survey Whose Time Came Authors: Saumya Gupta & Thirunavukarasu S.  ·  Environmental Governance, MoEFCC, Data & Accountability GS 3 — EnvironmentGS 2 — GovernanceEssay 03 The Power of Mangroves Over Seawalls Authors: Jui Gusani & Sony R. K. (Sustainable Futures Collaborative)  ·  EbA, Coastal Resilience, MISHTI GS 3 — Environment & Disaster MgmtGS 1 — GeographyEssay Editorial 01 of 03 Article 01 Funding India's Climate Future: A Trillion-Dollar Question Balakrishna Pisupati — Head, UNEP India Office · The Hindu Relevance: Climate finance architecture, RBI regulatory framework, green bonds, blended finance, NDC implementation, and the State-level financing gap — central to GS 3 (Environment, Economy) and GS 2 (Governance, IR) with strong essay value on development vs. sustainability and India's global climate leadership. GS 3 — Environment & EconomyGS 2 — Governance & IREssay — Development vs Sustainability 1 — Issue in Brief India faces a ₹162.5 trillion (~$2.5 trillion) climate financing gap by 2030 to meet its Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), and a staggering $10.1 trillion to achieve net-zero by 2070 — nearly three times the country's current GDP. These are not aspirational targets; they are structural funding requirements with hard deadlines. The international community will not fill this gap. The $100 billion/year Paris promise was repeatedly missed; the Baku NCQG (COP29, 2024) commits only $300 billion by 2035 — a figure India has rightly called woefully insufficient given the scale of developing-world need. India's instruments already exist — green bonds, sovereign green bonds, blended finance, PSL classification, sustainability-linked bonds, and the draft climate taxonomy — but what is missing is the institutional connective tissue to deploy them at the scale required. The most consequential structural shift in 2025 was not at a climate summit but at Mint Street: the RBI's Climate Finance Directions 2025 make climate risk integration mandatory for commercial banks, with green activities qualifying for Priority Sector Lending — the most powerful regulatory lever the RBI holds over bank lending behaviour. 2 — Static Background The Paris Agreement (2015) obligated developed nations to provide $100 billion/year in climate finance to developing countries by 2020 — a commitment that was systematically missed. The Baku NCQG (New Collective Quantified Goal) established at COP29 sets a new target of $300 billion/year by 2035, but developing nations including India consider it far short of the actual $5–6 trillion annual global adaptation and mitigation need. India's Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) include: reducing GDP emissions intensity by 45% from 2005 levels by 2030; achieving 50% non-fossil installed capacity by 2030; net-zero by 2070. Under the updated Second NDC (submitted 2022), these targets remain ambitious but financing mechanisms lag significantly behind the stated ambitions. Priority Sector Lending (PSL) is a foundational RBI instrument — banks must direct 40% of Adjusted Net Bank Credit (ANBC) to designated priority sectors (agriculture, MSME, affordable housing, education). The 2025 RBI Directions allow eligible green activities to qualify under PSL — a structural realignment of banking incentives toward climate-compatible lending at scale. Green bonds are debt instruments whose proceeds are exclusively used for climate and environmental projects. Sovereign Green Bonds are issued by the Government of India — India began this in FY 2022-23 with two tranches of ₹8,000 crore each, creating a domestic green yield curve that anchors private issuance pricing. Eight tranches have now been issued totalling INR 477 billion (~$5.7 billion). Blended finance is the strategic use of concessional/public funds to de-risk private investment — the key multiplier mechanism for climate capital in developing nations where risk perception keeps private capital away from green transitions despite commercially viable underlying economics. The Climate Finance Taxonomy — announced in Union Budget 2024-25, with draft released May 2025 — is the legal foundation of the entire ecosystem: without a clear classification of what is "green," PSL categorisation is ambiguous, green bond verification is impossible, and greenwashing cannot be credibly prosecuted. 3 — Key Dimensions The four-sector financing arithmetic: Decarbonising steel, cement, power, and road transport — together responsible for over half of India's carbon emissions — requires $467 billion in additional capex between 2022 and 2030 (~$54 billion/year = 1.3% of GDP). The economics of green steel and green cement don't work without policy support; private capital will not lead without regulatory de-risking. RBI 2025 Directions — the structural shift: For every ₹10,000 crore in bank loans, ₹4,000 crore must be directed to PSL. Green activity classification under PSL means every Indian commercial bank now has a direct financial incentive to expand green lending — not as a voluntary ESG gesture but as a regulatory compliance requirement. Market momentum is real but insufficient: India's GSS+ (green, social, sustainability, sustainability-linked) debt reached $55.9 billion by end-2024 — a 186% rise since 2021. Yet this is barely a third of the annual green financing requirement. India ranks 4th among emerging markets but holds only ~1% of global green bond volume against a much larger share of global climate vulnerability. Blended finance leverage ratio: A $100 million first-loss public guarantee (from NDB, NABARD, or a State Climate Finance Facility) can unlock $500 million–$1 billion in private co-investment in solar, offshore wind, green hydrogen, or climate-resilient agriculture — because it absorbs the risk layer that private capital finds unacceptable at current market pricing. The State-level exclusion problem: Climate adaptation — flood-proofing in Bihar, spring rejuvenation in the Himalayas, drought-proofing in Vidarbha, coastal protection in Odisha — is delivered at the state level. But states lack borrowing capacity and institutional infrastructure to directly access multilateral climate finance, leaving adaptation chronically underfunded while central mitigation schemes attract most available capital. Next frontier — differentiated capital requirements: The RBI has signalled the next step: making brown lending more capital-intensive and green lending less so, alongside mandatory climate stress-testing that assesses flood risk in a Bihar loan portfolio as rigorously as traditional credit risk — a shift that would fundamentally reprice climate risk across the banking system. 4 — Critical Analysis Favour — PSL linkage gives teeth: Unlike voluntary ESG frameworks, PSL compliance is legally enforceable. RBI supervisory inspections include PSL tracking; non-compliance triggers penalties. Making green activities PSL-eligible is therefore a structural — not aspirational — realignment of India's entire commercial banking system toward climate-compatible lending. Favour — Sovereign green bonds create the yield curve: Eight tranches totalling INR 477 billion provide a government-backed pricing benchmark for the entire domestic green debt market. Without this, private green bond issuers face uncertain pricing and limited institutional investor appetite — the sovereign anchor resolves this chicken-and-egg problem that stalled many developing-country green bond markets. Favour — Blended finance multiplier is high-leverage: The 10:1 leverage ratio of first-loss guarantees means that a relatively small NABARD or NDB commitment can mobilise order-of-magnitude more private capital. This is especially powerful for hard-to-abate sectors (green steel, offshore wind) where the risk-return profile doesn't yet attract unsubsidised private investment. Concern — Taxonomy delay undermines the architecture: Despite the Union Budget 2024-25 announcement, the draft taxonomy was only released for public comment in May 2025 — over a year later. Every month of delay means green bonds lack independent verification, PSL classifications remain disputeable, and international investors cannot make compliance claims, directly reducing capital inflows. Concern — States structurally excluded: All multilateral climate finance (GCF, GEF, ADB) flows through the Centre. States with ambitious climate programmes — Kerala's ₹900 billion climate need by 2030, Tamil Nadu's coastal adaptation plans — have no institutional mechanism to directly access international green debt markets, creating a federalism bottleneck that no amount of central-level instrument-building resolves. Concern — Greenwashing risk at scale: With 83% of India's $55.9 billion GSS+ debt labeled "green" but no legally enforceable taxonomy in place, market integrity rests on voluntary international frameworks (ICMA Green Bond Principles, SEBI BRSR). As the market scales to hundreds of billions, the absence of a domestic legal standard becomes a systemic credibility and regulatory risk. 5 — Way Forward Finalise the Climate Finance Taxonomy immediately — it is the single highest-leverage action available, unlocking PSL verification, green bond credibility, greenwashing enforcement, and international investor compliance simultaneously. The Ministry of Finance's June 2025 consultation must translate to enacted legislation before year-end. RBI must move from enabling to mandating — introduce differentiated capital requirements (higher risk weights for brown lending, lower for green), mandatory climate stress-testing covering physical and transition risks, and expanded PSL targets that explicitly include climate adaptation financing alongside mitigation activities. Establish a State Climate Finance Facility — capitalised by the Union Government + NABARD + international sources (NDB, ADB) — giving states and municipalities genuine direct access to green debt markets. Kerala and Tamil Nadu's climate ambitions cannot be met through central routing; states need their own institutional access pathway. Scale sovereign green bonds and embed in SLR framework — allowing banks to count sovereign green bond holdings toward their Statutory Liquidity Ratio would create a structural domestic demand, deepening the market and making green yield curves more liquid, which in turn attracts foreign portfolio investors seeking credible emerging-market green exposure. 6 — Data & Key Facts $2.5 TnIndia's NDC financing need by 2030 (₹162.5 trillion at 2014-15 prices) $10.1 TnCost of India's net-zero by 2070 — ~3× current GDP $467 BnAdditional capex for 4-sector decarbonisation (steel, cement, power, roads) 2022–30 $55.9 BnIndia's cumulative GSS+ debt by end-2024 — 186% rise since 2021 (Climate Bonds Initiative) INR 477 BnSovereign green bonds issued across 8 tranches (FY 2022-23 to 2024-25) 2.5% GDPRBI's minimum estimate for annual green financing need until 2030 India ranks 4th among emerging markets in GSS+ debt issuance — after China, South Korea, and Chile — yet holds barely 1% of global green bond volume, reflecting the structural underdevelopment of India's green finance market relative to its climate exposure and economic size. Baku NCQG (COP29, 2024): Commits $300 billion/year by 2035 from developed to developing nations. India called this inadequate — developing economies (ex-China) need $2.4 trillion/year by 2030, rising to $3.2 trillion/year by 2035. The gap between commitment and requirement is the defining tension in India's climate diplomacy. Blended finance leverage: First-loss guarantees of $100 million from public sources can unlock $500 million–$1 billion in private co-investment — a 5:1 to 10:1 leverage ratio that makes concessional public capital highly efficient for mobilising private flows into currently unattractive transition sectors. 7 — Prelims Pointers NCQG (Baku, COP29, 2024) — New Collective Quantified Goal; $300 billion/year by 2035 from developed to developing nations; replaces the missed $100 billion Paris promise; India called it "woefully inadequate" RBI Climate Finance Directions 2025 — applies to all commercial banks immediately; green activities eligible for PSL; sovereign green bonds recognised; proposes climate stress-testing framework; landmark regulatory shift PSL (Priority Sector Lending) — 40% of ANBC must go to designated priority sectors; enforced by RBI; green activity inclusion is the most powerful banking lever for climate finance mobilisation Climate Finance Taxonomy — announced Union Budget 2024-25; draft released May 2025; legal classification of "green" activities; foundation for PSL, green bond verification, and greenwashing enforcement SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio) — fraction of NDTL banks must hold as liquid assets; embedding sovereign green bonds in SLR would create structural domestic demand for green debt Blended Finance — concessional/public funds strategically deployed to de-risk private investment; 5–10× leverage ratio; key for hard-to-abate sectors (green steel, offshore wind, green hydrogen) Exam note: Never conflate mitigation finance (reducing emissions — solar, EVs, green hydrogen) with adaptation finance (protecting against impacts — coastal barriers, drought-proofing, heat-resilient agriculture). India's NDC gap is in mitigation; the state-level exclusion problem is in adaptation. Both are tested separately in GS 3 questions on climate governance. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's climate finance architecture has strong instruments but weak institutional connective tissue." Critically examine with reference to the RBI Climate Finance Directions 2025, the draft Climate Finance Taxonomy, and the State-level adaptation financing gap.GS 2 + GS 3 crossover | 15 marks | ~250 words | Governance + Environment + Economy Intro: Frame India's $2.5 trillion NDC financing gap and the paradox — instruments exist (green bonds, PSL, blended finance) but deployment lags severely. The 2025 RBI Directions mark the most consequential recent shift, but connective tissue gaps remain. Body 1 — Strengths: RBI Directions 2025 (PSL linkage, sovereign green bond recognition), $55.9 billion GSS+ market, 8 sovereign green bond tranches worth INR 477 bn, blended finance leverage mechanics, India's 4th rank among emerging markets. Body 2 — Gaps: Taxonomy delay (announced 2024-25, draft only 2025), state exclusion from multilateral finance, greenwashing risk with 83% green-labeled market but no enforceable standard, hard-to-abate sectors still commercially unviable without sustained policy support. Conclusion: Taxonomy enactment, State Climate Finance Facility capitalised by NABARD + NDB, SLR integration of sovereign green bonds, and mandatory climate stress-testing as the four priority institutional fixes that unlock the existing instrument stack at scale. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about India's climate finance landscape: 1. The RBI Climate Finance Directions 2025 allow eligible green activities to qualify as Priority Sector Lending and recognise investments in Sovereign Green Bonds under the framework. 2. India ranks as the second-largest emerging market source of GSS+ (green, social, sustainability-linked) debt globally after China. 3. By end-2024, India had issued $55.9 billion in GSS+ debt — a 186% rise since 2021, with green instruments accounting for 83% of the total. 4. The Baku NCQG (COP29) commits developed nations to provide $300 billion annually to developing countries by 2030. Which of the statements are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only(b) 1, 3 and 4 only(c) 2 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 only Editorial 02 of 03 Article 02 A National Environmental Survey Whose Time Came Saumya Gupta (University of Amsterdam) & Thirunavukarasu S. (University of Madras) · The Hindu Relevance: Environmental governance, institutional accountability, MoEFCC reform, data-driven policymaking — directly relevant to GS 3 (Environment) and GS 2 (Governance, Institutions) with strong interview value on India's environmental data crisis, land degradation, and the Economic Survey parallel. GS 3 — Environment & BiodiversityGS 2 — Governance & InstitutionsEssay — Development vs Environment 1 — Issue in Brief India faces a deepening, multi-dimensional environmental crisis — land degradation, river pollution, air quality emergencies, extreme weather events, and biodiversity loss — yet lacks any unified, independent, authoritative assessment of the true state of its environment. The result is what the authors call "ignorance masquerading as knowledge." The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC) is chronically underfunded at approximately 0.07% of the Union Budget, operates in institutional silos, and produces annual reports that highlight scheme outputs while systematically obscuring the scale of state-wise deforestation, biodiversity loss, and environmental compliance failures. The editorial proposes an Annual Environmental Survey of India (EnvSI) — modelled on the Economic Survey — as a statutory, expert-led, functionally autonomous body that aggregates evidence, conducts independent audits, and presents unvarnished environmental reality to Parliament and policymakers without political filtering. The core argument is not that data doesn't exist — India's environment is measured by dozens of agencies, think tanks, and research institutions. What is missing is a systemic platform that brings it together, cross-verifies it, and translates it into actionable, publicly accountable policy assessments. 2 — Static Background Yale School of Environment Survey (Dec 2024–Feb 2025): Of 10,751 Indian respondents, most had experienced at least one extreme event — heat waves (71%), agricultural pests/diseases (60%), power outages (59%), water pollution (53%), droughts and water shortages (52%), air pollution (52%). This survey is the most comprehensive recent ground-level assessment of climate impact on Indian citizens. The Desertification and Land Degradation Atlas of India estimates 29.7% of India's total land area is degraded — a figure that has barely moved in a decade despite multiple national restoration commitments. India has pledged Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) by 2030 under the UNCCD and committed to restoring 26 million hectares of degraded land. MoEFCC Budget FY 2025-26: ₹3,413 crore — a 9% increase over 2024-25 revised estimates but still representing approximately 0.07% of India's total Union Budget of ~₹50 lakh crore. This makes it one of the most under-resourced ministries relative to the scale of its mandate across any major economy. The Economic Survey of India — the editorial's proposed model — is an annual report prepared by the Chief Economic Adviser under the Ministry of Finance, tabled in Parliament before the Budget, and routinely cited as India's most credible, intellectually independent official economic document. It draws on multiple sources, rejects comforting narratives, and alerts policymakers to emerging challenges. Existing fragmentation: Environmental data is dispersed across MoEFCC, Forest Survey of India (FSI), Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB), Ministry of Jal Shakti (MoJS), ISRO (remote sensing), ICAR (agricultural ecosystem data), state pollution control boards, and dozens of independent research institutions — with no integrating platform, no cross-verification protocol, and no unified reporting standard. India's Fourth Biannual Report to UNFCCC (2024) reports total GHG emissions of 2,959 million tonnes CO₂e in 2020 — with the energy sector's emissions up 201% since 1994. Yet this data lives in climate reporting systems disconnected from the biodiversity, land, water, and air quality data that together constitute the full picture of India's environmental state. 3 — Key Dimensions The cover-of-numbers problem: India's forest cover reporting illustrates the credibility gap. FAO 2025 ranks India 9th globally in forest area and 3rd in annual net forest gain — impressive headline figures that obscure the biodiversity and ecosystem function gap between plantation monocultures (which count as forest cover) and natural forests that provide hydrological regulation, wildlife habitat, and tribal livelihoods. What EnvSI would assess differently: Not just hectares afforested but forest quality, canopy density, and biodiversity indicators. Not just river monitoring stations but heavy metal contamination levels, seasonal flow patterns, and aquifer depletion rates. Not just air quality index averages but life-years lost, disease burden by district, and industrial compliance rates — a qualitative and quantitative upgrade over current reporting. The Economic Survey parallel is precise: The CEA's Economic Survey regularly presents data that is uncomfortable for the Finance Ministry's own programme — criticising subsidy inefficiency, warning of fiscal risks, flagging stagnant wages. An EnvSI with equivalent autonomy would be empowered to flag MoEFCC's own programme failures — deforestation despite the Green India Mission, river degradation despite Namami Gange, air quality failure in cities outside the NCAP list. Climate finance credibility link: International climate funds (GCF, GEF Adaptation Fund, World Bank) increasingly require verified national environmental baselines before committing capital. India's lack of a credible, independent environmental audit directly constrains its ability to access the hundreds of billions in multilateral adaptation finance it is theoretically entitled to as a climate-vulnerable developing nation. Tribal and livelihood dimension: India's forest-dependent communities — approximately 100 million people, many governed under the Forest Rights Act 2006 — are most directly affected by environmental degradation that current reporting either misses or aggregates beyond recognition. An EnvSI with a livelihood and rights assessment component would make these impacts visible in national policymaking for the first time. 4 — Critical Analysis Favour — Accountability through transparency: The Economic Survey model works precisely because it is tabled in Parliament before the Budget — making it a public document that the media, civil society, and Opposition can scrutinise. An EnvSI with the same parliamentary tabling mechanism would create genuine institutional accountability for environmental outcomes, not just scheme delivery. Favour — Climate finance unlocking: A credible, annually updated national environmental baseline assessed by an independent expert body would directly satisfy the verification requirements of multilateral climate funds, potentially unlocking billions in GCF, GEF, and bilateral adaptation finance that currently requires India to commission expensive third-party assessments for each project cycle. Favour — SDG reporting upgrade: India's Voluntary National Reviews (VNRs) on SDG progress currently rely on self-reported ministry data — widely considered optimistic by independent researchers. An EnvSI providing cross-verified, independently audited environmental data would substantially improve the credibility of India's SDG 6, 13, 14, and 15 reporting at the UN. Concern — Political resistance is structural: An independent body publishing uncomfortable data on state-wise deforestation, industrial pollution compliance failures, or irrigation scheme ecological damage will face sustained institutional resistance from development ministries, state governments, and corporate interests — requiring extraordinary and sustained political will that has historically been absent from Indian environmental governance. Concern — Data silo integration is technically hard: Merging data from 30+ agencies with different collection frequencies, methodologies, spatial resolutions, and political sensitivities into a coherent national environmental account is not solved by creating a new body — it requires mandatory data-sharing protocols, interoperability standards, and shared geospatial infrastructure that themselves require multi-ministry legislative action. Concern — Funding paradox: The body best positioned to argue for increased environmental budgets is itself operating within the same underfunded system — MoEFCC at 0.07% of Union Budget cannot finance an ambitious EnvSI. International funding would introduce conditionalities that could compromise the functional autonomy the editorial rightly identifies as the model's essential feature. 5 — Way Forward Establish EnvSI through a statutory amendment to the Environment Protection Act, 1986 — granting the body functional autonomy, protected expert tenure, mandatory inter-agency data-sharing obligations, and annual parliamentary tabling requirements that mirror the CEA's Economic Survey mechanism. Create a Chief Environment Adviser (CEnvA) — parallel to the Chief Economic Adviser — housed in an autonomous institution (TERI, NIPFP, or a new statutory body) with authority to publish assessments that are independent of MoEFCC's own programme reporting, including critical analysis of the ministry's own schemes. Develop district-level environmental accounts — disaggregating data beyond state-level aggregates that currently mask local degradation hotspots. District-level data on groundwater depletion, air quality, soil health, forest canopy quality, and river health would enable rational, evidence-based clearance decisions rather than the ad-hoc project lobbying that currently characterises India's environmental governance. Integrate EnvSI outputs with the climate finance taxonomy, DILRMP, and national adaptation planning — so that independent environmental assessments directly feed into green finance decisions, land-use policy, and disaster risk reduction planning, creating a virtuous loop between environmental accountability and climate investment. 6 — Data & Key Facts 71%Indians experiencing heat waves (Yale survey, Dec 2024–Feb 2025, n=10,751) 29.7%India's land area that is degraded (Desertification & Land Degradation Atlas) 0.07%MoEFCC's share of Union Budget; ₹3,413 cr allocated FY 2025-26 (PRS India) ~3 yrsLife expectancy reduced by air pollution in India (2022 data) 88%Of the year some parts of India experienced extreme weather events 144%Rise in total CO₂ emissions (ex-LULUCF) between 1994–2020 (UNFCCC Biannual Report 2024) India's 4th Biannual UNFCCC Report (2024): Total GHG emissions in 2020 = 2,959 million tonne CO₂e (excluding LULUCF). Energy sector emissions up 201% since 1994. Agriculture up only 18%. Including LULUCF sink, net emissions fall to 2,437 million tonne CO₂e — India's forests are a meaningful but shrinking carbon buffer whose quality is not captured in current reporting. FAO Global Forest Resources Assessment 2025: India ranked 9th globally in forest area and 3rd in annual net forest gain — headline-positive figures that conceal the biodiversity and ecosystem function gap between plantation monocultures counted as "forest" and natural forest ecosystems providing the full suite of ecological services. EnviStats India (MoSPI) — existing government environment statistics compilation released annually by the Ministry of Statistics. Unlike the proposed EnvSI, EnviStats is a data repository without independent audit powers, actionable assessments, or performance grading — a distinction critical for exam differentiation. 7 — Prelims Pointers EnviStats India (MoSPI) — existing environment statistics, annually compiled; data repository only; no independent audit, no performance grading; different from the proposed EnvSI REDD+ — Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation + additional forest activities (conservation, sustainable management, carbon stock enhancement); India is a participant LDN (Land Degradation Neutrality) — UNCCD commitment to achieve no net degradation by 2030; India pledged to restore 26 million hectares of degraded land; currently 29.7% of land remains degraded National Afforestation Programme (NAP) — MoEFCC; implemented through SFDAs and JFMCs; plantation-heavy; counted in India's forest cover but biodiversity value often questioned CPCB — Central Pollution Control Board; monitors air and water quality; issues ambient air quality standards; one of 30+ agencies whose data an EnvSI would need to integrate Forest Rights Act 2006 — recognises tribal and forest-dwelling communities' rights over forest land; ~100 million forest-dependent people whose livelihoods are affected by environmental degradation largely invisible in current reporting Exam note: Distinguish EnvSI (proposed — independent audit + performance grading) from EnviStats India (MoSPI — existing — data compilation only). Also do not conflate MoEFCC's annual report (ministry self-reporting) with the proposed EnvSI (independent assessment of the ministry's own programme outcomes). This conceptual distinction is precisely the kind that appears in both Prelims and GS 2 Mains questions on institutional reform. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's environmental data landscape is rich in numbers but poor in accountability." Critically examine the case for an Annual Environmental Survey of India (EnvSI) modelled on the Economic Survey, and discuss the institutional design challenges it would need to overcome.GS 2 + GS 3 crossover | 15 marks | ~250 words | Governance + Environment + Institutional Design Intro: Frame India's paradox — among the world's most climate-vulnerable nations, yet lacking a unified independent environmental assessment. Cite Yale survey data (71% experienced heat waves) and MoEFCC's 0.07% budget share as evidence of both crisis severity and institutional underfunding. Body 1 — The case for EnvSI: Economic Survey parallel (CEA model — statutory, autonomous, Parliament-tabled); climate finance credibility linkage (GCF/GEF baseline requirements); SDG reporting upgrade; tribal and livelihood visibility; correcting the plantation-vs-natural-forest cover distortion. Body 2 — Design challenges: Political resistance from development ministries; data silo integration across 30+ agencies; funding paradox (underfunded MoEFCC cannot finance an ambitious body); risk of international funding conditionalities; balancing independence with governmental access to sensitive data. Conclusion: Statutory establishment under EPA 1986 amendment, Chief Environment Adviser model, district-level environmental accounts, and mandatory inter-agency data-sharing protocols as the four institutional pillars — with the Economic Survey precedent proving the model is achievable within India's existing constitutional and administrative framework. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about India's environmental governance: 1. India's MoEFCC was allocated approximately ₹3,413 crore in FY 2025-26, representing about 0.07% of the Union Budget. 2. EnviStats India, published by MoEFCC, provides independent environmental performance audits and grades ministry programmes annually. 3. As per the Desertification and Land Degradation Atlas of India, approximately 29.7% of the country's land area is degraded. 4. India ranked 9th globally in forest area and 3rd in annual net forest gain as per the FAO Global Forest Resources Assessment 2025. Which of the above statements are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only(b) 1, 3 and 4 only(c) 2 and 4 only(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4 Editorial 03 of 03 Article 03 The Power of Mangroves Over Seawalls Jui Gusani & Sony R. K. — Sustainable Futures Collaborative · The Hindu Relevance: Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA), coastal resilience, MISHTI programme, CRZ policy, and the grey vs. green infrastructure debate — essential for GS 3 (Environment, Disaster Management) and GS 1 (Geography) with strong Prelims value on Cyclone Dana, Bhitarkanika, and MISHTI. GS 3 — Environment & Disaster MgmtGS 1 — Geography & EcologyGS 2 — Governance & PolicyEssay — Nature vs Infrastructure 1 — Issue in Brief India's coastal adaptation spending is structurally biased toward grey infrastructure — seawalls, groynes, embankments, tetrapods — despite mounting evidence that Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) through mangroves, seagrasses, and coral reefs delivers superior, cost-effective, and livelihood-sustaining coastal protection for the 250 million people living along India's 11,000-km coastline. The challenge is no longer whether EbA works. Cyclone Dana (2024) at Bhitarkanika, Cyclones Amphan and Yaas in the Sundarbans — all demonstrated mangroves' protective capacity in live conditions. The challenge is whether India's policy frameworks can recognise, measure, and scale it as a distinct adaptation strategy. The most overlooked barrier is terminological: India's EbA portfolio is far larger than it appears in official records because interventions are classified under restoration, conservation, livelihoods, or fisheries schemes — never as "climate adaptation." This makes India look weaker on adaptation reporting than it is, limiting access to dedicated global adaptation finance. The National Coastal Mission budget was cut from ₹195 crore (2022-23) to ₹50 crore (2024-25) — a 74% reduction — even as climate risk along India's coastline escalated, illustrating the structural preference for hard infrastructure that the editorial challenges. 2 — Static Background Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) is defined as the use of biodiversity and ecosystem services to help people adapt to the adverse effects of climate change. It includes mangrove restoration for storm surge protection, seagrass conservation for sediment stabilisation, coral reef management for wave attenuation, and integrated watershed management for flood regulation — a suite of nature-based interventions with both adaptation and livelihood co-benefits. India's coastline hosts mangroves (4,991 sq km), seagrass meadows, and coral reefs across 11,000 km — the Indian Forest Survey Report 2023 records a net increase of 363 sq km in mangrove cover since 2013, but a decline of 7.43 sq km in the last two years, signalling the need for accelerated restoration to counter ongoing degradation pressures. Cyclone Dana (October 2024): Made landfall near Bhitarkanika National Park and Dhamra Port on Odisha's coast. The cyclone caused significantly less damage than forecast models predicted — widely attributed to the dense mangrove cover at Bhitarkanika, which slowed storm surge velocity and reduced inundation extent. Bhitarkanika has withstood multiple major cyclones including the devastating Super Cyclone of October 1999. The MISHTI Programme (2023): Launched on World Environment Day 2023, MISHTI (Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats and Tangible Incomes) aims to restore 540 sq km of mangroves across 9 coastal states and 3-4 UTs over five years (2023-2028), implemented through CAMPA convergence and MGNREGS labour. India joined the Mangrove Alliance for Climate (MAC) at COP27 (Egypt, 2022) as part of the initiative's genesis. The CRZ Notification 2019 classifies mangroves as CRZ-I (B) — the highest protection category under the coastal regulation framework, prohibiting construction within mangrove areas. However, enforcement has been inconsistent, and development pressures in coastal states continue to threaten mangrove integrity particularly in peri-urban zones. The Global Goal on Adaptation (UAE Framework, COP28) has renewed international attention to how adaptation outcomes are measured and reported. India's inability to classify and count its EbA interventions as adaptation means it systematically undercounts its own adaptation progress — a credibility and finance mobilisation problem that the editorial's proposed reclassification directly addresses. 3 — Key Dimensions The spending asymmetry: India spent ₹2,641 crore on hard coastal protection measures over the last decade — while the National Coastal Mission budget fell from ₹195 crore to ₹50 crore in a single budget cycle. This inverse relationship — more grey infrastructure spending as climate risk escalates, less ecological investment — is the core structural distortion the article diagnoses. Grey infrastructure's displaced risk problem: In Kerala, hard armouring of eroding coastlines protected specific sites while accelerating erosion and damage in adjacent unprotected areas — a classic coastal engineering failure mode. EbA approaches, by working with coastal sediment dynamics and wave energy, avoid this risk displacement by providing protection that moves with natural coastal processes. MISHTI's classification paradox: Designed to protect coastal communities from climate change, MISHTI is primarily framed as a restoration programme — meaning its climate adaptation value is not captured in India's NDC implementation tracking, adaptation finance claims, or UNFCCC reporting. Reclassifying MISHTI as EbA would strengthen India's adaptation credibility without adding a rupee of new spending. Research-backed scale of protection: Global research identifies India as a global 'hotspot' for coastal EbA, with mangroves protecting more people per hectare than almost any other country. An estimated 30.9 million people living within 2 km of India's coast are highly vulnerable to tropical storms and sea-level rise — with mangroves and coral reefs already overlapping threats to at least 5.3 and 3.4 million people respectively. Sundarbans women's restoration — the co-benefit model: Over 18,000 women restored 4,600 hectares of mangroves in the Sundarbans, directly reducing cyclone damage from Amphan (2020) and Yaas (2021), while strengthening community livelihoods through honey collection, crab farming, and eco-tourism — demonstrating that EbA simultaneously delivers physical protection, carbon sequestration, biodiversity conservation, and women's economic empowerment. Terminology confusion limits finance flows: The policy space is crowded with overlapping labels — EbA, Nature-based Solutions (NbS), Ecosystem-based Coastal Adaptation (EbCA), Eco-DRR — creating uncertainty about what qualifies for dedicated adaptation finance windows at the GCF, GEF, and bilateral development banks. Clear national classification would directly improve India's project eligibility and approval rates. 4 — Critical Analysis Favour — Live evidence is compelling: Cyclone Dana (2024) at Bhitarkanika and Cyclones Amphan/Yaas in the Sundarbans provide unambiguous real-world evidence — not just modelling — that mangroves reduce storm surge damage at a scale measurable in lives and property. This shifts the debate from "does EbA work?" to "why aren't we scaling it?" — a fundamentally different and more actionable policy question. Favour — Cost-effectiveness: Mangrove restoration costs a fraction of equivalent-protection seawall construction — with no maintenance capital expenditure, natural self-repair capacity after damage, and ecological co-benefits (fisheries habitat, carbon sequestration at 896 million metric tonnes globally in mangrove soils/biomass, biodiversity) that grey infrastructure cannot deliver. Favour — Livelihood integration: Unlike seawalls which protect assets but can displace fishing communities from their coastal access, EbA inherently sustains the fisheries, aquaculture, forest produce, and eco-tourism that 250 million coastal Indians depend on — making it a more inclusive adaptation pathway that aligns protection with livelihood continuation. Concern — Hard infrastructure remains irreplaceable in urban settings: In high-density coastal urban zones — Mumbai's waterfront, Chennai's Marina coast, Paradip port, Vishakhapatnam harbour — seawalls and engineered structures are irreplaceable. EbA is not a universal substitute; treating it as such risks leaving critical urban coastal infrastructure inadequately protected during the transition period before mangrove restoration matures. Concern — MISHTI budget vs. ambition gap: MISHTI targets 540 sq km over five years but FY 2024-25 saw only ₹17.96 crore released from CAMPA to six states and one UT — for just 3,836 ha of degraded mangrove treatment. At this pace, the 2028 target faces serious implementation risk, and the gap between India's MISHTI commitment and actual restoration investment undermines the credibility of its adaptation claims internationally. Concern — Climate change threatens mangroves themselves: Rising sea levels, increased salinity intrusion, and changing monsoon patterns — particularly reduced freshwater flows from upstream water infrastructure — directly threaten mangrove health and regeneration in the very low-lying intertidal zones where storm protection is most needed. The protection EbA offers is not static; it requires active management and climate resilience planning within the mangrove ecosystem itself. 5 — Way Forward Operationalise EbA as a distinct policy category in India's National Adaptation Plan (NAP), State Coastal Zone Management Plans, and National Disaster Management Plans — with a clear statutory definition, dedicated monitoring protocol, and separate budget line that makes EbA investments visible and trackable alongside grey infrastructure spending. Reclassify MISHTI and similar programmes as EbA in India's UNFCCC reports, NDC implementation tracking, and National Adaptation Communications — unlocking GCF, GEF Adaptation Fund, and bilateral adaptation finance windows that currently don't count restoration-framed programmes, immediately improving India's adaptation finance eligibility without new spending. Reverse the National Coastal Mission budget cut — restore and expand from ₹50 crore (2024-25) to ₹195 crore+ and integrate EbA financing into the National Disaster Risk Reduction Fund (NDRRF) and State Disaster Response Funds (SDRF) as a recognised disaster risk reduction investment category eligible for both central and state funding. Scale community-led mangrove monitoring and management — replicating the Sundarbans women's restoration model across all coastal states, with MGNREGS providing livelihood support for mangrove restoration workers, creating a rights-based, community-accountable EbA delivery mechanism that avoids the state-forest-department-only model's historical track record of inadequate local enforcement. 6 — Data & Key Facts 4,991 km²India's total mangrove cover (ISR 2023); net +363 sq km since 2013 but -7.43 sq km in last 2 years 540 km²MISHTI restoration target (2023-28) across 9 states + 3-4 UTs; ~35% achieved by Gujarat alone in 2 years ₹17.96 CrCAMPA release for MISHTI in FY 2024-25 — for just 3,836 ha across 6 states + 1 UT ₹2,641 CrIndia's spending on hard coastal protection (seawalls, groynes) over the last decade ₹50 CrNational Coastal Mission budget FY 2024-25 — down from ₹195 crore in 2022-23 (74% cut) 30.9 MnPeople within 2 km of India's coast highly vulnerable to tropical storms and sea-level rise Sundarbans restoration: Over 18,000 women restored 4,600 hectares of mangroves — blunting the devastation of Cyclones Amphan (2020) and Yaas (2021) while generating livelihoods through honey collection and crab farming. The most cited case study in India for EbA co-benefits: physical protection + women's empowerment + biodiversity + carbon sequestration simultaneously. Global research finding (PLoS ONE): India is a global EbA 'hotspot' with mangroves protecting more people per hectare than almost any other country. Mangroves and coral reefs overlap climate threats to 5.3 million and 3.4 million highly vulnerable coastal people respectively. Global mangrove carbon storage: 896 million metric tonnes in soils and biomass — making mangroves among the world's most carbon-dense ecosystems. MISHTI (MoEFCC, 2023): Total estimated cost ₹1,250 crore over 5 years; ₹1,000 crore through CAMPA (50% national + 50% state); remaining through MGNREGS convergence. Launched World Environment Day, June 5, 2023 — India's participation in the Mangrove Alliance for Climate (MAC, COP27) directly catalysed the programme's announcement in Union Budget 2023-24. 7 — Prelims Pointers MISHTI (2023) — MoEFCC; 540 sq km target across 9 states + 3-4 UTs; 2023-28; funded via CAMPA + MGNREGS; launched World Environment Day 2023; stems from Mangrove Alliance for Climate (MAC), COP27 EbA (Ecosystem-based Adaptation) — uses biodiversity/ecosystem services for climate adaptation; different from mitigation; mangroves, seagrasses, coral reefs, wetlands as natural buffers; co-benefits include livelihoods, carbon, biodiversity Bhitarkanika National Park — Odisha; Ramsar site (2002); 2nd largest mangrove in India after Sundarbans; Cyclone Dana (October 2024) demonstrated mangroves' protective role; habitat for saltwater crocodiles and olive ridley turtles CRZ Notification 2019 — Coastal Regulation Zone; mangroves classified under CRZ-I (B) — highest protection category; prohibits construction; enforced under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 Mangrove Alliance for Climate (MAC) — launched COP27 (Egypt, 2022); India is a member; aims to halt mangrove loss and increase restoration; MISHTI partly stems from India's MAC commitment CAMPA — Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority; provides funding for afforestation and restoration; primary financing vehicle for MISHTI implementation at state level Exam note: Never conflate EbA (climate adaptation using ecosystems) with mitigation (reducing emissions). Also distinguish MISHTI (mangrove restoration, MoEFCC) from MGNREGS (though MGNREGS provides convergence labour funding for MISHTI). Cyclone Dana (October 2024) near Bhitarkanika is the most current live example of EbA — cite it in answers. Do not confuse Bhitarkanika (Odisha, 2nd largest mangrove) with Sundarbans (West Bengal + Bangladesh, 1st largest). 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's coastal adaptation strategy prioritises grey infrastructure over green ecosystems despite mounting evidence of the superiority of Ecosystem-based Adaptation." Critically examine with reference to the MISHTI programme, the spending asymmetry, and the classification gap that limits India's adaptation finance eligibility.GS 3 — Environment & Disaster Management | 15 marks | ~250 words | Coastal Policy + Climate Finance + Institutional Reform Intro: India's 11,000 km coastline, 250 million vulnerable people, and live evidence from Cyclone Dana (2024) at Bhitarkanika frame the case for EbA. The spending paradox — ₹2,641 crore on hard protection vs. ₹50 crore National Coastal Mission — establishes the structural problem being examined. Body 1 — Evidence for EbA superiority: Cyclone Dana at Bhitarkanika; Sundarbans women restoring 4,600 ha with co-benefits (Amphan/Yaas); research finding India as EbA 'hotspot'; 896 million tonnes carbon in global mangrove biomass; MISHTI's 540 sq km target. Grey infrastructure's displaced risk failure in Kerala. Body 2 — Classification gap and its consequences: MISHTI framed as restoration, not adaptation — missing from UNFCCC reporting and NDC tracking; overlapping NbS/EbCA/Eco-DRR terminology causing adaptation finance eligibility confusion; National Coastal Mission 74% budget cut showing structural preference for hard infrastructure. Conclusion: Reclassify MISHTI and similar programmes as EbA in UNFCCC and NDC reporting; reverse National Coastal Mission cuts; integrate EbA into NDRRF eligibility; scale Sundarbans women's model via MGNREGS convergence; adopt hybrid EbA + grey infrastructure for high-density urban coasts where seawalls remain necessary. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the MISHTI Programme and Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) in India: 1. MISHTI targets restoration of approximately 540 sq km of mangroves across 9 coastal states and 3-4 Union Territories between 2023 and 2028. 2. Cyclone Dana (October 2024) demonstrated the protective role of mangroves when it made landfall near Bhitarkanika, Odisha, causing less damage than forecast due to dense mangrove cover. 3. The National Coastal Mission's budget was increased from ₹50 crore (2022-23) to ₹195 crore (2024-25) to meet escalating coastal climate risks. 4. Mangroves are classified under CRZ-I (B) — the highest protection category — under India's Coastal Regulation Zone Notification 2019. Which of the statements are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 1, 2 and 4 only(c) 2, 3 and 4 only(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

Jun 5, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Quark-Gluon Plasma — Smallest Fluid Droplet Found at LHC Mission Senehjori — Assam Muga Silk Amendments to Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025 Assam-Meghalaya Border Dispute — Tapat-Lapangap Sector El Niño — An Economic Crisis, Not Just a Weather Event Is the War in Ukraine Escalating? Coastal Adaptation — Between Concrete and Managed Retreat Double Burden of Malnutrition — NFHS-6 and Vellore Study Urban Fire Safety — Residential Buildings Most Vulnerable 1.Quark-Gluon Plasma — Smallest Fluid Droplet Found at LHC GS Relevance: GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Physics | Space Science | Achievements in Science Why in News Researchers at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN published a new study in Physical Review Letters reporting the creation of the smallest-ever droplet of Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP) that still exhibits fluid-like behaviour — achieved by colliding oxygen nuclei rather than the conventional heavy lead nuclei. What is Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP)? Quarks and gluons are the fundamental building blocks of matter — the smallest known constituents. A Quark-Gluon Plasma is an extraordinarily hot, dense state of matter in which quarks and gluons are not bound inside protons and neutrons but move freely. It existed in the first few millionths of a second after the Big Bang, before quarks bound together to form the first protons and neutrons. Key Highlights The Fluidity Paradox: QGP reaches temperatures of trillions of degrees Celsius — among the hottest substances ever created. Despite consisting of only thousands of quarks and gluons (compared to quadrillions of molecules in everyday fluids like water), QGP behaves like a near-perfect fluid with properties like viscosity and flow — not like a gas. A droplet of water has ~quadrillions of molecules; a glob of honey has ~a quintillion sugar molecules. QGP has far fewer particles but still behaves as a fluid — the fluidity paradox. Oxygen-Oxygen Collision Breakthrough: The LHC usually smashes protons or lead nuclei. Oxygen nuclei occupy a middle ground between tiny proton collisions and massive lead collisions. Researchers chose oxygen to identify the tipping point where subatomic matter transitions from gas-like independent particles to a collective fluid. The study found signs of jet quenching (energy suppression) — particles moving through the QGP lose energy before escaping. This was less pronounced in oxygen collisions but noticeable — indicating a dense medium was formed. Data are in better agreement with theoretical models that include quark-gluon energy loss than those that omit it. Scientific Significance: Confirms that a strongly interacting medium (QGP) can emerge even in collisions of relatively light nuclei. Opens a new question: where exactly does the transition between a fluid-like medium and a gas of independent particles occur? About the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Located at CERN (European Laboratory for Particle Physics) near Geneva, Switzerland. World’s largest and most powerful particle accelerator — a 27-kilometre underground ring of superconducting magnets. Accelerates beams of protons or heavy ions to nearly the speed of light. Most famous for enabling the 2012 discovery of the Higgs boson — the particle responsible for giving other particles mass. India–CERN Cooperation: Under a 1996 DAE–CERN protocol, India joined the LHC project, contributing hardware, software, and skilled manpower. Concerns / Significance The finding challenges the assumption that fluid-like collective behaviour requires a large number of particles. Deepens the mystery of the QGP phase transition boundary — of fundamental importance to understanding the early universe. Relevant to India as Indian scientists contribute to LHC experiments under the DAE-CERN protocol. Way Forward Expand oxygen-ion collisions at the LHC to build a statistically significant dataset confirming the fluid-to-gas transition boundary. Upgrade ALICE detector (dedicated QGP detector at LHC) to improve sensitivity for lighter-nuclei collisions. Strengthen India-CERN partnership: India should increase participation in QGP research given its existing contributions under the 1996 DAE-CERN protocol. Invest in theoretical physics: support domestic research institutions (TIFR, IISc) working on QCD (Quantum Chromodynamics) — the theoretical framework governing quarks and gluons. Conclusion The discovery of the smallest QGP droplet with fluid-like behaviour is a landmark in fundamental physics. It demonstrates that the collective behaviour we associate with fluids — viscosity, flow, energy dissipation — can emerge from just thousands of subatomic particles. As scientists probe ever smaller scales, the boundary between a fluid and a gas of independent particles becomes one of physics’ most compelling open questions. Prelims Pointers QGP = Quark-Gluon Plasma — extremely hot, dense state of matter; quarks and gluons move freely; existed microseconds after the Big Bang. Quarks = Fundamental constituents of protons and neutrons; held together by gluons. Gluons = Force-carrying particles that mediate the strong nuclear force between quarks. Fluidity paradox = QGP has only ~thousands of particles yet behaves like a near-perfect fluid — unlike gases. Jet quenching = Energy loss by energetic quarks/gluons passing through QGP dense medium — key evidence for QGP formation. LHC = Large Hadron Collider; 27 km underground ring; located at CERN, Geneva, Switzerland; world’s largest particle accelerator. Higgs boson = Discovered at LHC in 2012; responsible for giving other particles mass. CERN = European Organisation for Nuclear Research (French acronym); headquarters near Geneva. India-CERN protocol = 1996 DAE-CERN agreement; India contributes hardware, software, and manpower to LHC. ALICE detector = A Large Ion Collider Experiment — dedicated QGP detector at LHC. QCD = Quantum Chromodynamics — theoretical framework describing interactions of quarks and gluons via the strong force. Big Bang = ~13.8 billion years ago; QGP existed in the first few millionths of a second after. Practice Mains Question “The discovery of the smallest Quark-Gluon Plasma droplet at the LHC represents a breakthrough in our understanding of matter’s fundamental states. Examine the significance of QGP research and India’s role in global particle physics through its CERN partnership.” (GS Paper 3 | 150 words | 10 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to Quark-Gluon Plasma (QGP), consider the following statements: QGP is a state of matter that existed in the first few millionths of a second after the Big Bang, before the formation of protons and neutrons. Despite consisting of only thousands of subatomic particles, QGP behaves like a near-perfect fluid rather than a gas. In the latest study, researchers used lead nuclei collisions at the LHC to create the smallest-ever QGP droplet. India participates in the LHC project under a 1996 DAE-CERN protocol. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1, 2, and 3 only (b) 1, 2, and 4 only (c) 2, 3, and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (b) Explanation: Statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — the new study used oxygen nuclei (not lead) to create the smallest-ever QGP droplet. Lead nuclei collisions have been used for decades; the breakthrough was using the lighter oxygen nuclei to find the smallest possible QGP droplet that still exhibits fluid behaviour. 2.Mission Senehjori — Assam Muga Silk GS Relevance: GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy | Agriculture | GI Tags | Textile Industry | GS Paper 2 — Government Policies | North East Development Why in News Union Minister Jyotiraditya M. Scindia (MDoNER) along with the Assam Chief Minister launched Mission “Senehjori” — Assam Muga Silk USP, a comprehensive cluster-based initiative to transform Assam’s unique Muga silk sector into a globally competitive luxury textile ecosystem. What is Muga Silk? Muga silk is the world’s only naturally golden silk, obtained from the semi-domesticated silkworm Antheraea assamensis, which feeds exclusively on Som (Machilus bombycina) and Soalu (Litsea polyantha) host plants — both native to Assam. India’s first GI-tagged silk — valued for its natural golden colour, exceptional durability, and lustre that increases with washing. Assam accounts for ~90% of the world’s Muga silk production. Supports nearly 2.6 lakh rearer and weaver families in Assam. Current producer incomes: only ₹18,000–21,000 per year — significantly under-monetised given its rarity and luxury positioning. About Mission Senehjori Feature Detail Full Name Mission “Senehjori” — Assam Muga Silk USP Nodal Ministry MDoNER in convergence with Govt. of Assam, Central Silk Board, Ministry of Textiles Financial Outlay ₹396–411 crore over 3 years MDoNER Contribution ₹136–151 crore Approach Cluster-based; whole-of-government Key Districts Jorhat, Sivasagar, Lakhimpur, Dhemaji, Dibrugarh, Tinsukia, Majuli, Sualkuchi Value Chain Coverage: Host-plant cultivation → Silkworm seed production → Reeling → Weaving → Branding → GI authentication → Export promotion → Digital traceability → Silk tourism Targets by 2028: Establish 5 modernised Muga reeling units and a Muga Spun Mill Create 30 FPOs and over 1,180 Farmer Interest Groups Regenerate 5,000 hectares of Som and Soalu host plants GI-authenticate over 80% of traded Muga silk with digital traceability Extend digital traceability to 8,000+ households Expand Muga silk exports to over 2,000 kg annually Cultural Economy: Development of a Muga Silk Trail, Silk Tourism Park, and annual Muga Utsav festivals Positioning Assam as a premier destination for silk heritage tourism Significance Addresses the paradox of a globally rare product earning minimal returns for producers. Aligns with PM Modi’s vision of an Atmanirbhar North East. Combines economic development, cultural preservation, and export promotion. Reflects the Ashtalakshmi Mahotsav framework — integrating NE India’s unique products into global luxury markets. Concerns Low producer income: despite 90% global production share, rearers earn only ₹18,000–21,000/year — deep value chain inequity. Host plant depletion: Som and Soalu plants are under ecological pressure; regeneration of 5,000 ha is ambitious. GI enforcement: 80% GI authentication target requires robust supply chain monitoring. Market access: transitioning from local markets to premium global luxury markets requires sustained brand building. Counterfeiting risk: natural golden silk faces competition from chemically dyed substitutes. Way Forward Premium branding: position Muga silk at par with French silk (Lyon) and Italian luxury textiles through dedicated global marketing. E-commerce integration: link Muga silk FPOs directly to premium e-commerce platforms (Amazon Luxury, Etsy) for global reach. Fashion industry partnerships: collaborate with Indian and international luxury fashion houses to mainstream Muga silk in designer collections. Ecological conservation: protect Som and Soalu host plant ecosystems through joint forest management with local communities. Conclusion Mission Senehjori is more than a silk development programme — it is an attempt to convert a rare cultural heritage asset into a sustainable economic engine for Assam’s rural communities. If executed well, it could become a template for how India’s unique GI-tagged products can be elevated from artisanal obscurity to global luxury recognition. Prelims Pointers Muga silk = World’s only naturally golden silk; from silkworm Antheraea assamensis; feeds on Som and Soalu host plants. India’s first GI-tagged silk = Muga silk; Assam produces ~90% of world’s Muga silk. Mission Senehjori = Cluster-based Muga silk development initiative; ₹396–411 crore over 3 years; under MDoNER. MDoNER = Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region. Central Silk Board = Statutory body under Ministry of Textiles; nodal agency for silk development. GI Tag = Geographical Indication — protects products with specific geographical origin and quality. Majuli = World’s largest river island; in Assam; among key Muga silk producing areas. Sualkuchi = Known as the “Manchester of Assam” — major silk weaving hub. FPO = Farmer Producer Organisation — aggregates small farmers for collective bargaining and market access. Ashtalakshmi Mahotsav = Annual festival celebrating the 8 North Eastern states; platform for showcasing NE products. Som plant = Machilus bombycina — primary host plant for Muga silkworm. Soalu plant = Litsea polyantha — secondary host plant for Muga silkworm. Practice Mains Question “Mission Senehjori represents India’s ambition to transform a rare cultural heritage asset into a globally competitive luxury product. Critically examine the significance of GI-tagged products in India’s development strategy and the challenges in moving from producer to premium brand.” (GS Paper 3 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to Muga silk and Mission Senehjori, consider the following statements: Muga silk is obtained from the silkworm Antheraea assamensis, which feeds on Som and Soalu host plants. Muga silk is India’s first GI-tagged silk. Assam accounts for approximately 50% of the world’s Muga silk production. Mission Senehjori is anchored by the Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region (MDoNER). Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1, 2, and 3 only (b) 1, 2, and 4 only (c) 2, 3, and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (b) Explanation: Statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — Assam accounts for approximately 90% (not 50%) of the world’s Muga silk production, making it the near-exclusive global producer. This is a key data point about Muga silk’s irreplaceable nature. 3. Amendments to Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025 GS Relevance: GS Paper 2 — Governance | Citizenship | Internal Security | Government Policies Why in News The Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) notified amendments to the Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025, significantly tightening the registration timeline for foreign nationals seeking to extend their stay in India and revising citizenship-related provisions for children of mixed parentage. Key Highlights Revised Registration Timeline: Old rule: Foreigners on visas of up to 180 days had to register within 14 days after the expiry of the 180-day period if seeking extension. New rule: Foreigners must register “any time before the expiry of the 180-day period” — no grace period after expiry. This is a fundamental shift: from post-expiry window to pre-expiry mandatory registration. Stricter Multi-Entry Visa Norms: Foreigners holding visas valid for more than 180 days but with each stay capped at 180 days must register before the 180-day limit if they wish to stay longer. Such extensions will now be granted only in emergent circumstances. Relief for Newborns of Mixed Parentage: The mandatory 30-day electronic intimation to the registration officer upon birth of a child to foreign nationals will not apply if one parent is an Indian citizen who wishes to retain the child’s Indian citizenship. Delayed Foreign Citizenship Clause: If a child of mixed parentage acquires foreign citizenship at a later stage while in India, parents must inform the registration officer within 30 days of acquiring such citizenship. Medical Institutional Compliance: Updated administrative reporting requirements for all hospitals, nursing homes, and medical facilities that provide lodging or medical services to foreign nationals. Broader Citizenship Framework Context: These amendments follow recent draft changes to Citizenship Rules, 2009 — requiring declarations regarding passports from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh. Also follows Citizenship (Amendment) Rules, 2026 — introducing electronic OCI (e-OCI) cards, fully online applications, and stricter norms on dual passports for minors. Significance Plugs a 14-day grace period loophole that allowed foreigners to overstay before initiating registration. Strengthens internal security by ensuring overstay cannot occur without advance registration. The e-OCI card development modernizes India’s diaspora engagement while maintaining regulatory oversight. Reflects India’s intent to tighten immigration governance without compromising legitimate visitor flows. Concerns Operational burden: eliminating the grace period may cause hardship to genuine visitors facing emergencies near the 180-day mark. Awareness gap: tourists and short-stay visitors may not be aware of the tightened rules — risk of inadvertent violations. Diplomatic sensitivity: stricter enforcement for nationals of Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Bangladesh in citizenship rules has potential bilateral sensitivity. Digital infrastructure: the shift to fully online processes requires robust portal infrastructure to prevent technical failures from creating compliance failures. Way Forward Proactive communication: MHA and Indian missions abroad must widely publicise the new pre-expiry registration requirement. Digital portal robustness: ensure the FRRO (Foreigners Regional Registration Office) online portal has adequate capacity and 24/7 uptime. Humanitarian exemptions: clearly define what constitutes “emergent circumstances” for post-180-day stay extensions to prevent discretionary misuse. Review e-OCI rollout: ensure the e-OCI transition is smooth with adequate grievance redressal for the large Indian diaspora. Conclusion India’s immigration rule amendments represent a decisive tightening of the governance framework for foreign nationals — shifting from reactive to proactive compliance. As India’s internal security imperatives grow and its diaspora engagement deepens through e-OCI, the challenge will be to balance security stringency with administrative simplicity. Prelims Pointers Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025 = MHA rules governing entry, stay, and registration of foreign nationals in India. New registration rule = Foreigners must register before 180-day expiry (not within 14 days after) if seeking stay extension. FRRO = Foreigners Regional Registration Office — authority for foreigner registration in India. OCI = Overseas Citizen of India — a form of long-term visa/residency status for foreign nationals of Indian origin; not full citizenship. e-OCI = Electronic OCI card — introduced under Citizenship (Amendment) Rules, 2026; fully online process. Citizenship Rules, 2009 = Draft amendments require declarations on passports from Pakistan, Afghanistan, Bangladesh. Mixed parentage child rule = 30-day intimation not required if one parent is Indian citizen wishing to retain child’s Indian citizenship. LRS — do not confuse; LRS is about outward remittances, not immigration. FEMA — governs forex; Immigration and Foreigners Rules govern stay/registration. Distinct frameworks. Article 11 = Parliament’s power to regulate citizenship by law — constitutional basis for citizenship-related legislation. Practice Mains Question “India’s amendments to the Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025 reflect a shift towards proactive immigration governance. Examine the key changes introduced and their implications for internal security, diaspora engagement, and India’s bilateral relationships.” (GS Paper 2 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the amendments to India’s Immigration and Foreigners Rules, 2025, consider the following statements: Under the new rules, foreigners on visas of up to 180 days must register before the expiry of the 180-day period if they wish to extend their stay. The previous rule allowed foreigners to register within 14 days after the expiry of the 180-day period. The mandatory 30-day intimation rule for birth of a child to foreign nationals is now completely abolished. The Citizenship (Amendment) Rules, 2026 introduced electronic Overseas Citizen of India (e-OCI) cards. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1, 2, and 4 only (b) 1, 3, and 4 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Explanation: Statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — the 30-day intimation rule is not completely abolished; it is exempt only where one parent is an Indian citizen who wishes to retain the child’s Indian citizenship. In other cases involving foreign national parents, the requirement continues. This is a critical distinction. 4.Assam-Meghalaya Border Dispute — Tapat-Lapangap Sector GS Relevance: GS Paper 2 — Centre-State Relations | Federal Issues | Internal Security | North East India Why in News Villagers from Assam and Meghalaya resumed farming activities in the disputed Tapat-Lapangap sector after weeks of intermittent conflict. A temporary arrangement brokered by state government representatives allowed cross-community cultivation — Karbi farmers from Assam cultivating in Meghalaya-claimed fields, and Khasi-Pnar farmers from Meghalaya cultivating in Assam-claimed fields for one agricultural season. Key Highlights Tapat-Lapangap Sector: Tapat = Located in Assam’s West Karbi Anglong district. Lapangap = Located in Meghalaya’s West Jaintia Hills district. Dispute centres on access to agricultural land along an unclear inter-state boundary. The Temporary Arrangement: Karbi community farmers from Assam: cultivate in fields claimed by Meghalaya for one agricultural season. Khasi-Pnar community farmers from Meghalaya: cultivate in fields claimed by Assam for one agricultural season. Described as a temporary confidence-building measure pending final boundary resolution. Background of Assam-Meghalaya Border Dispute: 855-km border with 12 disputed sectors — dating to 1972 when Meghalaya was carved out of Assam under the North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971. The 12 sectors arise from the fact that Meghalaya disputes areas demarcated under the Assam Reorganisation (Meghalaya) Act, 1969. 2022 Agreement: Assam and Meghalaya signed a landmark agreement to resolve 6 of the 12 disputed sectors after high-level political negotiations — the first such breakthrough in 50 years. 6 sectors (including Tapat-Lapangap) still await final resolution. Significance Demonstrates community-level diplomacy supplementing formal government negotiations. The cross-community cultivation arrangement is a creative confidence-building measure that preserves livelihoods while formal talks continue. Tapat-Lapangap is significant because it involves two different tribal communities — Karbi (Assam) and Khasi-Pnar (Meghalaya) — with distinct customary land rights traditions. Concerns Temporary nature: the arrangement covers one agricultural season only — without a permanent solution, conflict can resume. Tribal land rights complexity: both Karbi and Khasi-Pnar communities have customary land ownership systems not easily reconciled with formal state boundary demarcation. Six unresolved sectors: the 2022 agreement resolved only 6 of 12 sectors; the remaining 6 — including Tapat-Lapangap — represent harder, more contentious cases. Escalation risk: agricultural disputes can quickly escalate to communal violence, as seen in the 2021 Assam-Mizoram border clash that resulted in fatalities. Way Forward Fast-track the remaining 6 sectors: build on the 2022 momentum to resolve the remaining disputes through a joint boundary demarcation commission. Community mediation structures: institutionalise community-level dialogue forums (like the Lapangap traditional organisation) as formal stakeholders in border negotiations. Livelihood protection during disputes: create an agricultural insurance/compensation framework for farmers in disputed sectors who lose cultivation seasons to conflict. Customary law integration: the boundary commission should incorporate customary land use records of both Karbi and Khasi-Pnar communities alongside colonial-era survey maps. Conclusion The Tapat-Lapangap arrangement is a small but meaningful step — a reminder that in Northeast India, lasting peace on inter-state boundaries is built not just in government offices but in the fields, through trust between neighbouring communities. The 2022 six-sector agreement showed that political will can resolve decades-old disputes; the same will must now be applied to the remaining six. Prelims Pointers Assam-Meghalaya border = 855 km; 12 disputed sectors since Meghalaya became a full-fledged state in 1972. Meghalaya carved out of Assam = Under North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971; became full state on January 21, 1972. 2022 Agreement = Resolved 6 of 12 disputed sectors; first major breakthrough in 50 years. Tapat = Assam’s West Karbi Anglong district. Lapangap = Meghalaya’s West Jaintia Hills district. Karbi = Major tribal community of Assam (West Karbi Anglong is named after them). Khasi-Pnar = Tribal communities of Meghalaya’s Jaintia Hills region. 2021 Assam-Mizoram clash = Border violence at Lailapur-Vairengte; resulted in fatalities; highlighted urgency of NE border resolution. North-Eastern Areas (Reorganisation) Act, 1971 = Created Meghalaya, Manipur, Tripura as full states (effective 1972). 6th Schedule = Constitutional provision for autonomous district councils in tribal areas of Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, and Tripura. Practice Mains Question “Inter-state border disputes in Northeast India are not merely administrative disagreements but deeply rooted in tribal identities, customary land rights, and historical grievances. Examine the Assam-Meghalaya border dispute in this context and discuss the prospects and challenges of a lasting resolution.” (GS Paper 2 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the Assam-Meghalaya border dispute, consider the following statements: Assam and Meghalaya share an 855-km border with 12 disputed sectors that have existed since Meghalaya became a full state in 1972. In 2022, Assam and Meghalaya signed an agreement to resolve all 12 disputed sectors. The Tapat area is located in Assam’s West Karbi Anglong district, while Lapangap is in Meghalaya’s West Jaintia Hills district. The temporary arrangement in Tapat-Lapangap involved Karbi community farmers from Assam and Khasi-Pnar community farmers from Meghalaya exchanging cultivation of disputed fields. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only (b) 1, 3, and 4 only (c) 2 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (b) Explanation: Statements 1, 3, and 4 are correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — the 2022 agreement resolved only 6 of the 12 disputed sectors, not all 12. The remaining 6 sectors — including Tapat-Lapangap — are still pending final resolution. This is a crucial distinction often confused in examinations. 5.El Niño — An Economic Crisis, Not Just a Weather Event GS Relevance: GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Climate Change | Agriculture | Indian Economy | Disaster Management Why in News The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) ENSO Diagnostic Discussion Report (2026) states that El Niño is likely to emerge with an 82% probability during May–July 2026 and a 96% probability of continuing through winter 2026-27. India’s IMD Long Range Forecast for the Southwest Monsoon Season 2026 projects monsoon rainfall at 92% of the long-period average (LPA) — placing it in the “below normal” category — raising significant economic concerns beyond weather. What is El Niño? El Niño is a periodic warming of sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean, occurring every 2–7 years. It disrupts global weather patterns, typically causing below-normal monsoon rainfall in India, droughts in parts of Asia, and floods in the Americas. The opposite phase — cooling of Pacific waters — is called La Niña, which typically brings above-normal monsoon rainfall to India. Key Highlights Three Economic Transmission Channels of El Niño: Channel 1 — Heat Economy: El Niño intensifies summer heat, reducing productivity of outdoor workers — construction labourers, delivery riders, street vendors, agricultural workers. Heat stress lowers productivity, reduces working hours, and deepens income insecurity for those on daily wages — disproportionately affecting the informal economy. Urban heat island effect: concretisation and shrinking green cover trap heat in cities; poorer households with no cooling face the worst outcomes. Channel 2 — Agricultural Disruption: The Southwest Monsoon supplies ~70% of rainfall needed to water India’s crops and recharge reservoirs and aquifers. A weak monsoon raises irrigation costs, increases groundwater extraction, makes sowing decisions riskier, and worsens crop stress. For small and marginal farmers already facing volatile prices and rising input costs, climatic uncertainty magnifies economic instability. Channel 3 — Food Price Inflation: Food inflation rose to 4.2% in April 2026 (MoSPI CPI data). A weaker monsoon can intensify price pressures across vegetables, pulses, and essentials. Creates a policy trap: the same climate shock can simultaneously weaken economic growth AND intensify inflationary pressures — constraining RBI’s monetary policy options. Concerns Informal economy vulnerability: India’s large informal workforce — estimated at ~90% of total employment — has no cushion against weather-driven income shocks. Food security risk: India’s food inflation, already at 4.2%, could worsen if kharif crop production is significantly impacted. Monetary policy dilemma: simultaneous growth slowdown and inflation (stagflation risk) would constrain RBI from using interest rate cuts to support growth. Groundwater depletion: farmers compensating for weak rainfall through intensified groundwater extraction will worsen already-stressed aquifer levels (15 states over-exploiting as per SoE 2026). Climate-change amplification: El Niño’s effects are now amplified by structural climate change — a temporary weather phenomenon has become part of a permanent risk landscape. Way Forward Heat Action Plans: all major Indian cities to implement comprehensive Heat Action Plans with mandatory employer protections for outdoor workers. Crop Insurance scaling: fast-track payouts under PM Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY) for kharif crop failures — eliminate claim settlement delays. Food price buffer stocks: build strategic reserves of pulses and vegetables in anticipation of El Niño-driven supply disruptions. Irrigation resilience: accelerate completion of PMKSY (Pradhan Mantri Krishi Sinchayee Yojana) projects to reduce monsoon dependence. MNREGA as shock absorber: expand MNREGA working days in drought-affected districts to provide income support to rural workers. Climate-proofing the informal economy: develop weather-indexed income protection schemes for informal workers. Conclusion El Niño is not merely a meteorological event — it is a development stress test. For a country where a large share of employment remains informal and climate-exposed, El Niño functions as an economic transmission mechanism: converting atmospheric heat into labour market fragility, agricultural distress, and inflationary pressure. India’s response must be as comprehensive as the challenge — not just weather preparedness, but economic climate adaptation. Prelims Pointers El Niño = Periodic warming of central/eastern tropical Pacific Ocean; disrupts global weather; causes below-normal monsoon in India. La Niña = Opposite of El Niño — cooling of Pacific waters; typically brings above-normal monsoon to India. ENSO = El Niño-Southern Oscillation — the coupled ocean-atmosphere phenomenon; El Niño and La Niña are its two phases. NOAA = National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration — US agency; monitors global weather and climate. IMD = India Meteorological Department — India’s national weather forecasting agency. LPA = Long Period Average — average monsoon rainfall over a 50-year base period; 92% of LPA = “below normal” per IMD classification. Below normal monsoon = IMD defines as 90–95% of LPA. Southwest Monsoon = India’s primary monsoon; June–September; supplies ~70% of India’s annual rainfall. PMFBY = PM Fasal Bima Yojana — crop insurance scheme for farmers against weather-related losses. PMKSY = PM Krishi Sinchayee Yojana — irrigation scheme; “Har Khet Ko Pani, More Crop Per Drop.” Heat Action Plan = City-level preparedness framework for extreme heat events; pioneered by Ahmedabad (India’s first, 2013). MNREGA = Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act — 100 days guaranteed employment; acts as rural income safety net. Food inflation = Rose to 4.2% in April 2026 (MoSPI CPI data). Practice Mains Question “El Niño is not merely a weather disturbance but an economic transmission mechanism that exposes India’s developmental vulnerabilities. Critically examine the multiple channels through which El Niño threatens India’s economy and suggest a comprehensive climate adaptation strategy.” (GS Paper 3 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about El Niño and its impact on India: El Niño is associated with warming of sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. The India Meteorological Department classifies monsoon rainfall at 92% of the Long Period Average as “below normal.” El Niño typically causes above-normal monsoon rainfall in India by intensifying the Bay of Bengal branch of the monsoon. The Southwest Monsoon supplies approximately 70% of the rainfall needed to water India’s crops and recharge reservoirs. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1, 2, and 4 only (b) 1 and 4 only (c) 2, 3, and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Explanation: Statements 1, 2, and 4 are correct. Statement 3 is incorrect — El Niño causes below-normal monsoon rainfall in India, not above-normal. It weakens the monsoon by disrupting tropical circulation patterns. It is La Niña that is associated with above-normal monsoon rainfall in India. This direction-of-effect reversal is a classic UPSC prelims trap. 6. Is the War in Ukraine Escalating? GS Relevance: GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Effect of Policies of Developed Countries | India’s Foreign Policy | Geopolitics Why in News The Russia-Ukraine war has entered a new and more dangerous phase in May–June 2026, with both sides launching long-range aerial campaigns targeting civilian infrastructure. Key escalation triggers include: Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian oil refineries, a Russian strike on a school in Starobilsk killing 21 people (mostly young girls), a drone hitting a building in Galati, Romania (NATO member), and a strike on the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. Key Highlights Escalation Dynamics (May–June 2026): Both Russia and Ukraine launched long-range aerial campaigns targeting each other’s civilian infrastructure — a shift from ground warfare stalemate. Ukrainian strikes: targeted Russian oil refineries (Ilsky and Novoshakhtinsk) and military logistics hubs; Ukraine now has ~70% of Russian population within drone range. Russian strikes: massive overnight assaults on Kyiv and Dnipro (June 1–2); UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine (HRMMU) reported at least 22 civilians killed and 145 injured. Starobilsk strike (May 21–22): Ukrainian strike on an educational complex; killed 21 people (primarily young girls); injured 44. Galati, Romania (May 29): drone hit a building in this NATO member state — raising the possibility of NATO’s Article 5 being invoked. Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant (May 31): drone strike; Ukraine denied responsibility; raised risk of nuclear accident. Peace Talks Status: US-led peace talks stalled: trilateral talks between US, Russia, and Ukraine in Geneva (February 2026) and subsequent talks in UAE produced no breakthrough. Russia’s maximalist position: demands recognition of sovereignty over Crimea, Donetsk, Luhansk etc.; strict limits on Ukrainian military; legally binding commitment that NATO troops will never deploy in Ukraine. Ukraine’s position: insists on ironclad security guarantees before any ceasefire; refuses to surrender any territory. Trump factor: US President Trump reportedly has “lost interest” in the Ukraine conflict — raising questions about continued US mediation. Economic Pressure on Russia: Russia’s budget deficit: ~5.9 trillion roubles by April 2026 — already exceeding 2025 full-year deficit. Russia has increased VAT twice in 2026; interest rates are high. Russia’s Central Bank Governor Elvira Nabiullina warned of a labour shortage — first in Russia’s modern history. Gennady Zyuganov (Russian Communist Party chief) warned in the Duma that economic collapse could provoke a revolution like 1917. Senior government officials reportedly warned Putin that war spending is on an unaffordable path. NATO Article 5 Risk: The Galati, Romania drone incident raised the spectre of Article 5 invocation — “an armed attack against one NATO member shall be considered an attack against all members.” A unanimous NATO decision is required; Trump’s US may refuse to acquiesce with invocation. India’s Position and Interests India has maintained strategic autonomy — not condemning Russia, continuing oil imports, while urging dialogue. India’s stance: “This is not an era of war” (PM Modi to Putin, 2023) — consistent messaging for de-escalation. India’s interests: energy security (discounted Russian crude oil), diaspora safety (large Indian student community in Ukraine/Europe), global food and fertilizer price stability. Any NATO-Russia direct confrontation would severely disrupt global supply chains — impacting India’s economy. Concerns Nuclear risk: strike on Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant — largest in Europe — could trigger a nuclear accident with catastrophic global consequences. NATO entanglement: Galati incident tests NATO’s collective defence commitment; misjudgement could escalate to direct NATO-Russia conflict. Civilian casualties: shift to long-range warfare maximizes collateral damage and civilian deaths. Global economic impact: prolonged war continues to distort energy markets, food prices (Ukraine is a major wheat exporter), and supply chains. Stalemate trap: both sides appear to be fighting to be in a stronger negotiating position — neither can win decisively, yet neither will accept the current line. Way Forward Neutral mediators: India, Turkey, or the Vatican could serve as credible neutral mediators given their non-aligned positions. Nuclear safety protocol: IAEA must establish an international monitoring presence at Zaporizhzhia to prevent nuclear accident. Humanitarian ceasefire: even if full political settlement is elusive, a humanitarian ceasefire corridor should be established. India’s diplomatic role: India should use its unique relationships with both Russia and the West to facilitate informal back-channel dialogue. Conclusion The Ukraine war’s escalation into long-range civilian infrastructure targeting represents a dangerous new phase — where the risk of miscalculation leading to NATO-Russia confrontation or nuclear accident has significantly increased. For India, the war’s resolution is not merely a geopolitical interest but an economic and strategic necessity — as every month of continued conflict deepens global instability. Prelims Pointers Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant = Europe’s largest nuclear plant; in Russian-held southeastern Ukraine; struck May 31, 2026. Starobilsk = City in Russian-held Luhansk Oblast; Ukrainian strike on educational complex killed 21. Galati = City in Romania (NATO member); drone hit a building — May 29, 2026. NATO Article 5 = Collective defence clause — attack on one member = attack on all; requires unanimous decision. HRMMU = UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine — reports civilian casualty data. Elvira Nabiullina = Governor, Central Bank of Russia; warned of labour shortage. Gennady Zyuganov = Chief, Russian Communist Party; warned of economic-collapse-triggered revolution. Russia’s budget deficit = ~5.9 trillion roubles by April 2026; exceeds full-year 2025 deficit. Ilsky and Novoshakhtinsk = Russian oil refineries targeted by Ukrainian drones. UN Secretary-General = António Guterres; called for immediate de-escalation at emergency UNSC meeting. Crimea = Russian-annexed 2014; internationally recognized as Ukrainian territory. Donetsk, Luhansk = Russian-annexed 2022; claimed by Russia; recognized only by Russia and a few states. India’s position = Strategic autonomy; “not an era of war”; continues Russian oil imports; urges dialogue. Practice Mains Question “The Russia-Ukraine war’s escalation into long-range civilian infrastructure targeting has raised the spectre of both nuclear accident and NATO-Russia confrontation. Examine the geopolitical dynamics of the escalating conflict and assess India’s strategic interests and diplomatic options.” (GS Paper 2 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the Russia-Ukraine war escalation (May–June 2026), consider the following statements: Ukraine scaled up drone attacks targeting Russian oil refineries and military logistics hubs in deep Russian territory. NATO’s Article 5 automatically triggers a collective military response when any NATO member is attacked, without requiring member-state consensus. The Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, struck by a drone on May 31, is Europe’s largest nuclear power plant located in Russian-held southeastern Ukraine. Russia’s budget deficit had reached approximately 5.9 trillion roubles by April 2026, exceeding the full-year 2025 deficit. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only (b) 1, 3, and 4 only (c) 2, 3, and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (b) Explanation: Statements 1, 3, and 4 are correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — NATO’s Article 5 does not automatically trigger a collective military response. It requires a unanimous decision by all NATO members. This is a critical distinction — Article 5 establishes the obligation to consider an attack on one as an attack on all, but the nature of the response is decided collectively. The Trump administration’s potential refusal to consent is relevant here. 7. Coastal Adaptation — Between Concrete and Managed Retreat GS Relevance: GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Climate Change | Disaster Management | GS Paper 1 — Geophysical Phenomena Why in News With India possessing one of the world’s longest coastlines (~7,500 km) and millions living in low-lying coastal areas, a critical debate is emerging about India’s coastal adaptation strategy: hard engineering (seawalls, reclamation) vs managed retreat vs a hybrid third way. The article warns that India risks maladaptation — using engineering solutions that amplify future catastrophe while protecting the wealthy at the expense of the vulnerable. Key Highlights The Three Approaches to Coastal Adaptation: Approach Method Risk Hard Engineering Seawalls, land reclamation, embankments Maladaptation trap — protects valuable real estate but diverts risk to poor communities Managed Retreat State buyouts, relocation, red-zoning Effective in high-income countries but produces chaotic displacement in India Hybrid Strategy Law + policy + engineering + nature-based solutions Best fit for India — but requires political will and institutional capacity Global Examples of Maladaptation: Nigeria — “Great Wall of Lagos”: land reclamation project protects financial district and luxury real estate; diverts tidal energy to neighbouring low-income Alpha Beach — accelerating erosion there. Vietnam — Mekong Delta dikes: high dikes maintain rice production but prevent natural sediment deposition by rivers → Mekong Delta is sinking faster than sea level is rising. India — Kosi River embankments: built under the 1954 Kosi Agreement (India-Nepal) from Bhimnagar into North Bihar. The confined river deposits silt on its own bed rather than the floodplain, raising the riverbed several metres above surrounding land. When monsoon rains breach embankments → catastrophic floods. Global Examples of Managed Retreat: US: Hazard Mitigation Grants — purchase flood-prone homes at pre-disaster market rates; convert land to permanent open space. UK: “Managed realignment” — intentionally breach ageing seawalls to create salt marshes as natural buffers. New Zealand: “Red-zoning” — restrict developers from rebuilding in high-risk areas. Panama: relocating Guna Indigenous community from sinking island to mainland (2024) — culturally traumatic even when economically managed. India’s Managed Retreat Experience: Odisha, 2018: Govt moved 500+ families from Satabhaya cluster of 7 villages (devoured by Bay of Bengal) to rehabilitation colony at Bagapatia. Housing provided but families transitioned from landowners to daily-wage labourers — social safety nets destroyed. Sundarbans: similar stories of chaotic displacement without adequate rehabilitation. The Hybrid Third Way: Bangladesh — Mongla Port: transforming a port city into a “climate-resilient town” with investment in schools, factories, and raised infrastructure — a model of socially equitable managed development. China — Sponge Cities: Ningbo and Shanghai installing permeable pavements, rain gardens, and restoring wetlands to absorb water — “sponge city” model. India needs to: Identify “receiver cities” in the hinterland and invest in infrastructure now. Treat displaced coastal people as “pioneers” of a new national geography — not refugees or encroachers. Reform coastal land laws to formally recognise informal settlements. Invest in nature-based solutions — mangroves, bioswales, artificial reefs — rather than seawalls. Concerns Maladaptation trap: engineering that protects luxury coastal zones while redirecting flood risk to poor communities is not adaptation but subsidized catastrophe. Social equity failure: managed retreat in India has historically displaced the poor without adequate rehabilitation — converting subsistence farmers into wage labourers. Legal land title gap: most coastal residents lack formal land titles — limiting compensation eligibility during displacement. Kosi-type risks: the Kosi embankment experience shows that hard engineering on flood-prone rivers can make eventual floods more catastrophic, not less. Cultural loss: indigenous and coastal communities like the Guna (Panama) lose identity, ancestral connection, and traditional livelihoods when relocated — beyond economic displacement. Way Forward Receiver cities strategy: India must identify and develop climate-resilient hinterland cities as destinations for voluntary coastal migration. Coastal Land Reform: formally recognise informal coastal settlements to enable equitable compensation and dignified relocation. Nature-based solutions priority: invest in mangroves, bioswales, and artificial reefs over seawalls — proven to be more resilient and cost-effective. Climate pioneer framework: legal recognition of climate-displaced persons as “pioneers” entitled to state-supported relocation — not “refugees.” Social impact assessments: mandatory for all coastal engineering projects to evaluate equity impacts before approval. IPCC AR6 alignment: India’s coastal adaptation policy should be aligned with the four strategies articulated in the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (protection, accommodation, advance, retreat). Conclusion India stands at a coastal crossroads. It cannot afford to surrender its coastline to the sea — but it also cannot afford the social injustice of concrete walls that protect the wealthy while flooding the poor. The third way — legally grounded, equity-focused, nature-informed hybrid adaptation — is not just the most ethical choice; it is the most durable one. Prelims Pointers Managed retreat = Purposeful, coordinated movement of people and infrastructure away from high environmental risk areas — one of four primary coastal adaptation strategies per IPCC AR6. IPCC AR6 = Sixth Assessment Report (2021-22); identifies 4 coastal adaptation strategies: protection, accommodation, advance, and retreat. Maladaptation = Adaptation measures that increase vulnerability elsewhere or for other groups — opposite of intended outcome. Kosi Agreement (1954) = India-Nepal agreement; built Kosi embankments from Bhimnagar into North Bihar; confined river now floods catastrophically when breached. Satabhaya, Odisha = Cluster of 7 villages relocated by Odisha Govt in 2018 after being devoured by Bay of Bengal; rehabilitated at Bagapatia. Guna people = Indigenous community of Panama relocated from sinking island to mainland in 2024. Sponge city = Urban design concept absorbing rainwater through permeable surfaces, gardens, wetlands — pioneered in China (Ningbo, Shanghai). Mongla = Bangladesh port city being transformed into climate-resilient town — cited as hybrid adaptation model. Mekong Delta = Vietnam; sinking faster than sea rise due to dikes blocking natural sediment deposition. Mangroves = Coastal forests providing natural storm surge protection, carbon sequestration, and fishery habitat — preferred nature-based solution. Bioswales = Vegetated channels designed to slow and filter runoff — nature-based urban drainage. Hazard Mitigation Grants (US) = Federal programme buying flood-prone homes at pre-disaster market rates; converting land to open space. Coastal Regulation Zone (CRZ) Notification = India’s primary coastal regulation framework — governs development within specified distances from the coast. Practice Mains Question “India’s coastal adaptation strategy risks falling into the maladaptation trap — using engineering solutions that protect valuable real estate while amplifying risk for vulnerable communities. Critically examine India’s approach to coastal climate adaptation and suggest a hybrid framework that balances development, equity, and ecological sustainability.” (GS Paper 3 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about coastal climate adaptation: Managed retreat refers to the purposeful movement of people and infrastructure away from areas at risk of environmental hazards, and is one of the four primary coastal adaptation strategies identified in the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report. The Kosi river embankments, built under the 1954 Kosi Agreement, have successfully prevented catastrophic flooding in North Bihar by controlling the river’s course. The “sponge city” concept, implemented in cities like Ningbo and Shanghai, involves designing cities to absorb rainwater through permeable surfaces, rain gardens, and wetland restoration. Maladaptation refers to adaptation measures that inadvertently increase vulnerability for some communities while protecting others. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only (b) 1, 3, and 4 only (c) 2 and 4 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (b) Explanation: Statements 1, 3, and 4 are correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — the Kosi embankments have not successfully prevented flooding; the opposite is true. By confining the river, silt accumulates on the riverbed, raising it several metres above surrounding land. When embankments breach during heavy monsoon, the result is catastrophic flooding — more severe than if embankments had not been built. The Kosi embankments are cited as a classic example of maladaptation. 8.Double Burden of Malnutrition — NFHS-6 and Vellore Study GS Relevance: GS Paper 2 — Health | Social Justice | Government Policies | Vulnerable Sections | GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy Why in News Two near-simultaneously released studies — the National Family Health Survey-6 (NFHS-6) data and a CMC-Vellore and ARUMDA (TIFR) collaborative study (MAL-ED study, published in Lancet Regional Health Southeast Asia) — together reveal a critical shift in India’s nutrition challenge: a double burden of malnutrition where both undernutrition and overnutrition (obesity) are simultaneously threatening public health. Key Highlights What is the Double Burden of Malnutrition? As defined by the WHO: malnutrition includes undernutrition (wasting, stunting, underweight), inadequate vitamins/minerals, overweight, obesity, and diet-related non-communicable diseases — all existing simultaneously in the same population or even the same individual. NFHS-6 Key Data: Stunting, wasting, and severe wasting have fallen compared to NFHS-5 — but progress is neither uniform nor even; pockets of significant concern remain. Overweight and obesity among adults (especially women and urban, wealthier groups): 30.7% of women aged 15-49 were overweight/obese in 2023-24 (NFHS-6) vs 24% in NFHS-5 — a significant increase. This represents a transgenerational burden: maternal overweight is a predictor of childhood nutrition problems. MAL-ED Vellore Study (CMC-Vellore + ARUMDA, TIFR): Recruited 251 children from urban slums in Vellore, Tamil Nadu between 2010-2012; followed up until age 9. Published in peer-reviewed journal Lancet Regional Health Southeast Asia by Birsen Yilmaz et al. Age Nutritional Finding Age 2 ~45% stunted Age 7 26.3% thin; 5.2% overweight/obese Age 9 21.6% underweight; 14.6% overweight/obese   Mean birth weight: 2.7 kg; 17% born with low birth weight. 80% of stunted children caught up by age 9 — but obesity emergence by school age is the new concern. Mother’s BMI was a predictor of childhood thinness — especially at ages 5 and 9. Surprise finding (Dr. Ullas Kolthur, TIFR): not that low-birth-weight children became obese — but that weight-related issues begin so early (before age 9). Two Malnutrition Trajectories (Dr. Nihal Thomas, CMC Vellore): Persistence of undernutrition → stunting + defects in insulin secretion + risk of lean diabetes (Type 5 / malnutrition-related diabetes). Overnutrition → overweight → risk of diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular disease. Key Policy Implication: A one-sided intervention addressing only undernutrition while ignoring overnutrition would be a “mistake the country can scarcely afford.” FAO recommendation: programmes designed to combat undernutrition (ICDS, school meals, PDS) must be re-thought to address both inadequate calories/micronutrients AND ultra-processed, high-sugar, high-fat diets. Concerns Policy mismatch: India’s nutrition programmes (ICDS, PDS, POSHAN Abhiyaan) are predominantly designed for undernutrition — not calibrated for the dual burden. Urban slum vulnerability: low/middle-income urban communities face both thinness AND obesity simultaneously — contradicting the traditional rural undernutrition paradigm. Cheap processed food availability: easy availability of cheap packaged foods, sugary drinks, and deep-fried sachets vs poor access to fruits, vegetables, and proteins creates a nutrition transition trap. Transgenerational risk: maternal obesity (30.7% of women 15-49 overweight) predicts childhood nutrition problems — creating an intergenerational cycle. Lean diabetes (Type 5): undernutrition in early life can lead to insulin secretion defects even in lean individuals — a largely unaddressed public health challenge. Monitoring gap: current child health monitoring focuses on the first 1,000 days (birth to age 2) — the Vellore study shows problems emerging between ages 7-9, after monitoring typically reduces. Way Forward Redesign ICDS and school meal programmes: incorporate both calorie adequacy AND diet quality — restrict ultra-processed foods; increase fruits, vegetables, protein. Extend growth monitoring beyond 1,000 days: monitor children through ages 7-9 when both thinness and obesity emerge — not just in early childhood. Maternal nutrition programmes: address maternal obesity as a separate policy priority under POSHAN 2.0 — beyond the traditional focus on maternal undernutrition. Regulate cheap processed food: implement school canteen guidelines banning sugary drinks and ultra-processed snacks. Targeted dietary differentiation: as Dr. Kolthur recommends, “feeding all children the same diet is not a great idea” — tailor nutritional interventions based on individual child BMI trajectories. Lean diabetes awareness: train frontline health workers to identify and refer lean diabetes (Type 5) cases — currently misclassified as Type 1 or Type 2. Conclusion India’s nutrition transition is complete: we are no longer a country facing only hunger — we are a country simultaneously facing hunger and excess, often in the same community, sometimes in the same child. The NFHS-6 and Vellore study together demand a fundamental reimagining of India’s nutrition policy — from a programme designed to add calories to one designed to optimize nutrition across the full spectrum of the life course. Prelims Pointers Double burden of malnutrition = Simultaneous existence of undernutrition (stunting, wasting, underweight) AND overnutrition (overweight, obesity) in the same population. NFHS-6 = National Family Health Survey-6; 2023-24 data; published by MoHFW; tracks health and nutrition indicators. MAL-ED study = Malnutrition and Enteric Diseases study; 251 children in Vellore slums followed from birth to age 9; CMC-Vellore + ARUMDA, TIFR. Stunting = Chronic undernutrition — low height for age; indicates long-term deprivation. Wasting = Acute undernutrition — low weight for height; indicates recent severe food shortage. BMI = Body Mass Index — weight/height² ratio; used to classify thinness, normal, overweight, obese. Lean diabetes (Type 5) = Malnutrition-related diabetes in lean individuals; insulin secretion defect; NOT the same as Type 1 or Type 2. ICDS = Integrated Child Development Services — India’s flagship nutrition and early childhood programme. POSHAN Abhiyaan (POSHAN 2.0) = PM’s Overarching Scheme for Holistic Nourishment; targets stunting, undernutrition, anaemia, and low birth weight. 30.7% women 15-49 overweight/obese (NFHS-6, 2023-24) vs 24% in NFHS-5. 1,000 days = Critical window from conception to age 2; India’s nutrition programmes primarily focus here — Vellore study shows this is insufficient. Lancet Regional Health Southeast Asia = Peer-reviewed journal where MAL-ED Vellore study findings were published. FAO recommendation = ICDS, school meals, PDS must address both undernutrition AND poor-quality diets. Practice Mains Question “India is now simultaneously facing the challenges of undernutrition and overnutrition — a double burden that demands a fundamental redesign of its nutrition policy architecture. Critically examine the evidence from NFHS-6 and the Vellore MAL-ED study and suggest a comprehensive policy response.” (GS Paper 2 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements based on the NFHS-6 data and the CMC-Vellore MAL-ED study on malnutrition: The NFHS-6 data shows that 30.7% of women aged 15-49 were overweight or obese in 2023-24, compared to 24% in NFHS-5. The MAL-ED Vellore study found that by age nine, the prevalence of overweight/obesity among children was higher than the prevalence of underweight. The Vellore study found that approximately 45% of children were stunted at age two, but 80% had caught up in height by age nine. According to the WHO definition, malnutrition includes both undernutrition and overweight/obesity. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1, 3, and 4 only (b) 1, 2, and 4 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (a) Explanation: Statements 1, 3, and 4 are correct. Statement 2 is incorrect — at age nine, the study found 21.6% underweight vs 14.6% overweight/obese. So underweight prevalence was still higher than overweight/obesity at age nine — though the gap had narrowed considerably from earlier ages. The statement is factually wrong in asserting overweight/obesity was higher. 9. Urban Fire Safety — Residential Buildings Most Vulnerable GS Relevance: GS Paper 3 — Disaster Management | Internal Security | GS Paper 2 — Governance | Urban Planning Why in News A deadly fire in South Delhi’s Malviya Nagar (a hotel operating in a converted residential structure without a Fire NOC) has reignited focus on India’s chronic urban fire safety gaps — particularly the vulnerability of residential buildings, enforcement failures, and the resource constraints facing fire services. Key Highlights Scale of the Problem: 5,888 fire-related deaths recorded nationally in 2024 (NCRB data). ~3,555 deaths (60%) occurred inside residential/dwelling buildings — making residential structures the single largest source of fire fatalities. Unlike commercial buildings, most Indian residential spaces operate without smoke alarms, suppression systems, evacuation planning, or safety awareness. Malviya Nagar Fire — Key Facts: Hotel Flourish Stays B&B was originally a residential structure converted to commercial use. Owner increased rooms from 6 to 26 across 6 levels — without a Fire NOC (No-Objection Certificate). Triggered by a short circuit (most common urban fire trigger along with gas leaks). Institutional Framework: Fire services are a state subject — included in the XII Schedule of the Constitution under Article 243(W) as a municipal function. National Building Code (NBC) 2016 (Bureau of Indian Standards) covers: smoke management, periodic audits, electrical fire prevention, sensors, building management systems. Problem: implementation and enforcement gap — not the absence of regulations. 15th Finance Commission: recommended ₹5,000 crore for strengthening fire services at state level. Why Residential Areas Are Most Vulnerable: Illegal conversion: residential properties converted to B&Bs, hostels, and commercial spaces without compliance. No fire safety infrastructure: no sprinklers, smoke alarms, or evacuation plans in most homes. Dense urban settlements: narrow lanes restrict fire engine access; NIDM identifies high-density urban settlements as a key fire vulnerability factor. Electrical overloading: high use of electrical equipment → faulty connections → fire risk. Resource constraints: Ministry of Home Affairs (2022) report noted a “considerable gap in operational capabilities of fire and emergency services in Indian cities.” Fire Causes and Side Effects (NIDM): Most common triggers: electrical short circuits and gas leaks. Fire depletes oxygen → most victims die of asphyxiation (smoke inhalation). Release of toxic gases from burning materials → choking and breathing failure. Heating effect → expansion of liquids, gases, metals → explosions. Concerns Enforcement vacuum: NBC 2016 exists but compliance is not enforced — especially in dense urban areas. Illegal conversions: homeowners converting residential properties to commercial use without Fire NOCs — systematically unchecked. Resource gaps: 15th Finance Commission’s ₹5,000 crore recommendation for fire service modernisation — implementation status unclear. High-rise challenge: growing urban high-rises require specialised equipment (aerial platforms, hydraulic ladders) that most city fire departments lack. State vs municipal disconnect: fire services are constitutionally a municipal function (Article 243W) but municipalities often lack the financial and technical capacity to modernise. Way Forward Mandatory fire audits: annual fire safety audits for all residential buildings above 3 storeys and commercial-residential hybrid structures. Fire NOC enforcement: strict penalties for operating commercial establishments in residential structures without Fire NOC — including demolition for repeat offenders. Implement 15th FC recommendation: allocate and utilise the ₹5,000 crore for fire service modernisation — procurement of aerial vehicles, thermal cameras, breathing apparatus. Urban fire database: create a national fire incident database for pattern analysis and preventive targeting of high-risk zones. National Urban Fire Safety Mission: modelled on NDMA guidelines — mandatory fire safety standards for all urban local bodies. Building approval digitisation: integrate fire NOC into online building approval processes to prevent post-construction commercial conversion without compliance. Conclusion India’s urban fire tragedy is one of governance failure, not ignorance. The National Building Code exists; the standards are clear; the constitutional assignment of municipal responsibility is established. What is missing is a culture of enforcement and accountability. Until fire safety compliance is treated with the same seriousness as structural safety, India’s residential buildings will continue to be the deadliest places in any fire. Prelims Pointers Fire services = State subject; listed in XII Schedule of Constitution under Article 243(W) as a municipal function. National Building Code (NBC) 2016 = Published by Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS); sets construction, maintenance, and fire safety standards. Fire NOC = No-Objection Certificate from fire department — mandatory for commercial buildings; frequently absent in illegal conversions. NCRB 2024 fire data = 5,888 fire deaths; 60% (3,555) in residential buildings. 15th Finance Commission = Recommended ₹5,000 crore for strengthening fire services at state level. Article 243(W) = Constitutional provision listing fire services as a function of municipalities (via XII Schedule). NIDM = National Institute of Disaster Management — key advisory body; identifies urban fire risk factors. MHA 2022 report = Noted “considerable gap in operational capabilities of fire and emergency services in Indian cities.” Asphyxiation = Most common cause of fire death — smoke depletes oxygen; toxic gas inhalation. Short circuit = Most common trigger for urban residential fires; second most common: gas leaks. XII Schedule = Added by **74th Constitutional Amendment (1992)**; lists 18 functions to be devolved to urban local bodies (municipalities). Practice Mains Question “Despite a robust National Building Code and constitutional assignment of fire safety to municipalities, India’s urban fire fatalities remain concentrated in residential buildings. Critically examine the structural reasons for this failure and suggest a comprehensive fire safety governance framework for Indian cities.” (GS Paper 2/3 | 250 words | 15 marks) Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to fire safety in India, consider the following statements: Fire services are a state subject listed in the XII Schedule of the Constitution under Article 243(W) as a municipal function. According to NCRB 2024 data, approximately 60% of fire-related deaths in India occurred in residential or dwelling buildings. The National Building Code of India was first published in 2016 by the Bureau of Indian Standards. The Fifteenth Finance Commission recommended a provision of ₹5,000 crore for strengthening fire services at the state level. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1, 2, and 4 only (b) 1, 3, and 4 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2, 3, and 4 Correct Answer: (d) Explanation: All four statements are correct. Fire services are constitutionally a municipal function under Article 243(W) via the XII Schedule; NCRB 2024 confirms ~60% residential fire deaths; the NBC was published by BIS in 2016 (latest version); and the 15th Finance Commission did recommend ₹5,000 crore for fire service modernisation.