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Jun 11, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Analysis 11 June 2026  ·  Legacy IAS Academy Contents01 DigiLocker — DISCOM Integration PIB, June 10, 2026  ·  Digital Governance | Infrastructure | Energy GS 2GS 3 Article 01 Article 01 DigiLocker Integrates 68 Electricity DISCOMs Nationwide Source: Press Information Bureau  ·  June 10, 2026  ·  MeitY / Digital India Syllabus Relevance: GS 2 — Government policies and interventions, e-Governance; GS 3 — Infrastructure (Energy), Digital Economy, Digital Public Infrastructure. GS 2GS 3 Key Statistics 68DISCOMs & Power Depts onboarded on DigiLocker 35States & Union Territories covered 67.63 CrDigiLocker registered users (March 2026) 950+ CrDocuments issued via DigiLocker (March 2026) 15.04%AT&C losses in FY 2024–25 (down from 22.62% in FY14) ₹3,03,758 CrOutlay under RDSS for DISCOM reform Issue in Brief DigiLocker — India’s flagship digital document wallet under the Digital India programme — has onboarded 68 Electricity Distribution Companies (DISCOMs) and Power Departments nationwide. Consumers across 35 States and Union Territories can now access issuer-authenticated digital electricity bills directly on the DigiLocker platform. Participating entities include state DISCOMs, municipal electricity departments, and private distribution utilities, covering millions of consumers. Static Background DigiLocker was launched in 2015 by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) under the Digital India programme as a secure cloud-based document wallet. Under Rule 9A of the Information Technology (Preservation and Retention of Information by Intermediaries providing Digital Locker Facilities) Rules, 2016 (notified February 8, 2017), DigiLocker documents are legally at par with original physical documents. As of March 5, 2026, DigiLocker had 67.63 crore registered users and over 950 crore documents had been issued through the platform. (Source: PIB, March 2026) DISCOMs (Distribution Companies) are last-mile electricity service providers regulated by State Electricity Regulatory Commissions (SERCs) under the Electricity Act, 2003. The Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme (RDSS), launched FY 2021–22 with an outlay of ₹3,03,758 crore, aims to reduce AT&C (Aggregate Technical and Commercial) losses to 12–15% pan-India and close the ACS–ARR gap to zero. (Source: PIB / Ministry of Power) Key Dimensions Expansion of Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI): Integration of electricity bills extends DigiLocker’s reach from identity documents (Aadhaar, PAN, driving licence) into utility-based citizen records, deepening India’s DPI stack. Address Proof and KYC: Electricity bills are widely used as proof of address for KYC (Know Your Customer) processes in banking, insurance, and government service applications — DigiLocker authentication strengthens this chain. Open API Architecture: DigiLocker’s open RESTful API model enables state and private utilities to integrate at low technical cost without rebuilding their own document-delivery infrastructure. Public-Private Convergence: Both state-owned utilities (e.g., Jharkhand Bijli Vitran Nigam) and private players (e.g., BSES Rajdhani, BSES Yamuna) are live, reflecting convergence in digital service delivery. Centre–State Coordination: Electricity distribution is a concurrent subject (Entry 38, List III, Seventh Schedule). Onboarding 68 entities across 35 States/UTs demonstrates effective federal coordination on digital governance. DISCOM Sector Reform Alignment: Power distribution utilities recorded a positive PAT (Profit After Tax) of ₹2,701 crore in FY 2024–25, a turnaround from a loss of ₹25,553 crore in FY 2023–24. AT&C losses have declined from 22.62% (FY14) to 15.04% (FY25), with digital billing as a contributing factor. (Source: PIB, Ministry of Power) Critical Analysis Strength — Authenticated document ecosystem: DigiLocker’s issuer-source model ensures bills carry the same legal validity as originals, strengthening India’s DPI without requiring citizens to navigate multiple portals. Strength — Scalability and low entry barrier: The open API model allows utilities of all sizes — from large state DISCOMs to smaller municipal departments — to integrate without significant capital expenditure, enabling nationwide reach. Limitation — Digital access gap: Benefits are primarily accessible to smartphone-owning, internet-connected consumers. Rural and low-income consumers may face digital literacy and connectivity barriers; the announcement does not specify an offline or assisted-access mechanism. Gap — Requester-side adoption: DigiLocker’s value depends on requesters (banks, employers, government agencies) accepting DigiLocker documents. The announcement focuses on issuer onboarding; broader utility as address proof depends on parallel requester adoption. Consideration — Data governance: Electricity consumption records can reveal household behaviour patterns. Robust consent and data minimisation frameworks under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDPA) are essential for citizen trust as the ecosystem scales. Positive trajectory — DISCOM context: The integration arrives at a time of measurable financial improvement in the DISCOM sector under RDSS; digital billing can further improve billing and collection efficiency, reinforcing this positive trend. Way Forward Expand to other utilities — water boards, gas distributors, and telecom providers — to create a comprehensive digital utility document wallet, strengthening DigiLocker’s KYC utility across sectors. Operationalise DPDPA consent architecture for utility data before scaling third-party requester access, ensuring citizens retain control over how their consumption data is shared. Assisted access via Common Service Centres (CSCs) can help rural consumers retrieve DigiLocker documents, bridging the digital divide in low-connectivity areas. Link DigiLocker billing data with RDSS smart metering rollout to improve real-time billing accuracy, reduce ACS–ARR gaps, and support energy accounting at the distribution level. Expand requester onboarding — financial institutions, insurers, and government agencies should formally accept DigiLocker utility bills as address proof, completing the issuer–requester loop. Prelims Pointers DigiLocker — Launched 2015; under MeitY; part of Digital India programme Legal equivalence — Rule 9A, IT (Digital Locker) Rules, 2016; documents at par with originals Users (March 2026) — 67.63 crore registered users; 950+ crore documents issued DISCOM integration — 68 DISCOMs; 35 States/UTs (June 2026) Electricity Act, 2003 — Governs power sector; SERCs regulate DISCOMs at state level AT&C losses — 22.62% (FY14) → 15.04% (FY25); RDSS target: 12–15% RDSS — Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme; outlay ₹3,03,758 crore; nodal agencies: PFC & REC DPDPA, 2023 — Digital Personal Data Protection Act; governs consent-based personal data sharing DPI — Digital Public Infrastructure; core pillars: Aadhaar, UPI, DigiLocker ACS–ARR gap — Average Cost of Supply minus Average Revenue Realised; key DISCOM financial metric Mains Practice Question “The integration of electricity utilities into DigiLocker marks a significant step in expanding India’s Digital Public Infrastructure beyond identity documents. Examine the opportunities this presents and the governance challenges that need to be addressed for equitable outcomes.” GS Paper 2  ·  15 marks Practice MCQ With reference to DigiLocker, consider the following statements: 1. DigiLocker is administered by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). 2. Documents issued through DigiLocker are legally equivalent to original physical documents under the IT Rules, 2016. 3. DigiLocker had crossed 50 crore registered users as of early 2026. Which of the above statements are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2, and 3

Jun 11, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

The Hindu Editorials — 11 June 2026 11 June 2026 · The Hindu Contents01 Not just what India manufactures, but what it discovers Shivkumar Kalyanaraman & Kishore Paknikar · Indian Express · R&D Policy, Innovation Ecosystem, ANRF GS 3 — S&T & EconomyGS 2 — GovernanceEssay 02 Economic story is one of transition. Challenges exist, but so do strengths Soumya Kanti Ghosh · Indian Express · Indian Economy, FDI, BIT Framework, Rupee, Forex Reserves GS 3 — Indian EconomyEssay — Growth & Resilience Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 Not just what India manufactures, but what it discovers Shivkumar Kalyanaraman & Kishore Paknikar — The Indian Express Relevance: R&D investment, national innovation ecosystem, ANRF, CSR-research convergence — core to GS 3 (Science & Technology, Economy) and Essay; touches GS 2 (governance of public institutions and multi-stakeholder policy design). GS 3 — Science & TechnologyGS 3 — EconomyGS 2 — GovernanceEssay — Science, Sovereignty, Development 1 — Issue in Brief India's R&D expenditure as a percentage of GDP has historically remained low compared to technologically advanced economies — creating a strategic vulnerability where the nation consumes technology without investing sufficiently in its creation, making it dependent on external intellectual property and innovation ecosystems for critical sectors including defence, health, and digital infrastructure. Research and innovation are still perceived as the exclusive responsibility of government institutions — not of industry, philanthropy, or CSR ecosystems — despite India possessing one of the world's largest CSR pools and a deep philanthropic tradition, both of which remain largely disconnected from the national science mission and its long-term strategic imperatives. The authors argue that research is invisible national infrastructure — its returns are delayed and difficult to quantify immediately, but its eventual societal impact (health, sustainability, security, competitiveness) is enormous, and nations that under-invest risk long-term strategic and economic dependency on external innovation ecosystems and foreign intellectual property. The Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) is positioned not merely as a grant distributor but as a catalytic institution designed to build multi-stakeholder partnerships among government, academia, industry, start-ups, and philanthropy — a systemic shift from isolated public funding to a co-investment ecosystem model that can compound innovation capacity over time. 2 — Static Background India's Gross Expenditure on R&D (GERD) as a share of GDP has hovered around 0.6–0.7% for over a decade — compared to over 2% in China, 3% in the USA, 4.5% in South Korea, and 5.4% in Israel — reflecting a fundamental structural gap in the national innovation architecture that cannot be bridged through government appropriation alone. The Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF) was established under the ANRF Act, 2023, replacing the SERB Act, 2008, with a proposed outlay of Rs. 50,000 crore over five years — the largest single research investment commitment in India's post-independence history, designed to seed, grow, and promote R&D across universities, colleges, research institutions, and industry alike. India's CSR regime under Section 135 of the Companies Act, 2013 mandates that companies above a specified threshold spend 2% of net profit on CSR activities. Research and innovation are included under eligible CSR activities, yet the proportion of CSR funds directed toward science and technology remains negligible relative to the scale of India's national innovation deficit. The Science, Technology and Innovation Policy (STIP), 2020 recognised the need to increase private sector R&D participation and called for raising India's GERD to 2% of GDP — a target that requires a fundamental behavioural shift in industry and philanthropy, not just higher government appropriation, since private sector currently contributes under 40% of India's total R&D spending. India's research funding model has remained government-dominated, unlike in China, South Korea, or the USA where private sector contributes 65–75% of total R&D spending. This structural imbalance means that when public budgets tighten, the entire innovation pipeline suffers — there is no private-sector buffer to absorb the shock or sustain long-cycle research programmes through budget cycles. 3 — Key Dimensions Research as national infrastructure: The editorial makes a conceptual reframe — science is not an academic luxury but a form of invisible infrastructure comparable to roads or power grids. Just as physical infrastructure enables economic activity, research infrastructure enables technological self-reliance, industrial competitiveness, and national security over the medium and long term — a framing with direct relevance to India's sovereignty goals. Multiplier effect of co-investment: Every rupee strategically co-invested through ANRF-style partnerships can potentially catalyse several-fold higher internal R&D investments within participating organisations — because institutional confidence in research triggers wider industrial risk-taking, which is how innovation ecosystems compound rather than grow linearly through isolated government grants or departmental schemes. Entry points for non-state actors: Participation need not begin with large outlays. Companies can support translational research aligned with national priorities; philanthropic foundations can fund doctoral fellowships, advanced instrumentation, or regional innovation clusters; industry associations can design challenge-driven innovation programmes; and successful start-ups can reinvest into deep-tech ecosystems that create the next generation of innovation leaders. Geopolitical dimension: Scientific capability is directly linked to technological sovereignty — the ability to make independent strategic choices without depending on external IP, foreign technology licences, or allied nations' goodwill in sharing critical knowledge. In semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, defence systems, and AI, nations without foundational research capacity become structurally dependent on those that have it. Democratising science as a societal movement: The editorial's normative argument is that the vision of an innovation-driven India cannot be achieved by a handful of elite institutions alone. Science must become a wider societal movement — embedded in the imagination of industry, philanthropy, academia, and civil society — for ANRF's catalytic model to produce the scale of transformation India's innovation deficit requires. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Corrects the public-goods problem: Research generates positive externalities that private actors cannot fully capture, explaining market under-investment. ANRF's co-investment model uses public funding as a catalyst to correct this structural market failure — reducing risk for private investors while aligning their contributions with national priorities rather than only short-cycle commercial returns with immediate payback periods. In favour — Builds ecosystem, not just output: Unlike traditional grant-making that produces papers or patents in isolation, the ANRF model is designed to build institutional confidence and cross-sector linkages across academia, industry, and start-ups — creating the connective tissue of an innovation ecosystem that compound-grows over time, as demonstrated in Israel, South Korea, and Taiwan over several decades. In favour — CSR-research convergence is underexplored: Given the scale of India's mandatory CSR ecosystem, even a small reorientation toward research fellowships, instrumentation, and translational projects would inject significant new capital into the science pipeline without requiring additional government expenditure — an enormous opportunity the editorial rightly highlights as currently wasted due to the absence of purpose-built CSR-science linkage frameworks. Against — Absorptive capacity gap in institutions: ANRF's success depends on the capacity of universities and research institutions to absorb, utilise, and account for large-scale funding. Many state universities and regional institutions lack the financial management, ethics oversight, IP management, and industry-liaison infrastructure required to deliver on co-investment partnerships at scale — a systemic constraint that ANRF's design does not yet adequately address. Against — Short-termism in industry remains structural: Indian industry has historically favoured technology licensing over indigenous R&D because the former offers faster, lower-risk returns. Without fiscal incentives (weighted deductions, patent box regimes, R&D tax credits) and a patient capital framework, the editorial's call for voluntary industrial co-investment may not translate into sustained, long-cycle commitments at the scale required to move India's GERD meaningfully. Against — Measurement and accountability gap: Research returns are delayed and non-linear, making standard outcome-measurement frameworks inadequate. Without robust, independent evaluation mechanisms tracking research utilisation, translation rates, and societal impact, ANRF risks replicating the input-focused accountability weaknesses of earlier SERB and DST schemes — measuring money spent rather than knowledge created or commercialised. 5 — Way Forward Redesign CSR guidelines under Section 135, Companies Act to create a dedicated R&D and innovation sub-category with incentivised reporting and public recognition — making it easier and more attractive for corporates to channel CSR funds toward doctoral fellowships, regional innovation clusters, and translational research aligned with national priority sectors like semiconductors, health technology, and clean energy. Introduce an R&D tax incentive architecture — including weighted deductions for industrial R&D investment, a patent box regime offering lower tax on IP-derived income, and start-up-specific deep-tech R&D credits — to reduce the risk-adjusted cost of private investment in long-cycle research and make industrial co-investment commercially rational, not just patriotically aspirational. Build institutional capacity in regional universities through ANRF-linked capacity grants for financial management systems, IP cells, industry-liaison offices, and research ethics boards — ensuring that increased funding can be effectively absorbed and governed by a wider range of institutions beyond the IISc/IIT/AIIMS cluster that currently dominates India's research output. Create a public ANRF dashboard tracking co-investment ratios, research-to-product translation rates, patent filings, and start-up spin-offs — making research outcomes visible to society, demonstrating value to potential philanthropic and industrial partners, and building the institutional credibility that sustains long-term participation from non-state actors. 6 — Data & Key Facts 0.6–0.7%India's GERD as % of GDP — well below global peers 4.5%South Korea's GERD (% of GDP) — benchmark for high-innovation economies Rs. 50,000 CrANRF 5-year outlay — largest single research investment in India's history 2023ANRF Act enacted; replaced SERB Act, 2008 2%GERD target under STIP 2020 and CSR mandatory spend threshold (net profit) 65–75%Private sector share of R&D in USA, South Korea, China — vs. under 40% in India ANRF Act, 2023 — replaces SERB Act, 2008; ANRF governed by a Governing Board chaired by the Prime Minister; CEO from science/technology background; designed to function with operational flexibility unavailable to traditional government departments, enabling partnership-based research co-investment at scale. Science, Technology and Innovation Policy (STIP), 2020 — called for decentralised research, doubling researchers per lakh population, open-access science, and private sector contributing 50% of GERD — a target requiring structural change in industrial R&D culture, fiscal incentives, and institutional linkages that have yet to materialise at policy scale. 7 — Prelims Pointers ANRF Act 2023 — replaces SERB Act 2008; Rs. 50,000 cr over 5 years; PM chairs Governing Board; catalyses govt-academia-industry-philanthropy research partnerships; not a grant-only body GERD — Gross Expenditure on R&D; India ~0.6–0.7% GDP; STIP 2020 target 2%; private sector under 40% vs. 65–75% in advanced economies Section 135, Companies Act 2013 — CSR mandate; 2% of net profit; R&D eligible; actual utilisation for science remains negligible despite India's large CSR ecosystem SERB — Science & Engineering Research Board; replaced by ANRF under ANRF Act 2023; operated under DST; funded individual research grants only STIP 2020 — Science Technology and Innovation Policy; open science, decentralised research, doubled researcher base, 50% private GERD target; policy blueprint not yet fully implemented Patent Box Regime — lower tax on IP-derived income; used by UK, Netherlands; not yet adopted by India — a significant gap in the fiscal incentive architecture for private R&D investment Exam note: ANRF ≠ SERB. SERB was a grant-giving body only; ANRF is a catalytic co-investment institution designed to bring in private sector and philanthropy. Also: ANRF Act 2023 replaces SERB Act 2008 — this statutory transition is frequently tested. Do not state SERB is still operational. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's research and innovation ecosystem suffers not from lack of talent but from lack of institutional imagination." Critically examine, with reference to ANRF and the role of non-state actors in science funding. GS 3 | 15 marks | ~250 words | Science & Technology + Economy + Governance Intro: Frame the paradox — India produces world-class scientists but ranks poorly on GERD and global innovation indices. Introduce ANRF Act, 2023 as a structural response shifting from isolated public grants to catalytic co-investment across multiple stakeholders. Body 1 — What ANRF attempts: Catalytic co-investment model, multi-stakeholder design (govt, academia, industry, start-ups, philanthropy), institutional flexibility over traditional departmental rigidity, PM-chaired Governing Board signalling political priority. Body 2 — Non-state actors: CSR under-utilisation despite scale (Section 135), private sector short-termism (technology licensing preferred over R&D), philanthropy disconnected from science — evidence and structural causes including absent fiscal incentives like patent box regime. Conclusion: R&D tax incentives, CSR sub-category redesign, institutional capacity building in regional universities, public ANRF dashboard — and the idea that science must become a societal movement, not just a government programme, for India to achieve true technological sovereignty. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF): 1. ANRF was established under the ANRF Act, 2023, replacing the Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB) Act, 2008. 2. The Prime Minister chairs the Governing Board of ANRF. 3. ANRF is designed exclusively to fund government research institutions and excludes private universities, industry, and start-ups from its partnership framework. 4. India's Gross Expenditure on R&D (GERD) as a percentage of GDP is among the lowest compared to major economies like South Korea, USA, and China. 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 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 Economic story is one of transition. Challenges exist, but so do strengths Soumya Kanti Ghosh — The Indian Express Relevance: India's GDP growth trajectory, FDI trends, BIT framework, rupee depreciation, forex reserves — directly relevant to GS 3 (Indian Economy, External Sector) and Prelims data questions on macroeconomic indicators and investment policy. GS 3 — Indian EconomyGS 3 — External SectorEssay — Growth, Reforms, Resilience 1 — Issue in Brief The editorial is a point-by-point evidence-based rebuttal of the claim that India has lost economic momentum due to weakening reforms, declining investor confidence, and a problematic revised Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) framework — challenging the evidentiary basis of each claim with specific empirical data, UNCTAD studies, and RBI reserve figures. The author argues that global shocks — COVID, supply-chain disruptions, geopolitical conflicts, financial tightening — must be factored into any fair assessment of India's post-2014 growth performance, and that once crisis years are excluded, the growth rate compares favourably with the pre-2014 period rather than showing structural decline. The India Model BIT, 2016 — which revised India's investment treaty framework — is defended as a balanced reassessment of investor rights versus the state's legitimate regulatory authority, consistent with a global trend of BIT renegotiation seen in Brazil, South Africa, Indonesia, and Ecuador, none of which suffered FDI collapse as a result. On the rupee, the author pushes back against depreciation-as-mismanagement narratives, contextualising the 10.6% FY26 depreciation within India's strong forex reserve position (~$682 billion), a manageable current account deficit (~2% of GDP in FY27), and the RBI's demonstrated consistency in long-run exchange rate management over 25 years. 2 — Static Background India's Model BIT, 2016 replaced an earlier framework seen as overly tilted toward investor rights. Key changes included: narrower enterprise-based definition of investment, removal of the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) clause, mandatory domestic exhaustion of remedies before international arbitration, and exclusion of taxation and government procurement from treaty coverage — each element designed to preserve sovereign regulatory space. Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) are international agreements between two countries to promote and protect investments made by each country's nationals or companies in the other's territory. They typically include provisions for Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) — allowing foreign investors to directly sue host governments before international arbitral tribunals, bypassing domestic courts entirely. FDI inflows into India have remained broadly robust: gross FDI was approximately $95 billion in 2025–26. The distinction between gross FDI (total inflows) and net FDI (gross minus repatriation and outward investment) is critical — net FDI decline reflects increased profit repatriation by established multinationals and higher outward FDI by Indian companies, both natural features of a maturing economy integrating with global markets. The RBI's forex reserve management has been a consistent long-run policy objective. India's reserves reached ~$682 billion by April 2026 — providing approximately 11 months of import cover, well above the conventional adequacy threshold of 3–6 months. The RBI sold ~$53 billion in FY26 to defend the rupee, yet reserves remained at this level due to prior systematic accumulation. Current Account Deficit (CAD): India's CAD is expected to remain around 2% of GDP in FY27 — within manageable limits. A CAD below 2.5% of GDP is generally considered sustainable for an economy at India's stage of development and investment cycle, given its high domestic savings rate and diversified, services-led export base. 3 — Key Dimensions Growth comparison methodology: The editorial argues that comparing average GDP growth across two political periods without controlling for extraordinary external shocks produces misleading conclusions. Once COVID and crisis years are excluded, India's growth rate during 2014–2024 (~7.4%) compares favourably with 2005–2014 (~7.2%) — suggesting structural growth capacity has been maintained rather than structurally eroded by policy choices. BIT and FDI — the evidence gap: A UNCTAD 2014 study across 146 economies over 27 years found no conclusive evidence that BITs significantly increase bilateral FDI inflows. The G20 Investment Report (2020) further found that investor protection ranked only 10th among decision-influencing factors — below political stability, market size, infrastructure quality, and growth prospects, where India holds competitive advantages relative to peer emerging markets. Global reassessment of BIT frameworks: Brazil never ratified traditional BITs with ISDS but remained Latin America's largest FDI destination. South Africa, Indonesia, Ecuador, and Bolivia also revised or terminated investment treaties over concerns about sovereign policy flexibility. India's BIT revision is therefore not an outlier but part of a considered global trend toward rebalancing investor rights with legitimate regulatory space. Rupee depreciation — contextualising the narrative: The rupee depreciated 10.6% in FY26 — sharper than broad dollar strength alone explains. But over 25 years, average annual depreciation has been remarkably consistent across periods, reflecting stable long-run management. The "shock absorber" argument — letting the rupee fall freely — is critiqued as allowing market players to dictate to the central bank, delinked from macro fundamentals. Net FDI vs. gross FDI distinction: As Indian companies invest more abroad and established MNCs repatriate higher profits, net FDI figures naturally decline in a maturing economy without reflecting reduced investor confidence. Interpreting lower net FDI as capital flight or confidence loss misreads a structural feature of economic maturation — rising Indian corporate globalisation — as a policy failure signal. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Evidence-based rebuttal models good policy discourse: The editorial is methodologically disciplined — each counter-argument is backed by specific data sources (UNCTAD 2014, G20 Investment Report 2020, RBI reserve data, FDI statistics) rather than qualitative assertion, demonstrating how evidence-grounded economic debate should proceed when aggregate numbers are selectively deployed to support pre-formed conclusions. In favour — Global benchmarking on BITs is empirically sound: The BIT rebalancing argument is well-supported by international precedents. Brazil's FDI leadership without ISDS-BITs is a powerful empirical counterpoint to the claim that India's revised framework deters investment — confirming that economic fundamentals, not treaty architecture, drive long-term capital flows into large, fast-growing markets. In favour — Net vs. gross FDI distinction is analytically important: The confusion between declining net FDI and declining investor confidence is a genuine analytical error in public commentary. Higher outward FDI by Indian firms represents Indian companies internationalising — a sign of economic maturation and global ambition — not domestic economic weakness or loss of investor trust in the home market. Against — Rupee depreciation explanation may be incomplete: While 25-year average depreciation consistency is a valid observation, it does not fully explain why FY26 depreciation was sharper than dollar strength alone would predict. Capital outflows, portfolio rebalancing, and carry-trade unwinding may have contributed — and dismissing market-influenced depreciation entirely as pandering to markets may oversimplify a complex exchange rate dynamic. Against — Domestic remedy requirement may deter small investors: Requiring exhaustion of domestic legal remedies before international arbitration is a legitimate sovereign protection. However, India's judicial delay and litigation cost reality means this requirement may effectively deter legitimate small and medium-sized foreign investors from seeking redress — undermining the BIT's investor-protection function in practice, even if defensible in principle. Against — Growth rate comparison ignores quality dimensions: Even if 2014–2024 average growth marginally exceeds 2005–2014, the composition of growth matters. Investment rate trends, private sector capex, credit offtake to MSMEs, and employment intensity of growth are not addressed in the editorial's rebuttal — making the growth comparison potentially incomplete without this qualitative layer of analysis. 5 — Way Forward India should publish a comprehensive BIT reform white paper articulating the legal and economic rationale for each element of the Model BIT 2016 — addressing specific investor concerns about the domestic exhaustion requirement, the narrowed definition of investment, and the absence of the MFN clause — to reduce perception risk without reopening substantive treaty provisions unnecessarily. The RBI's exchange rate management communication framework should be strengthened — publishing clearer forward guidance on intervention principles — so that market participants, foreign investors, and rating agencies understand the RBI's approach as a principled, rules-based framework rather than an opaque discretionary intervention style that creates uncertainty. India should proactively engage with UNCTAD and G20 investment working groups to build global legitimacy for its BIT reform model, positioning the India framework as a responsible balancing of investor rights and regulatory sovereignty — neutralising the perception-risk narrative that can deter genuine long-term investors even when macroeconomic fundamentals remain strong. To genuinely improve the investment climate, the focus should shift from treaty architecture to ease-of-doing-business reforms: faster commercial dispute resolution, contract enforcement efficiency, land availability, and infrastructure quality — the factors that G20 data confirms actually drive investment decisions, ranked far above investor protection provisions in treaties. 6 — Data & Key Facts ~7.4%India avg GDP growth 2014–2024 (excl. crisis years) vs ~7.2% in 2005–2014 ~$95 BnGross FDI inflows into India in 2025–26 $682 BnIndia's forex reserves, April 2026 — ~11 months import cover $53 BnRBI forex sales in FY26 to defend the rupee 10.6%Rupee depreciation in FY26 — sharper than broad dollar strength alone ~2%India's CAD as % of GDP expected in FY27 — within manageable limits UNCTAD Study, 2014 — covered 146 economies over 27 years; found no conclusive evidence that BITs significantly increase bilateral FDI inflows; key empirical foundation for India's BIT reform rationale and a critical data point for both Prelims and Mains answers on investment treaties. G20 Investment Report, 2020 — found that investor protection ranked 10th among decision-influencing factors for FDI; political stability, market size, infrastructure quality, and growth prospects ranked higher — directly supporting the argument that treaty architecture is not the primary determinant of FDI flows into large emerging markets like India. 7 — Prelims Pointers India Model BIT 2016 — enterprise-based investment definition; no MFN clause; mandatory domestic exhaustion before ISDS; excludes taxation and government procurement from treaty coverage ISDS — Investor-State Dispute Settlement; allows investors to directly sue host governments before international arbitral tribunals; bypasses domestic courts entirely CAD — Current Account Deficit; India ~2% of GDP (FY27); below 2.5% considered manageable; reflects trade deficit plus net invisibles (services, remittances) Forex reserves ~$682 Bn (April 2026) — ~11 months import cover; RBI sold ~$53 billion in FY26 to defend rupee; conventional adequacy threshold is 3–6 months import cover UNCTAD 2014 study — 146 economies, 27 years; no conclusive BIT–FDI causal link; foundational evidence for India's BIT reform and for global BIT renegotiation trend Gross vs. Net FDI — Net FDI = Gross FDI minus profit repatriation and outward investment; declining net FDI in a mature economy does not equal declining investor confidence Exam note: Do not confuse BIT (Bilateral Investment Treaty — investment protection) with FTA (Free Trade Agreement — trade in goods/services). Also: India's Model BIT 2016 is a template for negotiations, not a ratified treaty — actual coverage depends on bilateral ratification. MFN clause in BITs is separate from MFN in WTO/trade agreements. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's revised Bilateral Investment Treaty framework reflects a responsible reassessment of investor rights versus sovereign regulatory space, not a retreat from economic openness." Do you agree? Substantiate with evidence. GS 3 | 15 marks | ~250 words | External Sector + Economic Reforms + Investment Policy Intro: Contextualise India's BIT reform — the ISDS problem, the global trend of treaty renegotiation post-financial crisis, and the tension between investor rights and sovereign regulatory flexibility in a developing economy with legitimate policy goals. Body 1 — Case for India's BIT reform: Domestic exhaustion as a legitimate sovereign tool; UNCTAD evidence on weak BIT–FDI correlation; global peers (Brazil, South Africa, Indonesia) who revised treaties without FDI collapse; G20 data on true FDI determinants (political stability, market size over investor protection). Body 2 — Concerns: Judicial delay making domestic exhaustion burdensome for small investors; perception risk deterring prospective investors unfamiliar with India's BIT reform rationale; quality-of-growth questions not addressed by GDP average comparisons alone. Conclusion: Ease-of-doing-business reforms — contract enforcement, infrastructure, dispute resolution speed — not treaty architecture — are the real investment confidence levers. BIT white paper, UNCTAD engagement, and RBI communication reform as complementary steps. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about India's Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) framework and FDI: 1. India's Model BIT, 2016 requires foreign investors to exhaust domestic legal remedies for a specified period before filing international arbitration claims against the Indian state. 2. A 2014 UNCTAD study covering 146 economies over 27 years found strong conclusive evidence that BITs significantly increase bilateral FDI inflows. 3. The G20 Investment Report (2020) found that investor protection ranked only 10th among factors influencing FDI decisions, below political stability and market size. 4. Brazil, despite having no traditional BITs with ISDS provisions, remained among Latin America's largest FDI destinations. Which of the statements are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only(b) 2 and 4 only(c) 1, 3 and 4 only(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

Jun 11, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 11 June 2026 Defence Investiture Ceremony 2026 — Gallantry AwardsGS2 Abu Dhabi Dialogue — Labour Migration GovernanceGS2 Falling Net FDI — Composition and BoP ConcernsGS3 Floating Solar — India's 102 GW Reservoir PotentialGS3 Axolotl — FIFA 2026 and Conservation CrisisGS3 Glacial Lake Outburst Floods — Kashmir HimalayaGS3 Birsa Munda — Adivasi Identity, Ulgulan and LegacyGS1/GS2 Article 01 Defence Investiture Ceremony 2026 — Gallantry Awards GS Paper 2 — Indian Polity | Governance | Security Why in News President Droupadi Murmu conferred 51 gallantry awards at the Defence Investiture Ceremony 2026 (Phase-I) at Rashtrapati Bhavan on June 8, 2026 — comprising 7 Kirti Chakras (2 posthumous), 15 Vir Chakras (3 posthumous), and 29 Shaurya Chakras (1 posthumous) — to personnel of the Armed Forces, Central Armed Police Forces, and State/UT Police forces. Static Background: India's Gallantry Awards System Origin and Historical Context During colonial rule, valour by Indian soldiers was recognised through British decorations such as the Victoria Cross (VC) and the Indian Order of Merit (IOM) — the oldest military gallantry award on the subcontinent, instituted by the East India Company in 1837. After independence, India instituted its own sovereign gallantry award system reflecting national identity and constitutional values. Institution Timeline 26 January 1950: First three wartime gallantry awards instituted — Param Vir Chakra, Maha Vir Chakra, Vir Chakra — by President Dr. Rajendra Prasad; retroactive effect from 15 August 1947. 4 January 1952: Three peacetime awards instituted as Ashoka Chakra Class-I, Class-II, Class-III; retroactive from 15 August 1947. January 1967: Peacetime awards renamed to Ashoka Chakra, Kirti Chakra, Shaurya Chakra respectively. Classification of Awards Category Award Standard Precedence Wartime (in face of enemy) Param Vir Chakra (PVC) Most conspicuous bravery in presence of the enemy 1st overall Wartime Maha Vir Chakra (MVC) Acts of conspicuous gallantry in presence of the enemy 3rd overall Wartime Vir Chakra (VC) Acts of gallantry in presence of the enemy — on land, sea, or air 5th overall Peacetime (otherwise than in face of enemy) Ashoka Chakra (AC) Most conspicuous bravery or pre-eminent act of valour or self-sacrifice 2nd overall Peacetime Kirti Chakra (KC) Conspicuous gallantry otherwise than in face of the enemy 4th overall Peacetime Shaurya Chakra (SC) Gallantry otherwise than in face of the enemy 6th overall Order of Precedence (highest to lowest): PVC → Ashoka Chakra → MVC → Kirti Chakra → Vir Chakra → Shaurya Chakra Eligibility — Key Differentiator Wartime Awards (PVC, MVC, VC) Peacetime Awards (AC, KC, SC) All ranks of Naval, Military, Air Forces All wartime-eligible categories PLUS: Reserve Forces, Territorial Army, Militia Police forces (state and central) Medical/Nursing Services Central Para-Military Forces (CAPFs) Civilians under Armed Forces direction Railway Protection Force (RPF) and civilian citizens Important: RPF personnel are eligible for peacetime awards (AC/KC/SC) but NOT wartime awards (PVC/MVC/VC) — a frequent Prelims trap. Conferment Procedure Recommendations from military units/CAPFs/police → chain of command → Central Honours and Awards Committee → approved by the President of India. Announced twice yearly: on Republic Day and Independence Day. PVC and Ashoka Chakra: conferred at the Republic Day Parade, Kartavya Path (formerly Rajpath). All other gallantry awards: conferred at the Defence Investiture Ceremony, Rashtrapati Bhavan. Awards may be conferred posthumously to the Next of Kin (NoK). Subsequent acts of gallantry: recognised by a Bar to the Chakra — a miniature replica of the respective Chakra worn on the ribbon. Total Awardees (Historical) PVC: 21 total (14 posthumous) — last awarded in 1999 (Kargil War); meaning: "Wheel of the Ultimate Brave." Ashoka Chakra: 87 total (68 posthumous) — highest proportion of posthumous awards among all six. Other Defence Service Awards (Distinguished Service — Not Gallantry) PVSM (Param Vishisht Seva Medal) — distinguished service of most exceptional order. AVSM (Ati Vishisht Seva Medal) — distinguished service of exceptional order. Sena Medal / Nao Sena Medal / Vayu Sena Medal — Army, Navy, and Air Force bravery/devotion medals respectively. Constitutional Angle — Article 18(1) Article 18(1): "No title, not being a military or academic distinction, shall be conferred by the State." Balaji Raghavan v. Union of India (1995): SC upheld national awards' constitutional validity; clarified they are not "titles" under Article 18(1); must not be used as suffixes or prefixes to names. Way Forward Streamline recommendation pipelines to reduce the gap between act of gallantry and formal recognition — especially for CAPF and police personnel in counter-insurgency operations. Expand civilian awareness about eligibility for peacetime awards — RPF, police, and civilian citizens remain underrepresented in applications. Maintain clear distinction between gallantry awards and civilian honours (Padma awards) to preserve the integrity of the military recognition system. Prelims Pointers PVC, MVC, VC instituted: 26 January 1950; retroactive from 15 August 1947 — first three gallantry awards of independent India. Peacetime awards instituted: 4 January 1952 as Ashoka Chakra Class-I/II/III; renamed January 1967 to current names. Order of precedence: PVC > Ashoka Chakra > MVC > Kirti Chakra > Vir Chakra > Shaurya Chakra. PVC and Ashoka Chakra: conferred at Republic Day Parade, Kartavya Path. All others: Defence Investiture Ceremony, Rashtrapati Bhavan. RPF: eligible for peacetime (AC/KC/SC) but NOT wartime (PVC/MVC/VC) awards — key eligibility trap. Bar to the Chakra = recognition for subsequent gallantry — miniature Chakra replica on ribbon. PVC: 21 total (14 posthumous); last awarded 1999, Kargil War. Ashoka Chakra: 87 total (68 posthumous). Balaji Raghavan v. Union of India (1995): National awards are not 'titles' under Article 18(1); must not be used as suffixes/prefixes. Indian Order of Merit (IOM): Oldest military gallantry award on the subcontinent; instituted by East India Company in 1837. Victoria Cross: Highest British military decoration; awarded to Indian soldiers under colonial rule. Central Honours and Awards Committee scrutinises all recommendations before Presidential conferment. Peacetime awards include acts of bravery in: counter-insurgency, disaster relief, internal security, rescue operations — not only conventional military contexts. Practice Mains Question "Gallantry awards are not merely symbols of individual bravery but reflect a nation's values, institutional priorities, and constitutional commitments. Examine the hierarchy and classification of India's gallantry awards system, the procedural framework for conferment, and the constitutional questions raised by the Balaji Raghavan judgment." GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Match the following gallantry awards with their correct description: A. Param Vir Chakra     1. Highest peacetime gallantry award; peacetime equivalent of the PVC B. Ashoka Chakra       2. India's highest military decoration; for most conspicuous bravery in presence of the enemy C. Kirti Chakra        3. Second-highest wartime gallantry award D. Maha Vir Chakra     4. Second-highest peacetime gallantry award; for conspicuous gallantry otherwise than in face of enemy (a)A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3 (b)A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4 (c)A-2, B-1, C-3, D-4 (d)A-1, B-4, C-2, D-3 Correct Answer: (a) Param Vir Chakra is the highest wartime award (A-2). Ashoka Chakra is the highest peacetime award, peacetime equivalent of the PVC (B-1). Kirti Chakra is the second-highest peacetime award (C-4). Maha Vir Chakra is the second-highest wartime award (D-3). The order of precedence — PVC > AC > MVC > KC > VC > SC — is a fundamental Prelims fact. Article 02 Abu Dhabi Dialogue — Labour Migration Governance GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Indian Diaspora | Governance Why in News The MEA source highlights India's active engagement in multilateral labour migration forums — particularly the Abu Dhabi Dialogue (ADD) and the Colombo Process (CP) — as India currently chairs the Colombo Process (2024–26) for the first time since its 2003 inception. The 9th ADD Ministerial Consultation was held in Abu Dhabi, 31 January–1 February 2026. Why Labour Migration Matters for India India has the world's largest diaspora — over 32 million people of Indian origin abroad (Ministry of External Affairs data). India is consistently the world's largest remittance recipient: $125 billion in 2023 (World Bank) — approximately 3–4% of India's GDP; critical for forex reserves and rural household incomes. The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is the single most important destination corridor: approximately 8–9 million Indians work in the 6 GCC countries. About the Abu Dhabi Dialogue (ADD) Feature Detail Established 2008 Nature Regional, state-led, voluntary, non-binding consultative process Origin Countries (11) Afghanistan, Bangladesh, China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam Destination Countries (7) Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE + Malaysia (6 Gulf + Malaysia) Permanent Secretariat UAE Current Chair Pakistan (chairmanship rotates between sending and receiving country) Observers IOM, ILO, UN Women, OECD, civil society Focus Temporary Contractual Labour Migration — no permanent residency; stay tied to employment Three Pillars of ADD Good Governance Ensuring protection of migrant workers. Empowering workers to fulfil goals and aspirations. Affording workers the opportunity to benefit equitably from outcomes of temporary labour migration. Temporary Labour Migration Model: Host countries manage cyclical economic shifts without conferring permanent residency. Migrants are incentivised to remit earnings and return home with improved skills, knowledge, and entrepreneurial capital. About the Colombo Process (CP) Feature Detail Established 2003 Nature Regional Consultative Process; 12 Asian origin countries Members Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam Secretariat Support IOM (International Organization for Migration) — HQ Geneva; part of UN System since 2016 India's Role Current Chair (May 2024–2026) — first time since CP's 2003 inception Focus Overseas employment management; ethical recruitment; skills recognition; safe migration Multilateral Migration Forums — Comparative Table Forum Year Nature Key Lead Colombo Process 2003 12 Asian origin countries India (Chair 2024–26; first time) Abu Dhabi Dialogue 2008 11 origin + 7 destination countries UAE Secretariat; Pakistan (current chair) Budapest Process 1993 50+ govts; interregional Turkey (chair); Hungary (co-chair); India = Observer Bali Process 2002 45-member; anti-trafficking/smuggling Australia & Indonesia (co-chairs) GCM 2018 UN-wide; non-binding migration compact UN General Assembly GFMD 2007 Global Forum; state-led; informal Rotating; preceded GCM IMRF 2022 (1st) Reviews GCM implementation every 4 years 2nd IMRF: May 2026, New York Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM) Adopted December 2018, Marrakesh, Morocco — first inter-governmentally negotiated UN agreement on all dimensions of international migration; non-binding; 23 objectives across 6 themes. India's Voluntary National Review Report submitted to UN Network on Migration — first time. 2nd IMRF: 5–8 May 2026, New York. India-Specific Migration Context eMigrate System: Digital platform for regulating emigration of workers to Emigration Check Required (ECR) countries — primarily GCC nations. ECR Passport: Required for unskilled/semi-skilled workers going to notified countries; provides consular protection for vulnerable migrants. Pravasi Bharatiya Divas: Biennial convention connecting Indian diaspora with the homeland; held every two years in January. Pravasi Bharatiya Bima Yojana: Mandatory insurance scheme for ECR passport holders going abroad for employment. Concerns Kafala System in Gulf Countries: Employer-sponsored residency that ties workers' legal status to their employer — creates potential for exploitation and modern slavery. ADD's framework operates within this structural constraint without dismantling it. Wage Theft and Contract Substitution ("Visa Substitution"): Workers frequently face different terms on arrival than contracted; enforcement of Bilateral Labour Agreements (BLAs) remains weak. Feminisation of Migration: Growing numbers of women migrating as domestic workers face disproportionate vulnerability; ADD frameworks need gender-specific protections. Way Forward Leverage India's Colombo Process chairmanship (2024–26) to push for stronger worker protection standards and expand CP membership. Negotiate mandatory pre-departure orientation and destination-country ombudsman mechanisms through ADD consultations. Reform the Kafala system through bilateral pressure and ADD multilateral advocacy — the single most impactful structural change for migrant welfare in the Gulf. Prelims Pointers Abu Dhabi Dialogue (ADD): Established 2008; voluntary, non-binding; 11 origin + 7 destination countries; permanent secretariat: UAE; chairmanship rotates. Colombo Process: Established 2003; 12 Asian origin countries; IOM administrative support (HQ Geneva); India is current Chair 2024–26 — first time ever. ADD is an extension of the Colombo Process — CP members form ADD's origin side; GCC + Malaysia added on the destination side. Bali Process (2002): Co-chaired by Australia and Indonesia; focus: trafficking and smuggling; 45 members. Budapest Process (1993): Chaired by Turkey, co-chaired by Hungary; India is Observer (not full member). GCM (2018): First inter-governmental UN migration compact; 23 objectives; adopted Marrakesh; non-binding. IMRF: Reviews GCM every 4 years; 1st: 2022, New York; 2nd: May 2026, New York. India's remittances: world's largest recipient (~$125 billion, 2023); ~3–4% of GDP. Kafala System: Employer-sponsored residency in Gulf — ties worker's legal status to employer; key structural migration governance concern. eMigrate / ECR passport: India's emigration regulatory framework for workers going to notified countries. IOM: International Organization for Migration; part of UN System since 2016; HQ Geneva; administrative support to Colombo Process. GFMD (2007): Global Forum on Migration and Development; state-led; informal; preceded GCM. Practice Mains Question "India's large emigrant workforce and vast diaspora make labour migration governance a strategic, economic, and humanitarian priority. Examine India's engagement with multilateral migration forums like the Abu Dhabi Dialogue and the Colombo Process, and critically assess the adequacy of existing frameworks in protecting Indian migrant workers." GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Assertion (A): The Abu Dhabi Dialogue is more inclusive than the Colombo Process as it incorporates both labour-sending and labour-receiving countries. Reason (R): The Abu Dhabi Dialogue was established in 2008 as an extension of the Colombo Process, bringing Gulf destination countries into dialogue with Asian origin countries to govern temporary contractual labour migration. (a)Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A (b)Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A (c)A is true but R is false (d)A is false but R is true Correct Answer: (a) The ADD (2008) was built on the CP (2003) framework by adding 6 Gulf destination countries and Malaysia — creating a two-sided consultative forum. This bilateral origin-destination structure makes ADD more inclusive than the origin-only Colombo Process, and R accurately explains the institutional mechanism behind A. Article 03 Falling Net FDI — Composition and BoP Concerns GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy | Balance of Payments | Capital Flows Why in News India's net FDI fell from a peak of $44 billion (2020-21) to under $1 billion (2024-25), recovering marginally to $7.6 billion (2025-26) against gross inflows of $94.6 billion. This sharp divergence has opened a critical policy debate about the true quality and sustainability of India's FDI. Static Background: FDI and the Balance of Payments FDI (Foreign Direct Investment): Investment where the foreign investor acquires a lasting interest and significant degree of influence (≥10% voting power) in an enterprise; appears in the Financial Account of the BoP. Distinguished from FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investment): Short-term, securities-based investment without management control. India's liberal FDI policy introduced in 1991 (LPG reforms; PM Narasimha Rao; FM Manmohan Singh); later shifted toward maximising gross inflow numbers over investment quality. India currently permits 100% FDI under the automatic route in most sectors. The Three Categories of FDI Category Nature Share of Effective Inflows (2022-26) Real FDI (RFDI) Traditional MNEs; brings technology, brands, management skills; long-term commitment 41.9% Financial Investors PE funds, VC firms, sovereign wealth funds, asset managers; goal = capital growth + planned exit 40.5% Diaspora & SPVs Capital via offshore financial centres; may include round-tripping of Indian funds 17.6% Critical Insight: RFDI into manufacturing specifically has declined across three consecutive four-year periods and constituted only 10.6% of effective inflows in 2022-26 — deeply concerning for Make in India ambitions. The Gross vs. Net FDI Problem Gross FDI includes transactions involving no fresh capital entering India: intra-group ownership reorganisations; M&A via share swaps; conversion of ECBs and convertible debentures into equity; "offers for sale" by foreign promoters (e.g., Hyundai, LG). Approximately $40 billion of the $560 billion in equity inflows from 2014-15 to 2025-26 fall into this category. BoP Classification — The Critical Distinction Transaction BoP Classification Effect on Net FDI? Dividend repatriation by foreign companies Current Account (investment income) NO — raises CAD instead Disinvestment / capital repatriation Financial Account YES — primary driver of weak net FDI Profit reinvestment (reinvested earnings) Financial Account Increases net FDI The official narrative blaming profit repatriation for weak net FDI is misleading — dividends go through the Current Account. The actual culprit is disinvestment and capital repatriation by financial investors. Key Data Points Net FDI trend: $44 billion (2020-21 peak) → <$1 billion (2024-25) → $7.6 billion (2025-26). Temasek exit (2025): Earned $6.4 billion on a $637 million investment in Schneider Electric India (2020) — illustrating the financial investor exit-driven model. Total divestment CY 2025: $52 billion; 45 major PE/VC exits = $29 billion outflows. Outflow ratio: ~$1.50 flowed out for every $1 of fresh inflow (2022-26) — up from $0.56 (2014-18) and $0.70 (2018-22). A worsening structural trend. Outward FDI (OFDI) 2023-26: $65 billion total; 45% to "Financial, Insurance, Business Services" sector via SPVs in Singapore (27%) and UAE (11%). GIFT City: OFDI grew from $246 million (2023-24) to $1.18 billion (2025-26) — raising round-tripping concerns. Major Outflow Channels (2022-23 to 2025-26) Channel Amount BoP Classification Dividend remittances $118.9 billion Current Account IPR / Royalty payments (MNE subsidiaries, est. 75%) $46.6 billion Current Account Disinvestment & capital repatriation $178.9 billion Financial Account — primary driver of weak net FDI Combined outflows = $344.4 billion — approximately $1.50 for every $1 of fresh inflow (excluding reinvested earnings). Concerns Make in India Disconnect: Only 10.6% of effective FDI going to manufacturing despite PLI and other incentives. Financial Investor Dominance (40.5%): PE/VC FDI is inherently exit-oriented; large-scale capital repatriation is structurally built into the model. Round-Tripping Risk: OFDI to Singapore and UAE via SPVs may represent Indian capital recycled as "foreign" investment. External Sustainability: Worsening outflow-to-inflow ratio ($1.50/$1) poses medium-term pressure on CAD and forex reserves. Quality vs. Quantity Policy Gap: Prioritising gross FDI headlines over investment quality may misallocate fiscal incentives. Way Forward Develop FDI quality metrics — track RFDI vs. financial investor inflows separately in official RBI/DPIIT statistics. Strengthen manufacturing FDI incentives through PLI reinforcement targeted at genuine technology-bearing MNEs. Review OFDI outflows through GIFT City to prevent regulatory arbitrage and round-tripping. Monitor the outflow-to-inflow ratio as a key macroprudential indicator alongside gross FDI headlines. Prelims Pointers Net FDI = Gross FDI inflows minus disinvestment and capital repatriation (Financial Account items) — dividend payments do NOT reduce net FDI. Dividends: recorded in Current Account (investment income) — affect the CAD, not net FDI. A critical Prelims/Mains distinction. Round-tripping = Indian capital sent abroad (via tax havens) and returned as 'foreign' investment — distorts inflow and outflow statistics. SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle): Legal entity for a specific narrow purpose — used to route FDI through offshore financial centres. ECB (External Commercial Borrowing): Foreign-currency loans by Indian companies; conversion to equity appears as FDI inflow even without fresh capital. GIFT City (Gujarat International Finance Tec-City): India's first IFSC; growing two-way flows raise round-tripping concerns. Real FDI (RFDI): From traditional MNEs; brings technology and management — only 41.9% of effective inflows currently. LPG Reforms (1991): PM Narasimha Rao; FM Manmohan Singh — introduced India's liberal FDI policy. Financial Account of BoP: Records FDI, FPI, external borrowings, and reserve changes — distinct from Current Account. Make in India (2014): Flagship manufacturing FDI initiative — but manufacturing RFDI has declined across three consecutive four-year periods. FEMA (1999): Foreign Exchange Management Act — governs FDI and forex transactions; replaced FERA (1973). Automatic Route vs. Government Route: Most FDI sectors under automatic route (no prior approval); sensitive sectors require government approval. Practice Mains Question "India's impressive gross FDI figures mask a structurally fragile investment ecosystem. Critically examine the composition of India's FDI inflows, the reasons for declining net FDI, and the implications for India's external sector sustainability and industrial development goals." GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following statements about India's Foreign Direct Investment and Balance of Payments is correct? (a)Dividend repatriation by foreign companies reduces India's net FDI in the financial account of the BoP. (b)Intra-group ownership reorganisations and conversion of ECBs into equity are recorded as gross FDI inflows even when no fresh capital enters India. (c)Real FDI (RFDI) from traditional multinational enterprises accounted for over 60% of effective inflows between 2022-23 and 2025-26. (d)India's outward FDI is primarily directed toward manufacturing entities in Southeast Asia. Correct Answer: (b) Dividends are recorded in the Current Account, not the Financial Account — making (a) incorrect. RFDI accounted for only 41.9% — making (c) incorrect. Outward FDI is concentrated in "Financial, Insurance, Business Services" (45%) via SPVs in Singapore and UAE — not manufacturing — making (d) incorrect. Only (b) is correct: share swaps and ECB conversions appear as gross FDI inflows without fresh capital entering India. Article 04 Floating Solar — India's 102 GW Reservoir Potential GS Paper 3 — Energy | Environment | Renewable Energy | Infrastructure Why in News The National Institute of Solar Energy (NISE), an autonomous institute under MNRE, released the first comprehensive national assessment of floating solar photovoltaic (FPV) potential — estimating 102.18 GWp from India's inland reservoirs. This takes India's total assessed solar potential to 3,445 GWp (ground-mounted: 3,343 GWp + floating: 102.18 GWp). India's Renewable Energy Landscape Indicator Figure Non-fossil capacity in 2014 81 GW Non-fossil capacity in 2026 ~288 GW Solar capacity in 2014 2.8 GW Solar capacity in 2026 ~155 GW — a 55-fold increase India's 2030 target (non-fossil) 500 GW India's 2047 target (renewable) 1,800 GW Net-zero target 2070 Total assessed solar potential 3,445 GWp (3,343 ground + 102.18 floating) The Land Constraint Ground-mounted systems dominate India's ~155 GW installed solar capacity but require 3–4× more area per MW than panels themselves occupy. Land acquisition: costly, slow, prone to conflicts with agriculture, habitation, and forest rights — the primary bottleneck for India's 500 GW solar expansion target. About Floating Solar (Floatovoltaics / FPV) Solar panels mounted on buoyant structures on water bodies — lakes, reservoirs, ponds, and canals. Eliminates the land acquisition problem entirely. Additional Benefits over Ground-Mounted Solar Reduced evaporation: Panels shade the water surface — critical for water-stressed states. Improved panel efficiency: Water cooling effect can improve PV efficiency by 5–15%. Reduced algal bloom: Shading limits sunlight penetration, reducing algae growth. Dual use: No agricultural or habitation displacement. Challenges ~25% higher upfront cost than ground-mounted systems (NREL 2021 benchmark); advantage is indirect — avoids land acquisition cost and conflict. Engineering risks: anchoring, float joint integrity, cable management — Omkareshwar damaged in April 2024 storm due to insufficient anchoring. Ecological concerns: excessive surface coverage impacts aquatic ecosystems — hence the 20% surface cap in NISE methodology. NISE Assessment — Methodology and Findings Six Geospatial Filters: (1) Reservoirs >10 ha; (2) Water present ≥11 months/year; (3) Depth 3–30 m; (4) Irradiance >4.5 kWh/m²/day; (5) Within 10 km of roads; (6) Within 10 km of substations. Self-imposed cap: 20% of any reservoir's surface. Result: 1,946 sq km feasible → 102.18 GWp. Demonstration site: Hirakud Reservoir, Odisha — 499 sq km total; 99.5 sq km usable. Top States by Floating Solar Potential Rank State Potential 1 Maharashtra 16.28 GW 2 Madhya Pradesh 14.89 GW 3 Karnataka 13.69 GW 4 Odisha 12.81 GW 5 Telangana 10.72 GW Flagship Project: Omkareshwar Floating Solar Park Feature Detail Location Omkareshwar Dam, Khandwa district, Madhya Pradesh River Narmada Current capacity ~278 MW (Phase 1; as of 2024) Planned capacity 600 MW — among world's largest when complete Operators AMPIN Energy (100 MW), NHDC/NHPC (88 MW), SJVN (90 MW), Tata Power (126 MW) CO² reduction 2.3 lakh tonnes annually Notable issue Portions damaged in April 2024 storm due to anchoring failure Global Context and Policy Global floating solar: ~9.6 GW by 2024; Asia ~90%. China leads; Singapore's 1 MW Tengeh Reservoir pilot = key global FPV data source; Netherlands ~3/4 of Europe's capacity. MNRE working on a dedicated floating solar scheme; NISE and Military Engineering Services signed an MoU to promote solar across defence establishments. Agri-PV (Agri-Photovoltaics): Solar panels over farmland — dual land use; promoted alongside floating solar by MNRE. PM-KUSUM (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan): Solar scheme for farmers — complementary to Agri-PV. SECI (Solar Energy Corporation of India): Nodal agency under MNRE for solar project procurement and tendering. Prelims Pointers NISE = National Institute of Solar Energy; autonomous institute under MNRE; released India's first national floating solar potential assessment. India's total assessed solar potential: 3,445 GWp = 3,343 GWp (ground) + 102.18 GWp (floating). Floating solar ~25% costlier upfront than ground-mounted (NREL 2021 benchmark); advantage is indirect — eliminates land acquisition cost. Omkareshwar Floating Solar Park: Khandwa district, MP; River Narmada; current ~278 MW; planned 600 MW — among world's largest when complete. Hirakud Reservoir: Odisha; on River Mahanadi; NISE demonstration site for geospatial floating solar methodology. NREL = National Renewable Energy Laboratory; USA; source of floating solar cost benchmark. India's solar growth: 2.8 GW (2014) → ~155 GW (2026) — 55-fold increase. 2030 target: 500 GW non-fossil; 2047: 1,800 GW renewable; Net-zero: 2070. Agri-PV = Solar panels over farmland — dual land use; promoted alongside floating solar by MNRE. SECI = Solar Energy Corporation of India — nodal agency under MNRE for solar procurement. PM-KUSUM = Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan — solar energy scheme for farmers. Floating solar benefits: reduces evaporation, improves efficiency (water cooling 5–15%), limits algal bloom. 20% surface cap per reservoir = NISE ecological constraint. Practice Mains Question "India's land constraint is emerging as a critical bottleneck in its renewable energy expansion. Examine the potential of floating solar photovoltaics on India's inland reservoirs, the challenges of large-scale deployment, and its relevance to India's 500 GW renewable energy target by 2030." GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to floating solar energy in India, which of the following statements is NOT correct? (a)The National Institute of Solar Energy (NISE) assessed India's reservoir-based floating solar potential at approximately 102 GWp. (b)The Omkareshwar floating solar park on the Narmada River in Madhya Pradesh currently has an installed capacity of approximately 278 MW and is planned to scale to 600 MW. (c)Floating solar panels cost approximately 25% less than ground-mounted systems because they eliminate land acquisition costs. (d)NISE applied a 20% surface coverage cap per reservoir as an ecological constraint in its national potential assessment. Correct Answer: (c) Floating solar panels cost approximately 25% more upfront than ground-mounted systems — not less. The cost advantage is indirect: it avoids the high cost and conflict of land acquisition. All other statements are correct per the NISE assessment. Article 05 Axolotl — FIFA 2026 and Conservation Crisis GS Paper 3 — Environment | Biodiversity | Conservation Why in News The axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum) has become the unofficial mascot of Mexico City's FIFA World Cup 2026 hosting (Mexico City hosts 5 matches). Scientists conducting the latest census have found zero axolotls in the wild over the past two years. The commercial use of a critically endangered species as event imagery without conservation action has drawn sharp criticism. Important clarification: The official FIFA World Cup 2026 mascot is "Striker" (a cartoon bobcat). The axolotl is the unofficial mascot of Mexico City's hosting specifically — not of the FIFA 2026 tournament as a whole. Taxonomy and Classification Feature Detail Scientific name Ambystoma mexicanum Common name Axolotl (Classical Nahuatl āxōlōtl = 'water monster') Kingdom / Class Animalia / Amphibia (NOT a fish, NOT a reptile) Order / Family Urodela (salamanders) / Ambystomatidae (mole salamanders) IUCN Status Critically Endangered CITES Listing Appendix II Estimated wild population 50–1,000 adults (IUCN) Lifespan 10–15 years | Size: typically 15–30 cm What Makes the Axolotl Biologically Unique 1. Neoteny (Obligate Pedomorphism) The axolotl never undergoes metamorphosis — it retains larval features permanently (external feathery gills, tail fin, aquatic lifestyle) even after reaching sexual maturity. Caused by a hormonal mechanism — the axolotl lacks the thyroid-stimulating signal that triggers thyroxine-driven metamorphosis; neoteny is an adaptive specialisation to stable aquatic habitats, not a defect. Related term: Paedomorphosis = retention of juvenile characteristics in adult form; neoteny is a subtype. 2. Extraordinary Regenerative Ability Can regenerate limbs, spinal cord, eyes, heart, and parts of the brain — complete functional restoration within ~2 months; unique among vertebrates for brain regeneration capacity. Also absorbs oxygen through skin (cutaneous respiration) — highly sensitive to water pollution; serves as a biological indicator species. Scientific significance: promising leads in cancer research, stem cell therapy, anti-ageing, and regenerative medicine. 3. Conservation Paradox Abundant in captivity (research labs, pet trade worldwide since brought to Paris in 1864). Critically Endangered in the wild — a species simultaneously thriving in labs and vanishing in nature; illustrates the limits of ex-situ conservation alone. Habitat: Xochimilco — The Last Refuge Chinampas: Traditional Aztec-era floating island farms on shallow lake beds — UNESCO-recognised agricultural heritage. The Aztec capital Tenochtitlan (present-day Mexico City) was built on a vast lake system largely drained during Spanish colonial rule. Xochimilco (southern Mexico City) — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — is the axolotl's last wild refuge. Population Collapse Year Wild Population Density (Xochimilco) 1998 ~6,000 per sq km 2014 ~36 per sq km (UNAM survey) 2024–2026 Zero sighted — ongoing UNAM census Threats Habitat loss: Colonial draining of lake system; urban sprawl; poorly treated wastewater contaminating Xochimilco canals. Invasive species: Tilapia and carp (introduced fish) compete for food and predate on larvae — primary driver of wild population collapse. Water pollution: Axolotls absorb oxygen through skin — among the first to suffer in degraded water bodies. Chinampas conversion: Traditional farming islands being converted to soccer pitches — directly connected to the FIFA 2026 irony. Mass ecological tourism: Overcrowding of fragile Xochimilco ecosystem — worsened further by FIFA 2026 visitor surge. Conservation Response UNAM (National Autonomous University of Mexico) leads research and census; established captive breeding programmes; captive-bred axolotls have shown some survival when rewilded (2025). Shelters (stacked rocks + reedy plants + filtered water) being built in Xochimilco's canals. Axolotl functions as an umbrella species — protecting its habitat benefits the entire Xochimilco aquatic ecosystem. No formal national recovery plan has been publicly announced despite decades of documented decline. Prelims Pointers Axolotl = Ambystoma mexicanum; Class Amphibia; Order Urodela; Family Ambystomatidae — NOT a fish, NOT a reptile. IUCN Status: Critically Endangered; CITES Appendix II; wild estimate: only 50–1,000 adults. Native habitat: Xochimilco, Mexico City — last wild refuge; UNESCO World Heritage Site. Neoteny = permanent retention of larval features in adult form — caused by absence of thyroid-stimulating signal. Paedomorphosis = broader term; neoteny is a subtype. Axolotl absorbs oxygen through skin (cutaneous respiration) — highly vulnerable to water pollution; a biological indicator species. Wild population collapse: ~6,000/sq km (1998) → ~36/sq km (2014) → zero sighted (2024-26). Chinampas = Aztec-era floating island farms; UNESCO heritage; Xochimilco — last axolotl habitat. Tenochtitlan = Aztec capital; present-day Mexico City; lake system largely drained during Spanish colonial rule. Invasive species: Tilapia and carp — primary drivers of wild population collapse. Axolotl can regenerate limbs, spinal cord, eyes, heart, and parts of the brain — relevant to cancer, stem cell, and anti-ageing research. UNAM = National Autonomous University of Mexico; leads axolotl research and census. IUCN Red List categories: Least Concern → Near Threatened → Vulnerable → Endangered → Critically Endangered → Extinct in the Wild → Extinct. Conservation paradox: Abundant in captivity; near-extinct in wild — demonstrates limits of ex-situ conservation alone. FIFA 2026 official mascot = 'Striker' (bobcat); axolotl = unofficial mascot of Mexico City's hosting only. Practice Mains Question "The axolotl's story illustrates how rapid urbanisation, mass tourism, invasive species, and climate change intersect to push endemic species toward extinction even as they thrive in captivity. Examine the conservation challenges facing critically endangered freshwater species and discuss the limitations of ex-situ conservation as a substitute for habitat protection." GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the axolotl (Ambystoma mexicanum): 1. The axolotl is a permanently aquatic amphibian that retains larval features including external gills throughout its adult life due to a phenomenon called neoteny. 2. The axolotl is native to the Xochimilco canal system of Mexico City and is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List, with an estimated wild population of only 50–1,000 adults. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 only (b)2 only (c)Both 1 and 2 (d)Neither 1 nor 2 Correct Answer: (c) Both statements are correct. Statement 1 accurately describes neoteny — permanent retention of larval features due to the absence of the metamorphic hormonal trigger. Statement 2 correctly identifies the native habitat (Xochimilco), IUCN status (Critically Endangered), and the estimated wild population (50–1,000 adults). A detail-intensive question rewarding aspirants who know both biology and conservation data. Article 06 Glacial Lake Outburst Floods — Kashmir Himalaya GS Paper 3 — Disaster Management | Environment | Climate Change Why in News A University of Kashmir study published in the Journal of Glaciology has identified five glacial lakes in the Kashmir Himalaya as having "very high susceptibility" to Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs): Bramsar, Chirsar, Nundkol, Gangabal, and Bhagsar. Chief Minister Omar Abdullah confirmed this in the J&K Legislative Assembly in March 2026. No community-based early warning systems exist on any of these lakes. India's Himalayan Glaciers — Key Facts The Himalayas and Hindu Kush-Karakoram ranges host the largest concentration of glaciers outside the polar regions — often called the "Third Pole." India has approximately 9,575 glaciers in the Himalayan region (Geological Survey of India); feed major rivers: Indus, Ganga, Brahmaputra — critical for subcontinent water security. Kashmir Himalayan glaciers: thinning at 0.66 m/year; ice-contact lakes expanded 26% (1992–2024); average maximum temperature rose +1.4°C over 40 years. What is a Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF)? As a glacier retreats, it deposits a ridge of rock, sediment, and debris called a moraine. Meltwater accumulates behind this natural dam forming a glacial lake. Unlike an engineered dam, a moraine is uncompacted and structurally fragile — vulnerable to sudden failure. GLOF Triggers Avalanche or rock/ice fall → displacement wave overtopping moraine. Earthquake → moraine destabilisation (especially relevant in Seismic Zone V). Rising lake water level → overtopping and erosion of moraine. Permafrost thaw → slope destabilisation and moraine weakening. Rapid snowmelt + intense rainfall → sudden lake volume increase. GLOF Characteristics Sudden, catastrophic release of stored water and debris at extreme speed through narrow mountain valleys. Can trigger secondary landslides and flash floods far downstream. Often gives little to no advance warning without monitoring systems. Key Study Findings Mapped 155 glacial lakes using satellite data (1992–2024); used 10 hydrogeomorphic indicators: dam material, lake expansion rate, slope stability, seismic activity, permafrost thaw, upstream cascade potential, etc. Downstream Exposure (Geospatial Modelling) Lake Location Threatened Infrastructure Gangabal + Nundkol Ganderbal district; drain into Wangath Nullah → Sindh River 1,184 buildings, 4 bridges, 1 hydropower plant Bhagsar Kulgam district 1,114 buildings, 6 bridges, Mughal Road All 5 combined Ganderbal, Shopian, Kulgam ~2,700+ buildings, ~15 bridges Gangabal Lake: Area 1.65 sq km; altitude 3,576 m asl; fed by Harmukh Glacier. GLOF risk projected to shift and triple toward western Himalayas by end of century — Kashmir directly in the escalating risk corridor. Seismic Compounding Factor Kashmir lies in Seismic Zone V — India's highest earthquake hazard category (maximum probable intensity: MSK IX and above). Zone V states/regions: J&K, Ladakh, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Northeast India, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, parts of Rann of Kutch. An earthquake can simultaneously trigger landslides, moraine collapse, and GLOF — a compound cascade disaster scenario. Reference Disaster: Sikkim GLOF (October 2023) South Lhonak Lake, North Sikkim breached on October 4, 2023 — triggered by slumping of ice-rich permafrost moraine. 178 people killed; destroyed 3 hydropower projects including the 1,200 MW Teesta-III dam — within hours. Key lesson: No advance warning system was in place — GLOFs can devastate in hours, underscoring urgency of early warning infrastructure. Current Gaps and Governance Failures No early warning systems on any of the 5 high-risk lakes — no sirens, sensors, water-level gauges, or cameras. No community communication: Downstream villages and shepherds have received no information in local languages (Kashmiri/Urdu) about risks, evacuation routes, or protocols. Researcher minimum viable recommendation: Time-lapse cameras at Nundkol and Gangabal transmitting every few minutes — expandable to sensors, weather stations, and sirens. Key distinction — Susceptibility ≠ Imminent threat: "Very high susceptibility" means physical conditions for a GLOF are present, not that failure is imminent. Risk changes quickly as glaciers retreat. Way Forward NDMA GLOF Framework: Develop a dedicated national GLOF monitoring protocol under the National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) for all high-risk Himalayan lakes. ISRO and GSI: Integrate glacial lake monitoring into ISRO's remote sensing programs (InSAR + optical satellite); GSI to produce annual GLOF susceptibility updates. Community Early Warning Systems: Camera + sensor networks on high-risk lakes; alerts in local languages broadcast to downstream communities. Seismic-GLOF Cascade Preparedness: Train emergency responders for compound earthquake-triggered GLOF scenarios. Sendai Framework alignment: India's GLOF preparedness must align with Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030) — especially on early warning and community resilience. Prelims Pointers GLOF = Glacial Lake Outburst Flood; sudden catastrophic release of water when a natural moraine or ice dam fails. Moraine = Ridge of rock, sediment, and debris deposited by a retreating glacier — forms the natural (unstable) dam of glacial lakes; NOT an engineered structure. Five high-risk Kashmir lakes: Bramsar, Chirsar, Nundkol, Gangabal (Ganderbal district), Bhagsar — University of Kashmir study in Journal of Glaciology. Gangabal + Nundkol drain into Wangath Nullah → Sindh River (tributary of Jhelum). Kashmir lies in Seismic Zone V — India's highest earthquake risk zone. Himalayan glaciers: India has ~9,575 glaciers; Himalayan region = 'Third Pole'. Kashmir glaciers: thinning 0.66 m/year; ice-contact lakes expanded 26% (1992–2024); temperature rise: +1.4°C over 40 years. Sikkim GLOF (October 4, 2023): South Lhonak Lake; 178 killed; 3 hydropower projects destroyed including 1,200 MW Teesta-III; no advance warning. GLOF triggers: avalanche, earthquake, permafrost thaw, rising water level, intense rainfall — NOT exclusively earthquakes. GLOF risk in western Himalayas projected to triple by end of century. NDMA = National Disaster Management Authority; statutory body under DM Act 2005; chaired by Prime Minister. Sendai Framework (2015–2030): UN framework for disaster risk reduction; 7 global targets; 4 priorities; India signatory. InSAR = Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar — satellite technology for glacier and land surface deformation monitoring. Susceptibility ≠ Imminence — a critical conceptual distinction for Prelims MCQs and Mains answers on disaster risk. Practice Mains Question "Glacial Lake Outburst Floods represent a compound climate-seismic disaster risk for Himalayan communities that current governance frameworks are ill-equipped to manage. Critically examine the nature of GLOF risks in the Kashmir Himalaya, the communication and institutional gaps revealed by recent research, and the multi-layered preparedness measures needed." GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOFs), which of the following statements is correct? (a)A GLOF typically occurs when a moraine or ice dam retaining a glacial lake fails suddenly, releasing stored water and debris in a catastrophic flood downstream. (b)Moraines are engineered concrete structures constructed to manage glacial meltwater in high-altitude regions. (c)The Sikkim GLOF of October 2023 was preceded by a multi-day advance warning from ISRO's satellite monitoring system. (d)GLOFs can only be triggered by seismic activity and cannot result from avalanches or rising water pressure. Correct Answer: (a) A GLOF is the sudden failure of a natural moraine or ice dam — making (a) correct. Moraines are natural debris deposits, not engineered structures — making (b) incorrect. The Sikkim GLOF (October 2023) struck without advance warning — making (c) incorrect. GLOFs can be triggered by avalanches, earthquakes, permafrost thaw, and rising water pressure — not exclusively seismic activity — making (d) incorrect. Article 07 Birsa Munda — Adivasi Identity, Ulgulan, and Legacy GS Paper 1 — Modern Indian History | Social Movements  |  GS Paper 2 — Tribal Rights | Vulnerable Sections Why in News June 9 is the death anniversary of Birsa Munda (died June 9, 1900, Ranchi Jail, aged 24). Tribal organisations in Jharkhand renewed pledges to protect his legacy amid fresh demands for "delisting" — removing tribal converts to Christianity or Islam from the Scheduled Tribes list — raised at a Delhi gathering attended by Union Home Minister Amit Shah in May 2026. Personal Timeline Event Date / Detail Born 15 November 1875, Ulihatu village, Chotanagpur (present-day Jharkhand) Community Munda tribe; Chotanagpur plateau region Early education Missionary school, Chaibasa (German Mission school); initially converted to Christianity Break from Christianity Disagreement with church authorities over remarks about Munda community Brief Vaishnavism influence Phase after leaving missionary education Birsait faith founded Independent religious movement distinct from Sarnaism, Christianity, and Hinduism Arrested 3 March 1900, Jamkopai forest, Chakradharpur — while with guerilla army Died 9 June 1900, Old Central Jail, Ranchi; aged 24 Cause of death Official: cholera; believed by many to be British foul play — no conclusive evidence Epithets: "Dharti Aba" (Father of the Earth); "Bhagwan" (by his followers). The Chotanagpur Context Chotanagpur Plateau: Mineral-rich plateau spanning present-day Jharkhand, parts of Odisha, Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, and MP; home to Munda, Ho, Oraon, Santhal, and other tribal communities. Colonial period saw systematic dispossession through zamindari introduction, forest reservation, and missionary expansion — fundamentally disrupting the Khuntkatti system. Khuntkatti System: Traditional Munda system of collective land ownership; rights held by Khuntkattidars — descendants of original settlers who cleared forests and established a village. Colonial land revenue systems were fundamentally incompatible with and destructive to this. "Diku" (Outsiders): Munda term for non-tribal exploitative outsiders — zamindars, moneylenders, missionaries seen as instruments of colonial dispossession. The Ulgulan (1895–1900) Meaning: "Great Tumult" or "Great Rebellion" in Mundari. Dual character: (1) Political-agrarian — resistance against British land policies, forest laws, forced labour (beth begari), and diku zamindars; (2) Religious-cultural — revitalisation of Adivasi identity and sovereignty through the Birsait faith. Key slogan: "Diku Raj Tuntu Jana – Abua Raj Ete Jana" ("The rule of outsiders is over; our own rule has begun"). Climax — Dombari Buru (January 1900): Hill in Khunti district (then Ranchi); thousands gathered to assert land rights; British forces fired on the crowd; Birsa arrested 3 March 1900 at Jamkopai forest, Chakradharpur. Outcome: British initiated land reforms → legal recognition of Khuntkatti rights → Chotanagpur Tenancy (CNT) Act, 1908. Chotanagpur Tenancy (CNT) Act, 1908 Enacted after decades of Adivasi resistance culminating in the Ulgulan; central objective: Prevent transfer of Adivasi land to non-Adivasis; legally recognise traditional land tenure systems including Khuntkatti. Remains one of the strongest tribal land safeguard laws in India today — still in force in Jharkhand; 2016 amendment attempt met with massive tribal resistance. Companion legislation: Santhal Parganas Tenancy (SPT) Act, 1949 — similar protections for Santhal-dominated areas. Birsa's Religious Vision — Birsait Faith Distinct from Sarnaism (traditional tribal animist/nature-worship faith of Munda and other Jharkhand communities). Distinct from Christianity (despite missionary education) and from Hinduism (despite brief Vaishnavism influence). Centred on reverence for a single supreme god, nature, and the ancestral land ethic; followers regard Birsa as "Bhagwan" and attribute miracles to him. The Birsait faith demonstrates Adivasi capacity to develop independent spiritual frameworks — a crucial fact for UPSC MCQs that wrongly characterise it as a Hindu sect. Long-Term Political Legacy Ulgulan's vision of Adivasi self-governance (Munda Disum) was channelled into the Jharkhand statehood movement under Jaipal Singh Munda — Oxford-educated, 1928 Amsterdam Olympics hockey gold medallist, champion of tribal rights in the Constituent Assembly. Jharkhand state created: 15 November 2000 — on Birsa Munda's birth anniversary. Janjatiya Gaurav Divas: Union Cabinet declared 15 November as Tribal Pride Day on 10 November 2021; first observed 15 November 2021 (India's 75th independence anniversary). Bhagwan Birsa Munda Memorial Park-cum-Museum: Built in the Old Central Jail complex, Ranchi — where Birsa was imprisoned and died. PM-JANMAN (PM Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan): Development scheme for Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs). The "Delisting" Debate — Contemporary Relevance Demand: Remove tribal converts to Christianity or Islam from Scheduled Tribes list on grounds that conversion breaks cultural/community identity. Counter-argument: Adivasi identity is determined by ancestry, community belonging, and connection to land — not religion. Consistent with constitutional intent and judicial interpretation. Legal position: SC has repeatedly held that religious conversion does not automatically disentitle a person from ST status — the test is social and community belonging. Article 342: President is empowered to specify Scheduled Tribes; Parliament can modify by law. Key concern: Delisting would disproportionately affect Christian tribal communities in Jharkhand, Odisha, and Northeast India — stripping millions of constitutional protections. Birsa Munda's own descendants have followed Christianity for generations. Way Forward Strengthen implementation of CNT Act and PESA Act — the two most important tribal land and governance safeguards. Resolve the delisting question through judicial clarity and Parliamentary consultation with tribal communities — not through majoritarian political gatherings. Expand PM-JANMAN to all 75 designated PVTGs with time-bound, measurable outcomes on land rights, health, and education. Prelims Pointers Birsa Munda: Born 15 November 1875, Ulihatu village, Chotanagpur; died 9 June 1900, Ranchi Jail; aged 24; Munda tribe. 'Dharti Aba' = Father of the Earth; revered as 'Bhagwan' by followers. Ulgulan = 'Great Tumult' (Mundari); 1895–1900; against British land policies, forced labour (beth begari), diku zamindars, and missionaries. Ulgulan climax: Dombari Buru, Khunti — January 1900; Birsa arrested 3 March 1900, Jamkopai forest, Chakradharpur. Khuntkatti = Traditional Munda system of collective village land ownership by original settler descendants (Khuntkattidars). Diku = Munda/tribal term for exploitative non-tribal outsiders. CNT Act, 1908 (Chotanagpur Tenancy Act): Protects Adivasi land from non-Adivasi transfer; recognised Khuntkatti; still in force in Jharkhand. Birsait faith: Distinct from Sarnaism, Christianity, AND Hinduism — an independent religious movement; NOT a Hindu sect. Sarnaism: Traditional tribal nature/animist faith; separate from all mainstream religions. Munda Disum = Munda homeland/self-rule — the political aspiration of the Ulgulan. Jaipal Singh Munda: Oxford-educated; 1928 Amsterdam Olympics hockey gold; led Jharkhand statehood movement; championed tribal rights in Constituent Assembly. Jharkhand state created: 15 November 2000 — on Birsa Munda's birth anniversary. Janjatiya Gaurav Divas: Declared 10 November 2021; celebrated on 15 November annually. PM-JANMAN: PM Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan — for Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs); 75 PVTGs identified in India. Article 342: President specifies Scheduled Tribes; Parliament can modify by law. SC position on delisting: Religious conversion does not automatically disentitle ST status — test is social and community belonging. 5th Schedule: Administration of Scheduled Areas (tribal areas) in most of India; Governors have special powers. 6th Schedule: Tribal areas of Northeast India (Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, Mizoram) — Autonomous District Councils. PESA Act, 1996 (Panchayat Extension to Scheduled Areas Act): Extends Panchayati Raj to Scheduled Areas with special tribal governance provisions. Practice Mains Question "Birsa Munda's Ulgulan was simultaneously a movement for land rights, cultural sovereignty, religious reformation, and political self-determination. Examine the historical significance of the Ulgulan, its long-term impact on tribal legislation, and the contemporary relevance of Birsa Munda's legacy in the context of debates over Adivasi identity and Scheduled Tribe classification." GS Paper 1 / GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about Birsa Munda and the Ulgulan: 1. The Ulgulan reached its climax at Dombari Buru in Khunti district in January 1900, where British forces fired on thousands of tribal gatherings asserting land rights. 2. The Chotanagpur Tenancy (CNT) Act, 1908 legally recognised and protected the Khuntkatti system of collective tribal land ownership and prevented transfer of Adivasi land to non-Adivasis. 3. The Birsait faith founded by Birsa Munda was a reform movement within Hinduism, incorporating Vaishnavite elements with tribal traditions. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 only (b)1 and 2 only (c)2 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3