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Apr 3, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content India’s Multi-Hazard Early Warning Decision Support System PM-WANI Scheme Accelerates Public Wi-Fi Expansion across India with Over 4 Lakh Hotspots India’s Multi-Hazard Early Warning Decision Support System Why in News ? PIB highlighted measurable gains of MHEW-DSS—~30% improvement in forecast accuracy and 50% reduction in preparation time—showcasing India’s shift to impact-based digital forecasting. System now delivers location-specific warnings to ~80% population, significantly reducing evacuation costs (to one-third since 1999) through improved cyclone prediction accuracy. Recognition through national and global awards (e-Governance Award 2025, UNDRR Sasakawa Award) underscores India’s leadership in multi-hazard early warning systems. What is MHEW-DSS? MHEW-DSS is an integrated, GIS-enabled digital forecasting platform developed by IMD under Mission Mausam, enabling automated, real-time, impact-based multi-hazard early warning dissemination across sectors and regions. It transforms fragmented forecasting into a unified system by integrating satellite, radar, AWS and ocean data, ensuring seamless processing, visualization and decision-support for meteorologists and administrators. Over 90% automation in data processing and utilisation of >95% numerical weather prediction inputs enhances forecast reliability, particularly for extreme weather events like cyclones and heatwaves. Relevance GS I (Geography + Disaster Management) Extreme weather events: cyclones, heatwaves, floods—improved forecasting accuracy. Role of monsoon variability and climate change in multi-hazard vulnerability. Disaster preparedness and vulnerability mapping (district-level risk profiling). GS III (Environment, Disaster Management, Science & Tech) Climate adaptation and disaster risk reduction (DRR). GIS, AI/ML, numerical weather prediction → GovTech integration. Alignment with Sendai Framework and SDGs (11, 13). Practice Questions Q1.“Early warning systems are the first line of defence against climate-induced disasters.”Examine the role of India’s Multi-Hazard Early Warning Decision Support System (MHEW-DSS) in strengthening disaster preparedness. (250 words) Spatial Coverage and Reach Operational across India with regional extension to North Indian Ocean; IMD as RSMC provides cyclone and marine advisories to countries like Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Oman and UAE. Hyper-local forecasting via Mausamgram covers 1.5 lakh pincodes, 5,700 blocks and 6.2 lakh villages, ensuring last-mile connectivity through SMS, mobile apps, APIs and Panchayati Raj networks. Impact-based warnings currently reach nearly 80% of India’s population, including vulnerable coastal, agrarian and urban regions exposed to multiple climate hazards. Rationale and Need India’s high vulnerability: over 75% districts are multi-hazard prone; floods affect ~40 million hectares annually, while cyclones and heatwaves are increasing in intensity and frequency. Earlier forecasting systems were fragmented and slow, lacking actionable insights, leading to higher disaster mortality, economic losses and inefficient evacuation strategies. Aligns with Sendai Framework, SDGs (11, 13) and UN’s “Early Warning for All” initiative, promoting anticipatory governance and risk-informed disaster management. Institutional Framework Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Earth Sciences; implementing agency: India Meteorological Department (est. 1875), supported by Mission Mausam (2024) for improved modelling and observation infrastructure. Core system includes Weather Analysis and Forecast Enabling System (WAFES), enabling GIS-based visualization, real-time data assimilation and forecast generation across IMD’s network. Integrated with NDMA, NDRF, SDMAs and over 200 organisations including NITI Aayog, ensuring interoperable data sharing and coordinated disaster response. Operational Mechanism Multi-source real-time data (satellites, radars, AWS) is collected, standardised and processed using ensemble modelling and bias correction, improving accuracy during extreme weather events. Forecast lead time increased from 5 to 7 days; preparation time reduced by ~50%, enabling faster dissemination and improved anticipatory action by authorities. Provides colour-coded, impact-based warnings and sector-specific advisories (agriculture, health, energy), translating complex meteorological data into actionable information. Data and Evidence Forecast accuracy improved by ~30% and preparation time reduced by 50%, demonstrating efficiency gains from digital transformation. Evacuation costs reduced to one-third (1999–2024) due to improved cyclone landfall prediction accuracy in 3–5 day forecasts. Economic savings include ₹250 crore from indigenisation, ₹57.6 crore annual manpower savings and ₹1.4 crore/year from reduced paper usage. Agriculture benefits: farmers using advisories report 52.5% higher annual income; potential ₹13,331 crore benefit in rain-fed districts. Environmental gains include saving ~210,240 kWh electricity annually, 23.4 tonnes paper, ~63 kilolitres water and avoiding ~2.57 tonnes CO₂ emissions. Governance and Administrative Significance Enables anticipatory governance through real-time, evidence-based decision-making, strengthening Centre-State coordination and inter-agency disaster response. Enhances last-mile delivery via multi-channel dissemination (SMS, apps, APIs), improving inclusivity and accessibility for vulnerable populations. Promotes digital governance with transparency, interoperability and standardised data-sharing across ministries and departments. Economic Implications Reduces disaster-related losses, evacuation costs and infrastructure damage, improving fiscal resilience and public expenditure efficiency. Supports weather-sensitive sectors like agriculture, energy and transport through predictive intelligence, enhancing productivity and reducing uncertainty. Strengthens Atmanirbhar Bharat by promoting indigenous forecasting technology and reducing dependence on foreign systems. Social and Ethical Dimensions Protects vulnerable communities (farmers, fishermen, women, children) through targeted advisories, promoting equity in disaster preparedness. Supports public health through heatwave alerts, disease prediction and preparedness planning for healthcare systems. Builds public trust through reliable, timely and accessible warning systems, enhancing community resilience. Environmental, Security and Technological Dimensions Facilitates climate adaptation through improved monitoring of extreme weather, air quality and environmental indicators. Strengthens coastal and maritime security through accurate cyclone and marine advisories, reducing risks to fisheries and shipping. Represents GovTech advancement integrating GIS, AI/ML models, APIs and digital platforms for scalable disaster risk management. Challenges and Limitations Last-mile connectivity gaps persist in remote and tribal regions, limiting universal access to early warning systems. Data integration and interoperability challenges across agencies and states hinder seamless real-time information sharing. Capacity constraints at local levels affect interpretation and effective utilisation of impact-based forecasts. Requires continuous infrastructure upgrades and faces cybersecurity risks due to increasing digitalisation. Behavioural gaps where warnings do not always translate into timely action due to awareness and trust deficits. Way Forward Achieve universal early warning coverage aligned with UN’s “Early Warning for All” initiative by 2027. Strengthen last-mile delivery through community institutions (SHGs, Panchayats) and multilingual, localised communication strategies. Integrate AI, big data and IoT for hyper-local forecasting and real-time predictive analytics. Enhance institutional coordination through unified disaster data platforms and legal frameworks for seamless data sharing. Build grassroots capacity through training of district and block-level officials for effective interpretation and response. Mainstream MHEW-DSS outputs into urban planning, agriculture policies and climate adaptation strategies for long-term resilience. Prelims Pointers MHEW-DSS launched in January 2024 by IMD under Ministry of Earth Sciences. Mausamgram provides forecasts up to 10 days covering over 6.2 lakh villages. IMD is a Regional Specialized Meteorological Centre (RSMC) under WMO. Forecast lead time increased to 7 days; automation exceeds 90%. Impact-based forecasting focuses on consequences rather than only weather parameters. PM-WANI Scheme Accelerates Public Wi-Fi Expansion across India with Over 4 Lakh Hotspots Why in News ? Government informed Parliament that PM-WANI has crossed 4.09 lakh public Wi-Fi hotspots with 2.44 crore users and ~58.64 petabytes data consumption. Recent policy interventions—TRAI tariff cap (2025), roaming, FTTH integration and data offloading—have improved affordability, interoperability and business viability. Scheme gaining traction as a key instrument for bridging digital divide and complementing 4G/5G networks under Digital India and National Broadband Mission. What is PM-WANI Scheme? PM-WANI (Prime Minister Wi-Fi Access Network Interface) is a decentralised, market-driven framework enabling public Wi-Fi proliferation through unlicensed PDOs, transforming local shops into low-cost internet access points. It follows a four-tier architecture—PDO, PDOA, App Provider, Central Registry (C-DOT)—ensuring interoperability, seamless authentication and scalable last-mile connectivity without licensing barriers. Represents a paradigm shift from telecom-centric broadband delivery to community-based internet distribution, reducing entry barriers and promoting digital inclusion. Relevance GS II (Governance) Digital inclusion and last-mile connectivity. De-licensing reform → ease of doing business. Cooperative federalism in digital infrastructure expansion. GS III (Infrastructure) Complement to BharatNet and National Broadband Mission. Affordable internet as core infrastructure for growth. Practice Question Q1.“Affordable internet access is a key enabler of inclusive growth.”Evaluate the role of PM-WANI in bridging India’s digital divide. (250 words) Spatial Coverage and Current Status As of Feb 2026, 4,09,403 public Wi-Fi hotspots operational across States/UTs, with leading contributors being Delhi, Maharashtra, Karnataka and Uttar Pradesh. Ecosystem includes 207 PDO Aggregators and 113 App Providers, reflecting expanding private participation and competitive service delivery in public Wi-Fi infrastructure. Total users reached 2.44 crore, consuming ~58.64 petabytes of data, indicating growing adoption, especially in urban and semi-urban regions. Rationale and Need Addresses persistent digital divide—while mobile broadband expands, affordability and device constraints limit access for bottom-of-pyramid populations, especially in rural and informal sectors. India’s data demand surge (video streaming, e-governance services) requires complementary infrastructure beyond spectrum-based mobile networks to avoid congestion and inefficiency. Aligns with Digital India, National Broadband Mission and SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation, Infrastructure), promoting affordable, universal internet access. Institutional and Regulatory Framework Implemented by Department of Telecommunications (DoT) with policy enablement approach, minimising government intervention while encouraging private entrepreneurship. Central Registry maintained by C-DOT ensures interoperability, authentication and standardisation across PDOs, PDOAs and App Providers. TRAI tariff order (June 2025) mandates FTTH broadband up to 200 Mbps for PDOs at ≤2× residential tariffs, improving affordability and business viability. Operational Mechanism PDOs (local shops) provide Wi-Fi access points using FTTH or broadband connections, while PDOAs manage aggregation, authentication and accounting functions. App Providers enable user registration, hotspot discovery and payments, ensuring seamless user interface and interoperability across networks. Roaming capability allows users to switch across PDOAs without repeated authentication, improving user experience and network efficiency. Data and Evidence Over 4.09 lakh hotspots operational, indicating rapid infrastructure expansion under a decentralised model with minimal regulatory burden. 2.44 crore users and 58.64 petabytes data consumption highlight rising demand for low-cost public internet access. TRAI tariff reform ensures cost viability, while FTTH integration reduces infrastructure costs and enhances scalability of PDO operations. Governance and Administrative Significance Promotes cooperative federalism with States leading hotspot deployment, supported by central policy framework and regulatory facilitation. Enhances last-mile digital governance by enabling access to e-services (UMANG, DigiLocker, DBT platforms) in underserved regions. Reduces regulatory burden through de-licensing, improving ease of doing business and fostering grassroots entrepreneurship. Economic Implications Creates micro–entrepreneurship opportunities for small vendors (kirana stores, tea stalls), generating supplementary income streams without high capital investment. Enables telecom operators to offload mobile data traffic, improving spectrum efficiency and reducing network congestion costs. Supports digital economy growth by expanding user base for OTT, e-commerce, fintech and digital payments ecosystems. Social Dimensions Bridges digital divide by providing affordable “sachet-sized” internet access, especially benefiting students, migrant workers and low-income households. Promotes digital literacy and inclusion, enabling access to online education, telemedicine and government services. Strengthens rural empowerment by integrating local communities into the digital ecosystem through decentralised connectivity models. Technological Dimensions Encourages integration of existing home and business Wi-Fi networks into public infrastructure, optimising idle bandwidth utilisation. Enables interoperability, roaming and API-based integration, reflecting principles of open digital ecosystems. Supports data offloading from 4G/5G networks, enhancing overall telecom infrastructure efficiency and user experience. Challenges and Limitations Uneven distribution of hotspots, with rural and remote regions lagging despite policy push, limiting universal digital inclusion. Low awareness and digital literacy among target users restrict utilisation of public Wi-Fi services. Revenue sustainability concerns for PDOs in low-demand areas, affecting long-term viability of the model. Cybersecurity and data privacy risks due to open public networks require robust safeguards and regulatory oversight. Dependence on reliable backhaul (FTTH) infrastructure limits expansion in poorly connected regions. Way Forward Target rural expansion through viability gap funding, incentives and integration with BharatNet to ensure equitable distribution of hotspots. Enhance awareness campaigns and digital literacy programmes to increase adoption among underserved populations. Strengthen cybersecurity frameworks and user authentication systems to ensure safe public Wi-Fi usage. Promote integration with 5G ecosystem for seamless data offloading and improved network efficiency. Encourage innovation in business models (ads, data services, partnerships) to ensure financial sustainability for PDOs. Align PM-WANI with smart city initiatives, public infrastructure and transport hubs for wider accessibility. Prelims Pointers PM-WANI launched in December 2020; based on de-licensing of public Wi-Fi networks. PDOs do not require license or registration fees. Central Registry maintained by C-DOT ensures interoperability. TRAI (2025) capped FTTH tariffs for PDOs at ≤2× residential rates. Four-tier architecture: PDO, PDOA, App Provider, Central Registry.

Apr 3, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content A journey to the moon: a mission to understand the dawn of the universe ECI transfer controversy: top court’s clarifications A journey to the moon: a mission to understand the dawn of the universe Why in News ? Artemis II is launched on April 1, 2026 and became the first crewed lunar flyby since 1972 (Apollo 17), marking revival of human deep-space missions after ~50 years. Renewed focus due to confirmed presence of water ice in lunar polar regions (Chandrayaan-1/2 inputs), enabling fuel production and long-term habitation prospects. India’s PRATUSH mission (ISRO–RRI) highlights Moon’s role in detecting low-frequency signals from early universe, advancing study of “cosmic dawn”.It is currently in pre-RO studies / proposal phase Relevance GS I (Geography / Astronomy) Moon’s physical features: PSRs, lack of atmosphere/ionosphere → unique observational advantages. Origin of Moon (Giant Impact Hypothesis) supported by Apollo samples. Cosmic dawn studies → evolution of universe (early structure formation). GS III (Science & Tech / Space / Economy) ISRU (In-Situ Resource Utilisation): water ice → hydrogen fuel. Deep-space tech: SLS, Orion, reusable systems (SpaceX). Space economy: mining, logistics, habitats → multi-billion industry potential. Practice Question Q1.“The Moon is no longer just a destination, but a gateway to deep-space exploration.”Examine the strategic and scientific significance of recent lunar missions such as Artemis and PRATUSH. (250 words) What is Artemis Programme ? NASA-led programme aiming to establish sustainable human presence on Moon, transitioning from short-term exploration (Apollo) to long-term habitation and deep-space missions. Artemis II is a crewed flyby mission using Orion spacecraft and Space Launch System (SLS), testing life-support, navigation and radiation shielding systems. Serves as precursor to Artemis III/IV missions targeting human landing and lunar base development. Strategic Significance: Moon as a Gateway Water ice in Permanently Shadowed Regions (PSRs) near South Pole can be split into hydrogen and oxygen → rocket fuel and life support (ISRU model). Lower lunar gravity (~1/6th Earth) reduces launch costs, enabling Moon to function as refuelling hub for Mars and deep-space missions. Example: Chandrayaan missions identified hydroxyl/water signatures, triggering global interest in lunar resource utilisation. Scientific Significance Earth’s ionosphere blocks low-frequency radio waves (>10 m wavelength), preventing observation of first billion years after Big Bang. Moon lacks ionosphere → enables detection of primordial hydrogen signals from epoch of reionisation (“cosmic dawn”). PRATUSH mission aims to capture these signals; potential to answer origin of first stars and structure formation in early universe. Absence of atmosphere allows sharper optical astronomy; lunar telescopes can outperform Earth-based telescopes affected by atmospheric distortion. Data & Evidence Artemis programme cost > $90 billion; Artemis II mission alone ~ $4 billion, reflecting scale of investment in deep-space infrastructure. Lunar South Pole identified as key region due to high concentration of water ice and “peaks of eternal light” for solar energy. Chandrayaan-1 (2008) provided first definitive evidence of water molecules on lunar surface; Chandrayaan-2 strengthened polar ice mapping. Governance & Geopolitics Artemis Accords led by US vs China-Russia International Lunar Research Station (ILRS) reflect emerging geopolitical competition in space. Moon’s South Pole emerging as “strategic real estate” for resource extraction and energy generation. Outer Space Treaty (1967) prohibits sovereignty claims, but lacks clarity on commercial mining → regulatory vacuum. Technological Dimensions Orion spacecraft features advanced avionics, autonomous navigation and radiation shielding compared to Apollo-era systems. Space Launch System (SLS) is more powerful than Saturn V, enabling heavier payloads and deep-space missions. Future docking with lunar landers (e.g., Starship) and long-duration habitation systems are key technological milestones. Challenges High cost (~$90+ billion) raises sustainability concerns and opportunity cost debates. Technical risks: radiation exposure, life-support reliability, docking failures and lunar dust (abrasive, electrostatic). Legal ambiguity over resource ownership and risk of geopolitical tensions. Environmental concerns: potential degradation of lunar ecosystem and space debris accumulation. Way Forward Develop international legal regime for equitable and sustainable lunar resource utilisation. Strengthen global collaboration (NASA–ISRO–ESA) for cost-sharing and scientific advancement. Invest in reusable launch systems and ISRU technologies to reduce mission costs. Expand India’s role via Chandrayaan follow-up missions and deep-space scientific payloads like PRATUSH. Prelims Pointers Artemis II: first crewed lunar mission since 1972 (Apollo 17). Moon lacks ionosphere → enables detection of low-frequency radio waves. Lunar South Pole rich in water ice and solar energy potential. PRATUSH: ISRO–RRI mission to study early universe via hydrogen signals. Value Addition: Global Lunar Exploration Milestones Soviet Union (Luna Programme): Robotic Firsts Luna 2 (1959) became first human-made object to impact Moon, while Luna 3 (1959) captured first images of far side, revealing previously unknown lunar geography. Luna 9 (1966) achieved first soft landing, proving surface could support spacecraft; Luna 16 (1970) conducted first robotic sample return mission. Lunokhod rovers (Luna 17 & 21) pioneered robotic mobility on extraterrestrial surfaces, laying foundation for modern planetary rover missions. United States (Apollo Programme): Human Exploration Apollo 8 (1968) marked first human orbit of Moon, capturing iconic “Earthrise” image, transforming environmental consciousness globally. Apollo 11 (1969) achieved first human landing; Apollo 17 (1972) was last mission, ending crewed exploration for ~50 years. 12 astronauts walked on Moon; 382 kg lunar samples enabled Giant Impact Hypothesis, explaining Moon’s origin scientifically. China (Chang’e Programme): Technological Leadership Chang’e 3 (2013) marked China’s first soft landing with Yutu rover, demonstrating indigenous deep-space capability. Chang’e 4 (2019) achieved first-ever far-side landing using Queqiao relay satellite, solving communication barrier challenge. Chang’e 5 (2020) and Chang’e 6 (2024) returned youngest and first far-side samples respectively, advancing lunar geological chronology. India (Chandrayaan Programme): Cost-effective Innovation Chandrayaan-1 (2008) confirmed presence of water molecules on Moon, a paradigm-shifting discovery influencing global lunar missions. Chandrayaan-2 orbiter continues to provide high-resolution data, supporting international lunar mapping and mission planning. Chandrayaan-3 (2023) made India first country to land near lunar South Pole, strategically significant for water ice exploration. Japan (SLIM Mission): Precision Landing SLIM (2024) demonstrated “pinpoint landing” capability within ~100 metres accuracy, compared to conventional landing ellipses of several kilometres. Enhances future missions targeting specific resource-rich or scientifically critical lunar locations. ECI transfer controversy Why in News ? In run-up to 2026 Assembly elections (Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal, Puducherry), ECI transferred top officials including Chief Secretary and DGP without State consent. Actions triggered debate on federalism vs electoral integrity, with States alleging administrative paralysis and constitutional overreach. Calcutta High Court (31 March 2026) dismissed a PIL challenging the transfers in West Bengal, observing no public injury was caused. Old Supreme Court precedents (Mohinder Singh Gill 1978 and A.C. Jose 1984) are being revisited to examine the scope and limits of Article 324. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Constitutional body: Election Commission (Article 324). Federalism vs central authority during elections. Civil services control: AIS rules vs ECI powers. GS II (Constitutional Law) Doctrine of “occupied field”. Judicial precedents: Mohinder Singh Gill (1978) A.C. Jose (1984) Limits of plenary powers under Article 324. Practice Question Q1.“Article 324 provides wide powers to the Election Commission, but not unlimited authority.”Critically examine this statement in the context of recent controversies over transfer of officials. (250 words) Static Background and Basics Election Commission of India (ECI) is a constitutional body under Article 324 responsible for conduct of free and fair elections to Parliament, State Legislatures, President and Vice-President. Composition: Chief Election Commissioner (CEC) + Election Commissioners; enjoys security of tenure similar to Supreme Court judges (CEC removable via impeachment). ECI does not have independent administrative machinery; relies on State and Union government officials for election conduct. Representation of the People Acts (1950 & 1951) provide statutory framework for elections, including electoral rolls, conduct of polls and dispute resolution. Constitutional and Legal Framework Article 324 provides plenary powers of “superintendence, direction and control” of elections, interpreted as wide but not unlimited. Article 324(6) obligates Union/State governments to provide staff to ECI for election duties. Section 28A, RPA 1951: officials on election duty deemed to be under ECI’s control, superintendence and discipline during elections. Key Legal Issue: Scope of Article 324 Supreme Court in Mohinder Singh Gill (1978) termed Article 324 a “reservoir of power”, usable only when statutory law is silent. Limitation: ECI must act in conformity with existing laws and cannot override legislative provisions governing service matters. Must adhere to rule of law, act bona fide and follow principles of natural justice. Conflict: “Occupied Field” Doctrine Transfers of AIS officers governed by All India Services Act and rules; States have administrative control over officers serving them. As service matters fall under an “occupied field”, ECI cannot bypass statutory provisions using Article 324. A.C. Jose (1984): ECI cannot override law; can only supplement where law is silent. Federalism vs Electoral Integrity ECI justification: transfers ensure neutrality and “level playing field” by removing potentially biased officials. State argument: sudden removal of top officials disrupts governance (law & order, disaster response) and violates federal autonomy. Raises issue of “imperium in imperio”—whether ECI functions as parallel authority over State governments. Data, Facts and Examples ECI has conducted elections since 1951-52, traditionally relying on State machinery for logistics and administration. 2026 example: overnight transfer of Chief Secretary and DGP in West Bengal seen as unprecedented expansion of ECI intervention. Earlier practice limited to mid-level officials (District Magistrates, SPs), not highest administrative positions. Governance and Administrative Implications Creates dual control over civil servants, leading to conflict of accountability between State government and ECI. Risk of administrative disruption during elections, affecting essential public services beyond electoral domain. May expand scope of ECI powers without clear legal backing, impacting institutional balance. Ethical and Institutional Concerns Presumption of bias without transparent procedure undermines neutrality and morale of civil services. Absence of due process violates natural justice principles (no hearing, no reasoned orders). Risk of politicisation of ECI, affecting credibility of electoral process. Judicial Position and Limits Mohinder Singh Gill: ECI powers broad but subject to law and fairness. A.C. Jose: ECI cannot act contrary to statutory provisions. Kanhiya Lal Omar: ECI must act bona fide and not arbitrarily. SC caution: “No one is an imperium in imperio” → ECI not above constitutional limits. Challenges Lack of explicit statutory provisions defining ECI’s power over transfer of senior officials. Increasing politicisation of administrative decisions during elections. Balancing electoral integrity with federal structure remains unresolved. Way Forward Enact clear statutory guidelines defining limits of ECI’s power over transfer/posting of officials. Introduce transparent procedures (recorded reasons, consultation with States) to ensure accountability. Strengthen cooperative federalism through institutional dialogue between ECI and State governments. Judicial clarification needed to resolve “occupied field vs plenary power” conflict. Safeguard neutrality of civil services through codified norms and protections. Prelims Pointers Article 324: plenary but not absolute powers of ECI. Section 28A, RPA 1951: election duty officials under ECI control. All India Services Act governs transfer and service conditions of IAS/IPS officers. “Occupied field doctrine”: statutory law prevails over constitutional residuary powers.  

Apr 3, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Governor Bound by Cabinet Advice on Remission: Madras HC Judgment Hit by West Asia crisis, manufacturing activity slows to 45-month low in March India’s 16-Nation Maritime Initiative NCERT Declared Deemed-to-be University India’s defence exports rose by 62.66% in ’25-26 to reach all-time high of Rs 38,424 cr Artemis II Mission Technologies (2026) Income-tax Act, 2025: New Direct Tax Regime Governor Bound by Cabinet Advice on Remission: Madras HC Judgment  Why in News ? Madras High Court (Full Bench, 2026) ruled that Governor is bound by State Cabinet’s advice under Article 161 in remission/premature release cases, resolving conflicting HC judgments (2024). Reinforces Supreme Court position (Maru Ram, 1980) amid rising Centre–State tensions over Governors delaying or rejecting clemency decisions. Significant for federalism and limits of Governor’s discretion, especially in politically sensitive remission cases. Relevance GS II (Polity & Constitution) Article 161 (Governor’s clemency power) vs Article 163 (aid and advice). Limits of discretionary powers of Governor in parliamentary system. Judicial doctrines: “aid and advice”, “occupied field”, constitutional morality. GS II (Federalism) Centre–State tensions over role of Governors. Reinforces primacy of elected State governments in executive functions. Prevents constitutional deadlock in remission/clemency decisions. Practice Question Q1.“The Governor is a constitutional head, not an independent authority.”Examine this statement in the context of Article 161 and recent judicial interpretations on remission powers. (250 words) Static Background  Article 161 empowers Governor to grant pardons, reprieves, respites, remissions or commutations for offences under State laws. Parallel provision: Article 72 empowers President for Union laws, court-martial cases and death sentences. Governor is a constitutional head under Articles 153–162; real executive power lies with elected Council of Ministers (Article 163, 164). India follows parliamentary system → nominal executive (Governor) bound by aid and advice of real executive (Council of Ministers). Constitutional and Legal Framework Article 161: confers clemency power but does not specify procedure → interpreted through judicial precedents. Article 163: Governor acts on aid and advice except in matters where Constitution expressly grants discretion. No explicit discretionary power provided under Article 161 → key constitutional issue. Key Judgment: Madras High Court (2026) Governor has no discretion whatsoever under Article 161; must act in accordance with Cabinet advice even if personally disagreeing. Clemency power is not personal discretion but part of executive power exercised through elected government. Conflicting HC judgments resolved; contrary view declared per incuriam (legally incorrect). Judicial Precedents (Continuity of Law) Maru Ram v. Union of India (1980): Governor is bound by aid and advice; cannot act independently in clemency matters. Shamsher Singh v. State of Punjab (1974): Governor is formal head; real power lies with Council of Ministers. A.G. Perarivalan case (2022): SC held Governor cannot indefinitely delay decision; must act on Cabinet advice. Distinction clarified: M.P. Special Police Establishment case applies to sanction for prosecution (statutory discretion), not Article 161. Data, Facts and Examples Increasing instances of Governors delaying assent/remission decisions (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Punjab) have triggered judicial scrutiny. Perarivalan case: delay of over 2 years by Governor led SC to intervene and order release. Present ruling addresses administrative deadlock and legal ambiguity arising from conflicting HC interpretations (2024). Governance and Federal Implications Strengthens cooperative federalism by reaffirming primacy of elected State governments in executive decision-making. Prevents constitutional deadlock where Governor withholds or overrides Cabinet decisions in sensitive matters. Clarifies institutional boundaries between nominal executive (Governor) and real executive (Council). Legal and Constitutional Significance Reinforces doctrine of “aid and advice” as core to parliamentary democracy. Limits misuse of discretionary powers by Governors, ensuring accountability to democratic mandate. Upholds rule of law by aligning executive action with judicial precedents and constitutional scheme. Ethical and Administrative Dimensions Prevents arbitrary denial of remission, ensuring fairness and humanitarian justice in criminal justice system. Reduces politicisation of clemency decisions, which may otherwise be influenced by Centre–State political conflicts. Ensures consistency and predictability in executive decisions affecting prisoners’ rights. Challenges Ambiguity persists regarding timelines for Governor’s action → delays still possible without explicit constitutional deadline. Frequent Centre–State conflicts over role of Governors continue to test federal balance. Potential misuse of remission power by State governments for political considerations. Way Forward Codify timelines and procedures for Governor’s action on Cabinet advice to prevent delays. Clarify scope of discretionary powers of Governor through constitutional amendment or authoritative SC ruling. Strengthen conventions of constitutional morality and cooperative federalism. Ensure transparency in remission decisions with recorded reasons to balance humanitarian and justice concerns. Prelims Pointers Article 161: Governor’s clemency power for State offences. Article 72: President’s clemency power. Governor bound by aid and advice except in explicit discretionary areas. Maru Ram (1980): clemency powers exercised on Cabinet advice. Hit by West Asia crisis, manufacturing activity slows to 45-month low in March Why in News ? HSBC India Manufacturing PMI fell sharply to 53.9 in March 2026 (from 56.9 in Feb), marking a 45-month low, signalling slowdown in growth momentum. Decline attributed to West Asia conflict, rising input costs and weak global demand, affecting new orders and output expansion. Indicates vulnerability of India’s manufacturing sector to external geopolitical shocks despite remaining in expansion zone (>50). Relevance GS III (Economy) PMI as leading indicator of economic activity. Manufacturing sector role in GDP (~16–17%) and employment. Cost-push inflation, supply chain disruptions and global demand slowdown. GS III (External Sector) Impact of geopolitical conflicts (West Asia) on trade routes (Red Sea/Suez). Oil price volatility → imported inflation → macroeconomic instability. Export competitiveness and logistics costs. Practice Question Q1.“India’s manufacturing sector remains vulnerable to global geopolitical shocks.”Analyse the impact of the West Asia crisis on India’s manufacturing performance. (250 words) Static Background and Basics Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) is a high-frequency economic indicator based on surveys of firms covering output, new orders, employment, supplier delivery and inventories. PMI > 50 indicates expansion; < 50 indicates contraction; acts as leading indicator ahead of IIP and GDP data. Manufacturing sector contributes ~16–17% to India’s GDP and is central to Make in India, PLI schemes and export growth strategy. Key Data and Facts PMI declined to 53.9 (45-month low since June 2022), though still above expansion threshold. Input cost inflation highest since August 2022, driven by rising prices of aluminium, steel, chemicals, fuel, rubber and textiles. Two key PMI components—new orders and output—grew at slowest pace since mid-2022, indicating demand-side and supply-side stress. Causes: Impact of West Asia Crisis Supply Chain Disruptions Red Sea/Suez route disruptions increase shipping time by ~15–20 days, raising freight costs and delaying raw material imports. Example: rerouting via Cape of Good Hope increases logistics costs, impacting export competitiveness. Imported Inflation West Asia is key supplier of crude oil and petrochemicals; geopolitical tensions raise global oil prices → higher fuel and input costs. Leads to cost-push inflation, squeezing profit margins of manufacturers. Demand Compression Global uncertainty reduces export orders; domestic demand affected due to rising fuel prices lowering disposable incomes. “Fierce competition” prevents firms from passing full cost increases to consumers. Governance and Policy Dimensions Highlights need for resilient supply chains under National Logistics Policy and Gati Shakti framework. Reinforces importance of energy security policies (strategic reserves, diversification of imports). Aligns with Atmanirbhar Bharat push to reduce import dependence in critical inputs. Economic Implications Slowing manufacturing growth may impact GDP growth, employment and export performance. Rising input costs + weak demand may lead to stagflationary pressures (low growth + high inflation). Spillover effect: slowdown in manufacturing can affect services (logistics, trade) and MSME sector. Social Implications Manufacturing slowdown affects job creation, particularly in labour-intensive sectors like textiles, leather and MSMEs. Rising prices of manufactured goods may impact middle- and lower-income households. External Sector Linkages Demonstrates high sensitivity of Indian economy to global supply chains and geopolitical tensions. Export competitiveness impacted due to higher freight costs and delayed deliveries. Strengthens case for diversifying trade routes and markets (Act East, IMEC corridor). Challenges Heavy dependence on imported energy and raw materials. Limited ability of firms to pass on rising costs due to competitive pressures. Weak global demand environment amid geopolitical instability. Structural issues: logistics costs (~13–14% of GDP) remain high compared to global benchmarks. Way Forward Diversify energy sources (renewables, strategic reserves) to reduce vulnerability to oil shocks. Strengthen domestic manufacturing ecosystem via PLI schemes and local supply chains. Improve logistics efficiency through multimodal transport and infrastructure upgrades. Expand export markets and trade agreements to reduce dependence on specific regions. Monitor inflationary pressures and calibrate monetary-fiscal policies to avoid stagflation. Prelims Pointers PMI is a survey-based leading indicator; threshold = 50. HSBC compiles India Manufacturing PMI. Input cost inflation reflects wholesale price pressures (linked to WPI trends). India’s 16-Nation Maritime Initiative What is the Initiative? India has expanded naval deployment through a 16-nation maritime cooperation initiative, involving offshore patrol vessel (OPV) missions to enhance security, surveillance and confidence-building in the Indian Ocean and Indo-Pacific. It marks a shift from traditional naval patrolling to multi-nation Confidence-Building Measures (CBMs), addressing both conventional and non-traditional maritime threats. Focus areas include protection of sea lanes, undersea infrastructure, fisheries governance and maritime domain awareness (MDA). Relevance GS II (International Relations) Indo-Pacific strategy; SAGAR doctrine. Minilateralism and regional maritime cooperation. India as “Net Security Provider” in Indian Ocean Region. GS III (Security) Maritime security: piracy, IUU fishing, undersea cables. Protection of Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs). Strategic chokepoints: Hormuz, Malacca. Practice Question Q1. Discuss the significance of India’s emerging maritime initiatives in ensuring security and stability in the Indo-Pacific region. (250 words) Why has it been Launched? Triggered by prolonged West Asia crisis (second year), particularly instability in Strait of Hormuz, disrupting global energy flows and maritime trade routes. Rising non-traditional threats: Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated (IUU) fishing, piracy, armed robbery and narco-trafficking affecting regional stability. Growing strategic competition in global commons (oceans) including deep-sea mining and data cable security, necessitating cooperative security frameworks. Where is the Initiative Focused? Geographical focus: Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and Indo-Pacific, covering key maritime chokepoints and trade routes. Operational route: Mumbai → Colombo → Phuket → Jakarta → Singapore → Male → Kochi, linking South Asia with Southeast Asia maritime network. Covers critical sea lanes including approaches to Strait of Hormuz, Malacca Strait and major shipping corridors. Which Actors and Frameworks are Involved? Led by Indian Navy under Ministry of Defence, reflecting India’s role as “Net Security Provider” in the Indian Ocean. Involves 16 partner nations across South Asia and Southeast Asia, indicating shift towards minilateral cooperation (like Quad-type frameworks). Aligns with India’s Act East Policy, Neighborhood First and SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) vision. How does it Function? Deployment of Offshore Patrol Vessels (OPVs) conducting joint patrols, port calls, surveillance and coordination with partner navies. Builds Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) through information sharing, tracking vessels and monitoring illegal activities across Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs). Acts as Confidence-Building Measure (CBM) by reassuring merchant shipping, reducing risk perception and stabilising maritime trade flows. Data and Facts Strait of Hormuz handles ~20% of global oil trade, making disruptions critical for India’s energy security. Around 95% of global data flows through undersea cables, highlighting importance of maritime infrastructure protection. Indian Ocean carries ~80% of global seaborne oil trade, making it central to global economic stability. Governance and Strategic Significance Reinforces India’s role as regional security provider and strengthens cooperative maritime governance. Enhances interoperability with partner nations and supports rules-based order in Indo-Pacific. Counters influence of rival powers (China’s expanding maritime footprint) through strategic presence and partnerships. Economic Implications Ensures security of Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs), crucial for India’s trade (over 90% by volume). Reduces shipping insurance premiums amid conflict, stabilising logistics costs for exporters and importers. Protects energy supply chains, mitigating impact of oil price volatility on domestic economy. Security Dimensions Addresses traditional threats: piracy, armed robbery, narco-trafficking in Indian Ocean. Tackles non-traditional threats: IUU fishing, deep-sea resource exploitation and maritime environmental degradation. Secures undersea data cables, critical for digital economy and national security. Challenges Coordination complexity among multiple nations with differing strategic priorities. Limited naval capacity compared to expanding maritime threats and Chinese naval presence. Legal challenges in enforcing maritime laws across international waters and EEZ overlaps. Dependence on sustained diplomatic engagement for long-term cooperation. Way Forward Strengthen regional frameworks like IORA and Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative for institutionalised cooperation. Enhance naval capacity, surveillance systems and satellite-based maritime monitoring. Promote legal frameworks for regulating IUU fishing and deep-sea mining activities. Expand partnerships with ASEAN, Quad and African littoral states for broader maritime security architecture. Integrate economic and security strategies to ensure resilience of supply chains and trade routes. Prelims Pointers Strait of Hormuz: key global oil chokepoint (~20% trade). SAGAR doctrine: India’s maritime security vision. IUU fishing: Illegal, Unreported, Unregulated fishing. Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA): monitoring maritime activities. NCERT Declared Deemed-to-be University Why in News ? Ministry of Education (March 2026) notified NCERT as a deemed-to-be university following UGC approval, enabling it to grant degrees and launch doctoral programmes. Marks institutional shift from curriculum body → higher education and research institution aligned with NEP 2020 reforms. Comes with strict conditions: non-commercial mandate, UGC compliance and compulsory NAAC/NBA accreditation. Relevance GS II (Governance & Education) NEP 2020 reforms in teacher education. Institutional autonomy vs regulatory oversight (UGC, NAAC, NBA). Integration of school education with higher education. GS II (Social Sector) Quality of education and teacher training. Public vs private role in education sector. Equity and access in education reforms. Practice Question Q1. Evaluate the significance of granting deemed university status to NCERT in the context of NEP 2020. (250 words) What is the Development? NCERT (with 6 Regional Institutes of Education) granted deemed university status under UGC framework, allowing autonomy in designing courses, conducting exams and awarding degrees. Enables introduction of B.Ed., M.Ed., PhD and innovative programmes in education, pedagogy and emerging domains. Transforms NCERT into integrated hub for curriculum design, teacher training and education research. Where is its Scope? Applies to NCERT headquarters (New Delhi) and its six Regional Institutes of Education (Ajmer, Bhopal, Bhubaneswar, Mysuru, Shillong, etc.). Expands reach across national teacher education ecosystem, linking school education with higher education institutions. Potential for expansion to off-campus/offshore centres subject to UGC norms. Why was this Move Needed? Addresses disconnect between curriculum design (NCERT) and teacher training (universities/colleges), ensuring better implementation of school reforms. Supports NEP 2020 vision of multidisciplinary, research-driven teacher education and institutional integration. Strengthens India’s capacity in education research, pedagogy innovation and policy design. Which Institutional Framework Governs It? Approved by University Grants Commission (UGC) under deemed university regulations. Must comply with NAAC (institutional accreditation) and National Board of Accreditation (NBA) for programme-level quality assurance. Guided by National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 and Ministry of Education directives. How will it Function? NCERT can independently design curriculum, conduct examinations and award degrees without university affiliation. Mandated to start doctoral (PhD) programmes and expand into emerging areas (AI in education, digital pedagogy, vocational integration). Subject to strict oversight—no commercial/profit-making activities and adherence to UGC norms. Data and Facts NCERT established in 1961 as apex body for school curriculum; operates through 6 Regional Institutes of Education. Teacher education remains fragmented—over 90% institutions privately run (NCTE data), highlighting need for quality public institutions. NEP 2020 mandates 4-year integrated B.Ed. by 2030, increasing demand for high-quality teacher training institutions. Governance and Administrative Significance Strengthens Centre’s role in standard-setting for education while maintaining oversight through UGC and accreditation bodies. Enhances institutional accountability through mandatory NAAC/NBA ratings. Creates integrated governance model linking curriculum, teacher training and research. Economic Implications Improves human capital formation by upgrading teacher education → long-term productivity gains. Reduces dependence on low-quality private teacher education institutions. Supports knowledge economy through research in education technology and pedagogy. Social and Ethical Dimensions Enhances quality of school education through better-trained teachers, improving learning outcomes. Promotes equity by strengthening public education institutions and reducing commercialisation. Ensures ethical guardrails via prohibition of profit-driven activities. Educational and Technological Dimensions Facilitates research in AI-based learning, EdTech, digital classrooms and competency-based education. Bridges gap between theory (curriculum) and practice (classroom teaching). Positions NCERT as national hub for innovation in pedagogy and education policy. Challenges Capacity constraints: transition to full-fledged university requires faculty, infrastructure and research ecosystem expansion. Risk of bureaucratisation affecting academic autonomy and innovation. Ensuring high-quality NAAC/NBA accreditation amid expansion. Coordination challenges with existing universities and teacher education institutions. Way Forward Strengthen faculty recruitment, research funding and global collaborations. Ensure autonomy with accountability through transparent governance and accreditation. Integrate NCERT programmes with school systems for real-time feedback. Promote interdisciplinary research in education, psychology and technology. Align with NEP 2020 targets (4-year B.Ed., teacher reforms) for systemic transformation. Prelims Pointers NCERT (1961): apex body for school curriculum (NCF, textbooks). Deemed university status granted by Centre on UGC advice. NAAC: institutional accreditation; NBA: programme accreditation. NEP 2020 mandates integrated teacher education reforms. India’s defence exports rose by 62.66% in ’25-26 to reach all-time high of Rs 38,424 cr  Why in News ? India’s defence exports reached ₹38,424 crore in FY 2025–26, registering a sharp 62.66% growth over previous year (₹23,622 crore). Driven by surge in DPSU exports (+151%) and steady private sector contribution, signalling structural shift towards indigenous defence manufacturing. Reflects policy push under Atmanirbhar Bharat and increasing global acceptance of Indian defence products across 80+ countries. Relevance GS III (Economy) Defence manufacturing and export-led growth. Role of DPSUs and private sector in industrial ecosystem. Contribution to GDP, employment and foreign exchange. GS III (Security) Strategic autonomy and reduced import dependence. Defence diplomacy and geopolitical influence. GS III (Science & Tech) Indigenous R&D, advanced platforms (Tejas, BrahMos). Integration into global defence supply chains. Practice Mains Question Q1. “India’s defence exports reflect a shift from import dependence to strategic self-reliance.” Discuss the factors driving this transformation. (250 words) What is the Development? Defence exports include military platforms, systems, sub-systems, components and services supplied by DPSUs and private firms to foreign countries. FY 2025–26 marks transition from import-dependent defence sector → emerging exporter integrated into global supply chains. Indicates shift from exporting low-value components → high-value platforms and complete systems. Where is the Export Footprint? India exports defence equipment to 80+ countries, spanning Southeast Asia, Africa, West Asia and Latin America. Key markets include Indo-Pacific nations (Philippines, Vietnam), African countries and Global South partners. Expanding footprint strengthens India’s strategic presence in Indian Ocean Region and beyond. Which Actors are Involved? Defence Public Sector Undertakings (DPSUs): contributed ₹21,071 crore (54.84%), showing dominant role in high-value exports. Private sector: contributed ₹17,353 crore (45.16%), key role in components, innovation and supply chain integration. Total exporters increased from 128 → 145 (13.3% growth), indicating widening industrial base. How has Growth Occurred? Policy reforms: simplified export authorisation procedures, revamped online portal and faster approvals by Department of Defence Production. Increased domestic procurement: ₹2.28 lakh crore contracts and ₹6.81 lakh crore AoN approvals boosting production capacity. Integration with global OEM supply chains (Boeing, Dassault, Lockheed) enabling steady demand for sub-systems. Data and Facts Total exports: ₹38,424 crore (FY 2025–26) vs ₹23,622 crore (FY 2024–25) → +62.66% growth. DPSU exports grew from ₹8,389 crore → ₹21,071 crore (+151%). Private sector exports grew from ₹15,233 crore → ₹17,353 crore (+14%). Defence exports have nearly tripled in last 5 years, indicating sustained upward trend. Governance and Policy Dimensions Reflects success of Defence Production Policy, Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India initiatives. Ministry of Defence transitioning from regulator → facilitator, improving ease of doing business. Strengthens coordination between DPSUs, private sector and global partners. Economic Implications Boosts manufacturing sector, high-value exports and contributes to GDP growth. Generates employment in high-skill sectors (aerospace, electronics, shipbuilding). Reduces import dependence, improving trade balance and foreign exchange savings. Strategic and Security Significance Enhances strategic autonomy by reducing reliance on foreign defence imports. Defence exports act as tool of diplomacy, strengthening ties with partner countries. Positions India as alternative supplier amid global geopolitical shifts (Russia-Ukraine, China factor). Technological Dimensions Growth in indigenous platforms (Tejas LCA, BrahMos, ALH Dhruv) indicates rising technological capability. Encourages R&D, innovation and advanced defence technologies. Integration into global value chains improves quality standards and competitiveness. Challenges Limited scale compared to global leaders (US, Russia, China). Dependence on imported components (engines, electronics) persists. Export competitiveness affected by pricing, financing and after-sales support issues. Regulatory and testing bottlenecks still exist despite reforms. Way Forward Enhance R&D investment and indigenous component manufacturing (engines, semiconductors). Expand defence export financing and lines of credit for Global South markets. Strengthen private sector participation and MSME integration. Improve quality certification, after-sales service and global marketing strategies. Align defence exports with foreign policy goals (Indo-Pacific, Africa outreach). Prelims Pointers Defence exports (FY 2025–26): ₹38,424 crore. DPSU share: 54.84%; Private sector: 45.16%. AoN (Acceptance of Necessity): approval for capital procurement proposals. Department of Defence Production regulates exports. Artemis II Mission Technologies   Why in News ? NASA’s Artemis II (1 April 2026) is first crewed deep-space mission since 1972, testing next-generation technologies for sustainable lunar exploration and future Mars missions. Focus on advanced systems—SLS rocket, laser communication, organ-on-chip experiments and life-support validation—marks shift from exploration → long-duration habitation. Mission serves as critical testbed before Artemis III (lunar landing) and long-term lunar base construction. Relevance GS I (Geography / Astronomy) Moon’s physical features: Permanently Shadowed Regions (PSRs), lack of atmosphere/ionosphere → observational advantages. Origin of Moon (Giant Impact Hypothesis) supported by Apollo samples. Cosmic dawn studies → evolution of universe (early structure formation). GS III (Science & Tech / Space / Economy) ISRU (In-Situ Resource Utilisation): water ice → hydrogen fuel. Deep-space tech: SLS, Orion, reusable systems. Space economy: mining, logistics, habitats → multi-billion industry. Practice Question Q1. “The Moon is no longer just a destination, but a gateway to deep-space exploration.” Examine the strategic and scientific significance of recent lunar missions such as Artemis and PRATUSH. (250 words) What are the Core Technologies? Artemis II integrates SLS, Orion spacecraft, laser communication systems, advanced life-support and biological research payloads. Moves beyond Apollo-era capabilities with automation, higher computing power and human-centric deep-space survival technologies. Combines propulsion, habitation, communication and biomedical innovations into a single integrated mission architecture. Where are these Technologies Deployed? Launch from Kennedy Space Center → operates beyond Low Earth Orbit into cis-lunar space. Exposure to Van Allen radiation belts and lunar environment enables real-world testing under extreme conditions. CubeSats deployed in high-Earth orbit for radiation, electronics and space weather experiments. Which Systems and Components are Involved? Space Launch System (SLS Block-1): most powerful rocket with 8.8 million pounds thrust (~15% more than Saturn V). Orion Crew Module + European Service Module (ESA): provides life support, propulsion, power and thermal control (~21 days capacity). Laser Communication System (O2O): high-speed optical communication replacing radio systems. Scientific payloads: organ-on-chip (AVATAR), radiation sensors (M-42 EXT), international CubeSats. How do these Technologies Work? Heavy-Lift Launch (SLS) Uses solid boosters + RS-25 engines + cryogenic propulsion stage to deliver Orion into translunar trajectory. Minimises time in radiation belts, improving crew safety. Laser Communication (O2O) Uses infrared lasers to transmit data at ~260 Mbps, enabling real-time 4K video transmission from deep space. More efficient than traditional radio communication (Apollo era). Life Support Systems (ECLSS) Maintains air, water recycling, waste management and thermal control inside Orion. Includes radiation “storm shelter” for solar particle events. Organ-on-Chip Technology (AVATAR) Uses astronaut-derived cells in microfluidic chips to simulate human organs. Studies real-time effects of radiation and microgravity on human tissue. Manual Rendezvous Operations Astronauts practice manual docking manoeuvres, critical for future lunar lander integration and emergency scenarios. Data and Facts SLS thrust: 8.8 million pounds (greater than Saturn V). Laser communication speed: ~260 Mbps (supports multiple 4K streams). Mission duration: ~10 days; Orion capability up to ~21 days. Radiation sensor (M-42 EXT): 6× higher resolution than previous instruments. Scientific and Technological Significance Enables deep-space human survival capabilities, essential for Moon and Mars missions. Organ-on-chip research advances personalised medicine and cancer research. High-speed communication revolutionises deep-space data transmission and mission control. Governance and International Collaboration NASA-led mission with contributions from ESA and CubeSats from Germany, Argentina, South Korea, Saudi Arabia. Reflects collaborative model under Artemis Accords for peaceful space exploration. Economic Implications Drives innovation in aerospace, biotechnology and communication technologies. Spin-offs: medical research, satellite communication, advanced materials. High cost (~$90+ billion Artemis programme) balanced by long-term space economy potential. Strategic Significance Reinforces US leadership in space amid competition with China’s lunar programme. Establishes foundation for lunar base and deep-space logistics. Enhances geopolitical influence through space technology leadership. Challenges Radiation exposure risks in deep space remain significant. High mission costs and sustainability concerns. Technical complexity in life-support, docking and long-duration missions. Space debris and lunar environmental challenges. Way Forward Transition to Artemis III/IV with human landing and lunar infrastructure development. Improve radiation shielding and life-support technologies. Expand international collaboration for cost-sharing and governance. Integrate AI, robotics and ISRU technologies for sustainable exploration. Prelims Pointers SLS: NASA’s heavy-lift rocket with highest thrust. Orion: crew capsule with European Service Module. O2O: laser communication system (~260 Mbps). Organ-on-chip: microfluidic biological experiment simulating human organs. Income-tax Act, 2025: New Direct Tax Regime Why in News ? Income-tax Act, 2025 came into force from April 1, 2026, replacing the six-decade-old Income-tax Act, 1961, marking a major structural reform in India’s direct tax framework. CBDT notified Income-tax Rules, 2026 and new simplified forms, signalling full operationalisation of the new regime. Reform aligns with “ease of compliance” and Viksit Bharat vision amid stagnation in direct tax collections (~₹7.99 lakh crore in FY 2025–26). Relevance GS II (Governance) Tax reforms for ease of compliance and transparency. Role of CBDT and digital governance in taxation. GS III (Economy) Direct tax system and fiscal policy. Tax base expansion and formalisation of economy. Impact on MSMEs and investment climate. Practice Mains Question Q1. Discuss the key features of the Income-tax Act, 2025. How does it aim to improve compliance and reduce litigation? (250 words) What is the Income-tax Act, 2025? A comprehensive legislative overhaul aimed at simplifying tax laws through clearer language, streamlined structure and removal of redundant provisions without major policy changes. Retains core tax principles (progressive taxation, slabs, deductions) while modernising administrative and compliance framework. Focuses on clarity, digitisation and taxpayer convenience rather than altering tax rates or base. Where does it Apply? Applies across India to individuals, companies and other entities liable to pay income tax. Covers all income categories—salary, business, capital gains and emerging digital assets. Integrates both domestic and global income taxation rules for residents. Which Institutions and Frameworks are Involved? Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT): responsible for rule-making, implementation and administration. Ministry of Finance: policy formulation and legislative oversight. Supported by digital infrastructure (Income Tax portal, e-filing systems) for compliance and enforcement. How does the New System Work? Structural Simplification Replaces complex provisions with simplified language and reorganised sections for better readability. Introduces unified “Tax Year” replacing Financial Year (FY) and Assessment Year (AY), reducing confusion. Compliance Reforms Introduction of system-generated Form 130 replacing Form 16, improving accuracy and standardisation. Simplified, re-engineered forms to reduce filing complexity and compliance burden. Digital Integration Expands scope of undisclosed income to include virtual digital assets (crypto, digital holdings). Allows access to “virtual digital spaces” (emails, social media) during search and seizure operations. Data and Facts Replaces Income-tax Act, 1961 (over 60 years old). Gross direct tax collection FY 2025–26: ₹7.99 lakh crore (↓1.9% from ₹8.14 lakh crore previous year). Reform passed August 2025; notified March 2026; effective April 1, 2026. Governance and Administrative Significance Enhances ease of doing business through simplified compliance and reduced litigation. Improves transparency and standardisation via digital processes and automated reporting. Strengthens tax administration efficiency and reduces discretion-based interpretation. Economic Implications Expected to improve tax compliance and broaden tax base through simplified processes. Reduces compliance costs for individuals and businesses, especially MSMEs. Supports formalisation of economy and integration of digital economy into tax net. Social and Ethical Dimensions Simplified system improves taxpayer trust and voluntary compliance. Inclusion of digital assets ensures equity in taxation across traditional and new income sources. Raises privacy concerns due to expanded search powers in digital spaces. Technological Dimensions Push towards full digitisation of tax ecosystem (e-filing, automated forms, data analytics). Enables real-time tracking, better enforcement and reduced human interface. Aligns with Digital India and data-driven governance. Challenges Transition challenges for taxpayers and professionals adapting to new structure. Privacy and data protection concerns due to expanded digital surveillance powers. Limited immediate impact on tax buoyancy if underlying policy remains unchanged. Need for capacity building within tax administration. Way Forward Ensure smooth transition through awareness campaigns and taxpayer support systems. Strengthen data protection safeguards to balance enforcement with privacy rights. Periodic review of tax slabs and exemptions to align with inflation. Leverage AI and analytics for efficient administration and fraud detection. Expand tax base by integrating informal and digital economy segments. Prelims Pointers Income-tax Act, 2025 replaces 1961 Act. CBDT administers direct taxes in India. “Tax Year” replaces FY + AY distinction. Virtual Digital Assets included under undisclosed income.