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Jul 14, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 Guardians of India’s Maritime Frontiers: Three Indigenous Naval Classes for Combat, Survey and Coastal Defence Ministry of Defence · Indian Navy · Warship Design Bureau GS 3GS 2 02 Digital Threat Report 2025–26: AI Asymmetry and Cyber Resilience in India’s BFSI Sector MeitY · CERT-In · CSIRT-Fin · SISA GS 3GS 2 Article 01 Article 01 Guardians of India’s Maritime Frontiers: Three Indigenous Naval Classes for Combat, Survey and Coastal Defence Ministry of Defence · Indian Navy · Warship Design Bureau · July 2026 Relevance: GS 3 (internal security, defence, science & technology, infrastructure) · GS 2 (India’s bilateral relations and maritime diplomacy, SAGAR/MAHASAGAR vision). GS 3GS 2 Image: INS Mahendragiri (F38), sixth Project 17A Nilgiri-class stealth frigate, commissioned 11 July 2026 at Visakhapatnam. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance 11,098 kmIndia’s coastline guarded by the Indian Navy 2.4 mn km²India’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) ~90%of India’s trade by volume carried over sea lanes 7 shipsProject 17A Nilgiri-class frigates total (6 commissioned, 1 under construction) 16 craftplanned ASW SWC strength (Arnala 8 + Mahe 8) 89,000 km²area surveyed by Indian hydrographers (2019–24); 96 charts produced Issue in Brief The Indian Navy has inducted four indigenous naval platforms across three new classes within a single month — the fastest commissioning pace in recent naval history. The three classes — Nilgiri-class stealth frigates (Project 17A), Sandhayak-class Survey Vessels (Large) and Arnala-class Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW SWC) — together constitute a layered maritime defence architecture covering surface combat, hydrography and littoral ASW. INS Mahendragiri (sixth Project 17A frigate) was commissioned on 11 July 2026 at Visakhapatnam; INS Sanshodhak was the fourth and final Sandhayak-class vessel; INS Agray the fourth Arnala-class craft. All platforms embody Aatmanirbhar Bharat in defence, with over 75% indigenous content in the Nilgiri-class and broad MSME network participation across all three programmes. Static Background — India’s Maritime Strategic Context The Indian Ocean Region (IOR) is India’s primary strategic theatre. The SAGAR doctrine (Security and Growth for All in the Region, 2015) and the newer MAHASAGAR vision frame India’s role as a net security provider across the IOR. The Warship Design Bureau (WDB) — under the Indian Navy — is India’s apex body for indigenous warship design. The Nilgiri-class represents the WDB’s 100th ship designed and delivered. Key shipbuilding agencies: Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited (MDL), Mumbai (public sector; built four Nilgiri-class ships including INS Mahendragiri) and Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers (GRSE), Kolkata (built three Nilgiri-class ships, all four Sandhayak-class vessels, and the Arnala-class in partnership with L&T Shipbuilding). Cochin Shipyard Limited (CSL) is building the parallel Mahe-class. Project 17A (Nilgiri-class) succeeds Project 17 (Shivalik-class frigates), incorporating major stealth and survivability upgrades. Estimated programme cost: ₹45,000 crore. All seven ships are named after Indian mountain ranges. The National Hydrographic Office (NHO), Dehradun manages India’s nautical charting; the International Hydrographic Organisation (IHO) sets global standards. The Arnala-class replaces ageing Abhay-class corvettes; the combined Arnala+Mahe programme targets a total ASW SWC fleet of 16 ships. Key Dimensions — Nilgiri-Class Stealth Frigates (Project 17A) Ships (7): INS Nilgiri (Jan 2025), INS Himgiri, INS Taragiri, INS Udaygiri, INS Dunagiri, INS Mahendragiri (11 Jul 2026) — sixth commissioned; INS Vindhyagiri under construction. INS Mahendragiri is the first Indian naval vessel to carry this name (drawn from the Mahendragiri range, Eastern Ghats). Size & displacement: ~149 m length; ~6,670 tonnes. Propulsion: CODOG (Combined Diesel or Gas) — diesel engines for cruising range, gas turbines for high-speed sprints. Maximum speed: 28 knots. Stealth features: Reduced radar cross-section (RCS), thermal (infrared) and acoustic signatures — improving survivability in contested environments while enabling offensive operations. Armament: BrahMos supersonic surface-to-surface missiles; medium-range surface-to-air missiles (MRSAM); Close-in Weapon Systems (CIWS) for terminal air defence. Sensors: Advanced radar suite; hull-mounted sonar (uses sound pulses to detect submarines); naval helicopters for extended ASW and surface surveillance. Indigenous content: Over 75%; contributions span a wide network of Indian MSMEs for sub-systems, electronics and structural components. Key Dimensions — Sandhayak-Class Survey Vessels (Large) Ships (4): INS Sandhayak, INS Nirdeshak, INS Ikshak, INS Sanshodhak (fourth and final; recently commissioned). All built by GRSE, Kolkata. Size & crew: ~110 m length; ~3,400 tonnes displacement; crew of ~178 personnel. Speed & range: Top speed 18+ knots; operational range of 6,500 nautical miles — enabling long-distance missions across the IOR and beyond. Survey suite: Multi-beam echo sounders, side-scan sonar and Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) for detailed seabed mapping. Accurate nautical charts ensure safe navigation for warships and merchant vessels. Secondary roles: Helicopter operations; emergency conversion to a hospital ship; Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR); search and rescue. India’s hydrographers have surveyed 89,000 sq km and produced 96 charts in five years (2019–24), aiding friendly IOR nations and reinforcing India’s standing as a trusted hydrographic partner. These vessels directly support India’s Blue Economy — the sustainable use of ocean resources including fisheries, seabed minerals and offshore energy. Key Dimensions — Arnala-Class ASW Shallow Water Craft Ships (8): Arnala, Androth, Anjadip, Amini, Abhay, INS Agray (fourth; recently commissioned), Akshay, Ajay — named after Indian islands. Built by GRSE in partnership with L&T Shipbuilding. Size: ~77.6 m length; ~900 tonnes displacement. Compact design essential for littoral operations in waters where larger frigates cannot manoeuvre effectively. Propulsion: Waterjet — drives the craft using a high-pressure jet of water rather than a conventional propeller, delivering superior agility and shallow-draft capability in coastal waters. Speed: ~25 knots. Weapons: Lightweight torpedoes; anti-submarine rockets to engage submarines below the surface. Sensors: Shallow-water sonar; combat management system (CMS) linking all sensors and weapons for integrated response. A parallel Mahe-class (8 ships) is under construction at Cochin Shipyard, raising the planned ASW SWC fleet to 16 ships — freeing larger warships for open-ocean blue-water operations. Critical Analysis — Strengths Layered maritime architecture: The three classes collectively cover blue-water surface combat (Nilgiri), maritime domain awareness via hydrography (Sandhayak) and littoral ASW (Arnala) — creating an interlocking, self-reinforcing defensive system that no single class could provide alone. Serial production maturity: Simultaneous multi-hull construction across MDL and GRSE demonstrates programme maturity and industrial scaling that India previously struggled to achieve — six Nilgiri-class ships commissioned in ~18 months is a historic pace. Aatmanirbhar depth: Over 75% indigenous content in the Nilgiri-class, with broad MSME participation, meaningfully reduces import dependence for high-end platforms — a qualitative shift from the earlier era of extensive foreign refits (e.g., INS Vikramaditya). Dual-use soft power: HADR, survey and hospital-ship roles embedded across all three classes extend India’s reach as a security provider and align with SAGAR/MAHASAGAR objectives. Strategic signalling: Rapid Nilgiri-class commissioning signals India’s intent to maintain a credible, modern surface fleet amid expanding Chinese naval presence in the IOR. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions Submarine gap: Despite ASW investments at the surface and littoral levels, India’s conventional submarine fleet (~16 ageing platforms) remains numerically insufficient. Project 75I (next-generation submarines) continues to face procurement delays, creating a strategic asymmetry between surface and sub-surface capability. Delay legacy: Project 17A frigates originally due from 2022 experienced significant schedule slippage; the recent acceleration is welcome but must be institutionalised into programme management processes rather than treated as an exception. Maintenance ecosystem: Indigenous design is necessary but not sufficient. India needs co-developed maintenance ecosystems, spare-parts supply chains and technically trained manpower at scale to sustain complex platforms across their 25–30-year service lives. Shipyard capacity bottleneck: MDL and GRSE remain public sector entities with structural constraints in dry-dock availability and workforce. Deeper integration of private yards (L&T Shipbuilding) needs sustained policy support beyond individual partnerships. EEZ monitoring gaps: Despite the Sandhayak-class enhancing hydrographic capability, India’s Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA) in the outer EEZ and deep ocean remains dependent on a limited P-8I maritime patrol aircraft fleet and coastal radar chains. Way Forward Prioritise Project 75I: Expedite the procurement of six advanced conventional submarines to close the critical sub-surface gap that surface and littoral platforms cannot compensate for. Expand private shipyard capacity: Formally develop L&T Shipbuilding and new entrants under a dedicated Maritime Shipbuilding Policy, moving beyond the MDL–GRSE duopoly for complex warship programmes. Deepen Maritime Domain Awareness: Expand the National Maritime Domain Awareness (NMDA) framework, integrate Sandhayak hydrographic data with real-time MDA feeds, and plan additional P-8I acquisitions. Defence export diplomacy: Leverage the Nilgiri and Arnala design pedigree for naval exports to friendly IOR nations (Maldives, Sri Lanka, Mauritius) as a concrete expression of MAHASAGAR. Performance-Based Logistics (PBL): Mandate PBL contracts alongside each commissioning so maintenance partnerships are built in from Day 1, ensuring long-term operational readiness. Prelims Pointers Project 17A (Nilgiri-class): 7 ships; MDL (4) + GRSE (3); ~₹45,000 cr; over 75% indigenous content; CODOG propulsion; named after Indian mountain ranges. INS Mahendragiri: 6th P17A ship; commissioned 11 July 2026, Visakhapatnam; built by MDL; first Indian vessel with this name (Mahendragiri range, Eastern Ghats); Eastern Fleet. Warship Design Bureau (WDB): Nodal body for indigenous warship design under the Indian Navy. Nilgiri-class is its 100th ship designed and delivered. Sandhayak-class: 4 ships; all GRSE; final ship INS Sanshodhak; survey/hydrographic; range 6,500 nautical miles; operates AUVs. Arnala-class: 8 ASW SWC; GRSE + L&T Shipbuilding; waterjet propulsion; replace Abhay-class corvettes; INS Agray is 4th ship. Mahe-class (8 more) at Cochin Shipyard = total 16. SAGAR / MAHASAGAR: SAGAR = Security and Growth for All in the Region (2015); India’s IOR maritime doctrine positioning India as net security provider. CODOG: Combined Diesel or Gas propulsion — diesel for range/economy, gas turbine for high speed. Distinct from COGAG (all gas) and CODAD (all diesel). Blue Economy: Sustainable use of ocean resources. Sandhayak-class hydrographic surveys are foundational to EEZ management, fisheries and offshore energy planning. Practice Mains Question India’s recent indigenisation of complex warship programmes demonstrates both the potential and the limits of Aatmanirbhar Bharat in defence. Critically analyse the achievements and persistent structural gaps in India’s naval indigenisation programme, with reference to the Nilgiri, Sandhayak and Arnala classes. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding Project 17A Nilgiri-class frigates: (1) All seven ships are being built at Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited, Mumbai. (2) The ships use a CODOG propulsion system combining diesel engines and gas turbines. (3) INS Mahendragiri is the sixth ship of the class, commissioned in July 2026. Which of the above is/are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): Arnala-class anti-submarine warfare craft use waterjet propulsion rather than conventional propellers. Reason (R): Waterjet drives deliver superior agility and shallow-draft manoeuvrability in littoral waters where propeller-driven vessels lose effectiveness. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true Q3. Match List I (Naval class) with List II (Primary role): A. Nilgiri-class   B. Sandhayak-class   C. Arnala-class 1. Hydrographic survey and seabed mapping   2. Shallow-water anti-submarine warfare   3. Stealth surface combat and power projection Choose the correct match: A) A-3, B-1, C-2B) A-1, B-2, C-3C) A-2, B-3, C-1D) A-3, B-2, C-1 Article 02 Article 02 Digital Threat Report 2025–26: AI Asymmetry and Cyber Resilience in India’s BFSI Sector MeitY · CERT-In · CSIRT-Fin · SISA · July 2026 Relevance: GS 3 (internal security, cybersecurity, science & technology) · GS 2 (governance, public-private partnerships, regulatory frameworks, digital India). GS 3GS 2 Key Data at a Glance 2nd editionDigital Threat Report 2025–26 for BFSI & payments ecosystem 6 of 7prior predictions from 2024–25 edition already fully realised Years → Weekscompression of threat-to-exploitation timeline 1.6×India BFSI cyberattack rate vs global average (BCG–DSCI study, 2026) 40+ countriesSISA’s global operational footprint in payment ecosystem security 18 monthsaction roadmap: foundational controls → continuous capability → resilient architecture Issue in Brief MeitY, along with CERT-In, CSIRT-Fin and cybersecurity firm SISA, released the second edition of the Digital Threat Report 2025–26 for India’s BFSI (Banking, Financial Services and Insurance) and digital payments ecosystem. The report’s central finding: six of seven forward-looking predictions from the 2024–25 edition have already reached full-scale realisation, demonstrating a dramatic compression of the threat-to-exploitation timeline — from years to months or even weeks. The defining risk identified is “AI Asymmetry” — offensive AI capabilities are scaling faster than defensive and regulatory mechanisms, enabling low-resource threat actors to execute attacks that previously required specialist teams and significant resources. A key analytical contribution is the “Anatomy of Cyber Failure — 4-Layer Gap Archetype Framework”, which reconstructs end-to-end how a modern breach actually unfolds as a chain of compounding systemic weaknesses rather than a single lapse. Static Background — India’s Cyber Governance Architecture CERT-In (Indian Computer Emergency Response Team): Established as the national nodal agency for cybersecurity incident response under the Information Technology (Amendment) Act, 2008. Functions include collection/analysis of cyber incidents, forecasting, emergency response, and issuing guidelines and advisories. DG: Dr. Sanjay Bahl. CSIRT-Fin (Computer Security Incident Response Team — Finance): The nodal sectoral CSIRT for India’s financial sector. Manages incidents and coordinates responses across banking, securities markets, insurance and pension funds. Distinct from CERT-In in its sector-specific mandate. MeitY (Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology): Apex ministry overseeing India’s digital infrastructure, cybersecurity policy and the IT Act, 2000/2008. Secretary: S. Krishnan. SISA: Private cybersecurity firm; global leader in payment ecosystem security; operates in 40+ countries securing 1,000+ organisations through Digital Forensics and Incident Response (DFIR) expertise. Key legislation: IT Act, 2000 and IT Amendment Act, 2008 (backbone of cyber law); DPDP Act, 2023 (Digital Personal Data Protection Act, breach disclosure obligations); RBI’s Cybersecurity Framework for Banks (2016); SEBI’s Cyber Security and Cyber Resilience Framework (CSCRF). Why BFSI is most critical: India’s financial ecosystem has undergone rapid digitalisation (UPI, digital lending, neo-banking, insurance-tech), making it the single largest surface for cyber exploitation. Cyberattacks on Indian BFSI have roughly doubled since 2021, occurring at 1.6× the global average (BCG–DSCI, 2026). Key Dimensions — Threat Acceleration Predictive accuracy: Six of seven predictions from the 2024–25 edition have fully materialised — validating the DFIR-based forecasting methodology and underlining the urgency of proactive threat intelligence over reactive response. The threat-to-exploitation gap has compressed from years → months → weeks, rendering traditional annual review-update-patch cycles structurally inadequate. Threats once classified as “emerging” — social engineering, credential theft, supply-chain compromise, cloud exploitation — are now established, mainstream attack vectors across India’s BFSI ecosystem. The most damaging attacks no longer “look like” intrusions — they surface as legitimate sessions, approved payments, manipulated workflows or ordinary user behaviour, detectable only after damage is complete. Key Dimensions — AI Asymmetry: The Defining Risk AI Asymmetry describes the condition where offensive AI capabilities (available cheaply to threat actors) are outpacing defensive AI and regulatory frameworks designed to contain them — placing attack tools on a faster development curve than defence. Activities once requiring specialist teams and weeks of manual effort can now be executed at machine speed by comparatively low-resource adversaries using frontier AI models. Context-aware, AI-generated phishing attacks are now nearly indistinguishable from legitimate communication, making traditional user-awareness training an insufficient primary defence. Frontier AI models are demonstrated to run cyberattacks against financial institutions with minimal human supervision — this is an operationally realised threat, not a theoretical future risk. Key Dimensions — Anatomy of Cyber Failure & Institutional Model The “Anatomy of Cyber Failure — 4-Layer Gap Archetype Framework” reconstructs end-to-end how a modern breach actually happens. Its core insight: a breach is rarely a single lapse but a chain of compounding weaknesses across four layers, helping organisations identify recurring patterns and prioritise investments. The framework enables a shift from periodic, incident-level security reviews to continuous systemic risk assessment — aligned with global best practice (NIST CSF 2.0, MITRE ATT&CK). The report exemplifies a public-private partnership (PPP) model in cyber resilience: government expertise (CERT-In, CSIRT-Fin) combined with private sector operational intelligence (SISA) — a replicable template for other critical sectors. The 18-month roadmap structures action in three phases: (i) strengthen foundational controls → (ii) build continuous capabilities → (iii) construct resilient security architectures. Critical Analysis — Strengths The 6/7 prediction realisation rate lends strong credibility to the report’s forecasts and provides a robust empirical basis for forward policy investment. The AI Asymmetry framework correctly identifies AI not as a future risk but as a present operational asymmetry demanding immediate regulatory and institutional action. The 4-Layer Framework is a sophisticated upgrade from incident-counting approaches; systemic gap analysis enables more effective investment prioritisation. The PPP collaboration model (MeitY + CERT-In + CSIRT-Fin + SISA) can serve as a replicable template for energy, telecom, and healthcare cyber resilience. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The report is advisory, not binding; actual impact depends on RBI, SEBI and IRDAI operationalising recommendations through enforceable compliance mandates — a step the report itself cannot take. Mid-sized and smaller BFSI institutions — where BCG–DSCI data shows the highest exposure — may lack the technical capacity and budget to implement the continuous monitoring architectures the roadmap envisions. The AI Asymmetry finding highlights a regulatory lag: India’s evolving AI governance framework (India AI Mission) is not yet calibrated to the adversarial AI dimension that cybersecurity demands. Supply-chain compromise as an established vector raises concerns about India’s heavy third-party and outsourced IT dependency in BFSI — CERT-In advisories exist but enforcement remains uneven. Information sharing, while emphasised, faces competitive and legal barriers; institutions avoid disclosing breaches due to reputational risk, undermining the collective defence model the report advocates. Way Forward Translate recommendations into compliance: RBI, SEBI and IRDAI should issue sector-specific frameworks incorporating the 4-Layer Gap analysis as a mandatory self-assessment tool for all regulated entities. Adversarial AI policy track: India AI Mission and MeitY should develop a dedicated policy track on adversarial AI — distinct from general AI governance — focused on detecting and neutralising AI-powered cyber threats. Shared SOC model for smaller BFSI: Create a Cyber Resilience Fund or shared Security Operations Centre (SOC) for mid-tier financial institutions that cannot individually afford continuous threat monitoring. Mandatory third-party audits: RBI and SEBI frameworks should require vendor cybersecurity audits and supply-chain risk assessments for all regulated entities, closing the most exploited attack vector. Safe-harbour for breach disclosure: Legislate safe-harbour provisions for entities that promptly and voluntarily disclose breaches to CSIRT-Fin, removing the reputational deterrent that suppresses threat intelligence sharing. Prelims Pointers CERT-In: National nodal cybersecurity agency; designated under IT Amendment Act, 2008 (not original IT Act, 2000); under MeitY. DG: Dr. Sanjay Bahl. Functions: incident response, advisories, forecasting. CSIRT-Fin: Nodal sectoral CSIRT for India’s financial sector (banking, securities, insurance, pensions). Distinct from CERT-In by sector-specific mandate. AI Asymmetry: Condition where offensive AI capabilities outpace defensive ones — the defining risk of the 2025–26 Digital Threat Report. Enables low-resource attackers to operate at machine speed. Digital Threat Report 2025–26: 2nd edition; MeitY + CERT-In + CSIRT-Fin + SISA; draws on DFIR research; central finding: 6/7 prior predictions already realised. 4-Layer Gap Archetype Framework: “Anatomy of Cyber Failure” — reconstructs how breaches unfold as chains of compounding systemic weaknesses, not single lapses. DPDP Act, 2023: Digital Personal Data Protection Act — India’s primary data protection law; relevant for BFSI breach disclosure obligations to affected parties. BFSI: Banking, Financial Services and Insurance — India’s most targeted sector; cyberattacks doubled since 2021; occur at 1.6× global average rate. SISA: Private cybersecurity firm; global payment security leader; 40+ countries; collaborating partner on the report. Provides DFIR (Digital Forensics and Incident Response) expertise. Practice Mains Question AI-powered threats are fundamentally altering the cybersecurity landscape for India’s banking and financial services sector. Critically examine the nature of these threats and evaluate the adequacy of India’s existing institutional and regulatory framework to address them. GS Paper 3 · Internal Security, Science & Technology · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding CERT-In: (1) It is the national nodal agency for cybersecurity incident response in India. (2) It was designated under the Information Technology Act, 2000. (3) Its functions include issuing guidelines, advisories and vulnerability notes on cyber security. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. With reference to the Digital Threat Report 2025–26, consider the following statements: (1) It was released jointly by MeitY, CERT-In, CSIRT-Fin and SISA. (2) “AI Asymmetry” refers to the condition where defensive AI capabilities outpace offensive ones. (3) It introduces a “4-Layer Gap Archetype Framework” to analyse how cyber breaches unfold. Which are correct? A) 1 and 3 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 2 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q3. (Odd-one-out) Which of the following is NOT a function of CSIRT-Fin? A) Collection and analysis of cyber incident information in the financial sectorB) Issuing guidelines and advisories for financial sector cybersecurityC) Regulating interest rates and liquidity management in commercial banksD) Coordinating cyber incident response across banking, insurance and pension entities

Jul 14, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 Holding the Court Accountable Amid Democratic Strain The Hindu · Judiciary, electoral rolls, SIR, democratic accountability GS 2 — Judiciary & Electoral ProcessEssay — Democracy & Institutions 02 The Right Path for India's Nuclear Power Development The Hindu · Energy security, nuclear technology, self-reliance, SHANTI Act GS 3 — Energy Security & S&TEssay — Self-Reliance vs Ambition Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 Holding the Court Accountable Amid Democratic Strain The Hindu Relevance: GS 2 (judiciary, constitutional bodies, fundamental rights, electoral processes, role of opposition) and Essay (democracy, institutional accountability, counter-majoritarianism) — examining the Supreme Court's handling of the Bihar Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls and its implications for democratic governance. GS 2 — Judiciary & Electoral ProcessGS 2 — Fundamental RightsEssay — Democracy & Accountability 1 — Issue in Brief The Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls — initiated by the Election Commission of India (ECI) ahead of the 2025 Bihar Assembly elections — triggered a major constitutional controversy: did it amount to large-scale disenfranchisement, or was it a legitimate cleansing of voter rolls? 23 Opposition parties wrote to Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant expressing concern that the SIR process was exclusionary, documentation-heavy, and disproportionately burdensome for ordinary citizens — especially migrants, women, minorities and the poor. The article's central critique is not the SIR itself, but the Supreme Court's handling of the challenge: it acted too late, administered the process rather than reviewed it, and ultimately endorsed the ECI's position without adequately examining rights deprivation. The broader argument: when the executive attacks democratic structures, the judiciary — as a counter-majoritarian institution — must act swiftly, independently, and with full appreciation of social realities. The Bihar SIR case reveals failures on all three counts. 2 — Static Background Adult franchise is a foundational constitutional right under Article 326, which guarantees every Indian citizen aged 18+ the right to vote. While the right to vote is a statutory right under the Representation of the People Act, 1950 (RPA), it draws its fundamental significance from this constitutional guarantee. Electoral rolls are prepared and maintained by the ECI under Article 324 (superintendence of elections) and Section 21, RPA 1950 (revision of electoral rolls). Routine revision happens annually through Summary Revision; an SIR is a full re-verification of all households — a more intensive and disruptive exercise. The ECI notified the SIR on 24 June 2025, requiring Bihar residents to submit fresh eligibility documents; approximately 47 lakh (4.7 million) voters — roughly 5–6% of Bihar's total electorate — were subsequently removed from the rolls. The petition — Association for Democratic Reforms v. Election Commission of India (W.P.(C) No. 640/2025) — challenged the SIR on grounds of violation of Articles 14, 19 and 21 (equality, freedom, life and dignity) and principles of natural justice and due process. The matter was heard by a Bench of CJI Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi over 29 hearing days across seven months, with judgment reserved on 29 January 2026. The Supreme Court upheld the SIR on 27 May 2026 — holding it constitutionally valid, proportionate, and within the ECI's powers under Article 324 and Section 21(3), RPA 1950. The Bihar elections had already been held by this date. Counter-majoritarianism: The theory, associated with Alexander Bickel, that unelected courts are justified in overruling elected majorities to protect minority and individual rights — the foundational justification for judicial review in modern democracies. 3 — Key Dimensions The timeliness failure: By the time the Court ruled (27 May 2026), the Bihar elections were over — making the ruling a fait accompli. This echoes the pattern seen in the demonetisation challenge (2016, upheld 2023) and the J&K special status abrogation case — where delayed adjudication rendered the ruling practically inconsequential for those harmed. Administering vs. reviewing: The Court issued a "multitude of interim orders and directions" during the SIR process — effectively guiding its operational parameters. This transformed the Court from a forum of judicial review into an administrative collaborator, creating a conflict of interest in its own review — an unprecedented departure from the classical separation between review and administration. Framing the dispute — powers vs. rights: The Court treated the SIR primarily as a technical-administrative question (does the ECI have competence under Article 324?) rather than as a rights question (are citizens being deprived of their franchise without due process?). The article argues this framing predetermined the outcome in the ECI's favour. Who bears the burden? The SIR's documentation requirements imposed disproportionate costs on migrants, daily-wage workers, illiterate citizens, women (whose identity documents are often in a husband's or father's name), and minorities. The Court's judgment did not engage adequately with these discriminatory effects and social realities of poverty and lack of institutional access. "Digital structural authoritarianism" (scholar Rudraksh Lakra's term): the systematic use of digital mandates, documentation requirements and bureaucratic timelines to exclude structurally vulnerable citizens from political participation — without overtly violating formal legal rules. Judicial legitimacy and ideological endorsement: The article invokes Murray Rothbard/Charles Black and J.A.G. Griffith (The Politics of the Judiciary, 1977) to argue that courts naturally tend to legitimise state action — converting judicial review from a check on power into an instrument of institutional endorsement. The opposition's democratic function: The article argues that publicly critiquing fundamental judicial aberrations is a legitimate — even necessary — function of political opposition in a democracy, distinct from attacks on judicial independence. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Democratic urgency demands timely courts: Delayed adjudication in fast-moving electoral situations is not procedurally neutral — it is a substantive choice that favours the status quo. A court that rules after the harm is complete provides no real remedy to disenfranchised voters. In favour — The administering-vs.-reviewing distinction matters constitutionally: Once the Court becomes a co-author of the contested administrative process through operational directions, it cannot be its independent reviewer. This blurring compromises the structural integrity of judicial review itself. In favour — Social-reality blindness: A rights-sensitive court should have engaged with the disproportionate burden the SIR placed on migrant workers, women and the poor — groups for whom the right to vote carries the greatest compensatory significance in a stratified society. Against — Clean rolls serve democracy too: The ECI has a constitutional mandate to maintain accurate electoral rolls. If rolls contain dead or fictitious voters, elections are distorted — a harm the article does not weigh adequately against the disenfranchisement risk. Against — Proportionality was assessed: The Court held SIR measures "not manifestly excessive or disproportionate." The article's critique rests on a preferred framing, but upholding the ECI's mandate under a proportionality standard is another defensible legal position. Against — Political pressure on courts cuts both ways: The Opposition's letter to the CJI and the article's call to publicly evaluate judicial decisions sit in uncomfortable tension with the principle that judicial independence must be insulated from political mobilisation — even well-intentioned mobilisation. Against — Not all delays are abdication: A seven-month hearing spanning 29 days represents substantive judicial engagement. Elections have constitutional timelines; the Court's inability to decide before polling may reflect the complexity of the case, not dereliction of duty. 5 — Way Forward Establish a constitutional norm of pre-election judicial expediting: courts should issue interim stays or fast-track electoral challenges when prima facie voter exclusion is established — to prevent fait accompli situations from recurring in future State elections (Assam, West Bengal, and others are already in the SIR pipeline). Consider a dedicated Electoral Law Bench in the Supreme Court (as recommended by constitutional scholars and explored by the Law Commission) for specialised, time-sensitive adjudication of election-related constitutional questions. Separate judicial review from election administration: Courts should confine themselves to the legality of the ECI's framework and not issue operational directions — which transform them into administrative actors with a conflict of interest in their own subsequent review. Rights-sensitive SIR framework: If SIR continues in other States, it should include adequate notice periods, multilingual communication, online submission alternatives for migrants, extended timelines, and a National Voters' Helpline-backed appeal mechanism. Recognise that democratic resilience cannot rest on courts alone: people's movements, civil society, bar associations and an independent press serve as parallel accountability mechanisms when institutional checks weaken or align with the executive. 6 — Data & Key Facts 47 lakhVoters removed from Bihar's electoral rolls after SIR verification (~5–6% of total electorate) 29 daysHearing days in the Bihar SIR case spanning 7 months; judgment reserved 29 Jan 2026 27 May 2026Supreme Court upholds Bihar SIR as constitutionally valid and proportionate 23Opposition parties that wrote to CJI Surya Kant raising concerns about the SIR framework Art. 324Constitutional basis for ECI's powers; read with Section 21(3) RPA 1950 — upheld by Court Art. 326Guarantee of adult franchise — right to vote for every citizen aged 18+; foundational right challenged Case: Association for Democratic Reforms v. Election Commission of India, W.P.(C) No. 640/2025 — Bench: CJI Surya Kant + Justice Joymalya Bagchi; petitioners included ADR, Yogendra Yadav, Mahua Moitra, PUCL. SIR notified: 24 June 2025 for Bihar; subsequently extended to West Bengal, Gujarat, Kerala, Goa and other States. SIR exercise in Bihar conducted June–September 2025; final rolls published September 2025. Key references: J.A.G. Griffith, The Politics of the Judiciary (1977) — judicial inclination towards political branches; Mukulika Banerjee, Why India Votes? (2014) — the vote as existential assertion for the marginalised. 7 — Prelims Pointers Article 324 — Superintendence, direction and control of elections vested in ECI; the constitutional source of ECI's plenary power over elections Article 326 — Adult franchise: right to vote for every citizen aged 18+ in elections to Lok Sabha and State Assemblies Section 21, RPA 1950 — Power to revise electoral rolls; Section 21(3) — enables Special Intensive Revision; the statutory anchor for the Bihar SIR SIR vs. Summary Revision — SIR = full household re-verification; Summary Revision = annual incremental addition/deletion at the margins; SIR is more disruptive Counter-majoritarianism — Justification for judicial review: unelected courts protect minority rights against majoritarian legislative/executive action (Alexander Bickel) Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 — Operative framework for electoral roll maintenance; the SIR was held not to conflict with these Rules Exam note: Article 324 gives the ECI plenary constitutional power over elections; RPA 1950 provides the statutory framework beneath it. The SIR was upheld as flowing from both. Do not confuse Summary Revision (routine, annual) with Special Intensive Revision (full re-verification, exceptional). The petitioners' constitutional grounds were Articles 14, 19 and 21 — not Article 326 directly, though adult franchise (Art. 326) provides the normative backdrop. 8 — Practice Mains Question "Judicial delay in electoral disputes is not a procedural failure but a substantive democratic harm." Critically examine with reference to the Bihar Special Intensive Revision case and its implications for the Supreme Court's role as a counter-majoritarian institution.GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Judiciary + Electoral Process + Fundamental Rights Intro: Frame the SIR controversy and constitutional stakes — adult franchise as the bedrock democratic right, and the Court as the counter-majoritarian safety valve; note the Bihar elections were already over by the time the Court ruled. Body 1 — The fait accompli pattern: Demonetisation (2016, decided 2023), J&K Art. 370, Bihar SIR (elections over before ruling) — how delayed adjudication tilts the scales and provides no real remedy to those harmed. Body 2 — Administering vs. reviewing: The Court's directional involvement in the SIR process; the conflict of interest it creates; the rights-framing (Articles 14, 19, 21) the Court did not adequately engage with; discriminatory impact on migrants, women and the poor. Body 3 — Counter-arguments: ECI's legitimate mandate for clean rolls; 29-day hearing as substantive engagement; the Court's proportionality assessment; tension between judicial independence and political pressure on courts. Conclusion: Propose a dedicated Electoral Law Bench, pre-election interim-stay norms, and a separation between judicial review and operational administration — affirming that a court protecting democracy must itself act within democratic time. 9 — Practice MCQ With reference to the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls in Bihar, consider the following statements: 1. The SIR was held by the Supreme Court to be traceable to Article 324 of the Constitution and Section 21(3) of the Representation of the People Act, 1950. 2. The Supreme Court struck down the Bihar SIR as unconstitutional and disproportionate in its May 2026 judgment. 3. Approximately 47 lakh electors were removed from Bihar's electoral rolls following the SIR verification exercise. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 only(b) 1 and 3 only(c) 2 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 The Right Path for India's Nuclear Power Development The Hindu Relevance: GS 3 (energy security, infrastructure, science and technology, indigenisation) and Essay (self-reliance, technology sovereignty, ambition vs. caution) — examining whether India should scale its 100 GW nuclear target through proven domestic technology or import foreign plants and SMRs. GS 3 — Energy SecurityGS 3 — Science & TechnologyEssay — Self-Reliance vs Ambition 1 — Issue in Brief India achieved a historic nuclear milestone on 6 April 2026 when its Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam attained first criticality — marking India's entry into the second stage of its three-stage nuclear programme, a vision Dr. Homi Bhabha originally conceived decades ago. The article's central argument: India has already built the world's cheapest nuclear reactors (domestic PHWRs at ~$1,700/kW) and possesses proven, scalable indigenous technology — making any plan to import expensive foreign reactors or unproven technologies (especially SMRs) economically irrational and strategically risky. Two key concerns: (a) cost competitiveness — importing costlier foreign plants raises electricity prices without proportionate technological gain; and (b) safety culture — rapid expansion with new private entrants must not compromise India's exemplary nuclear safety record. The policy conclusion: scale to 100 GW by 2047 using domestic technology (PHWRs, FBR, future indigenous LWRs); allow foreign SMR imports only after proven operational track records abroad; let private entrants establish themselves before scaling up. 2 — Static Background India's Three-Stage Nuclear Programme (conceived by Dr. Homi Bhabha): Stage 1 — Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWRs) using natural uranium → generate plutonium in spent fuel. Stage 2 — Fast Breeder Reactors (FBRs) using plutonium → breed more fuel than consumed; thorium blankets produce fissile U-233. Stage 3 — Advanced Heavy Water Reactors (AHWRs) using thorium/U-233 — enabling India to leverage its vast thorium reserves (est. ~25% of global supply). India has modest uranium reserves (~1–2% of global supply), making the three-stage programme — especially the FBR-to-thorium pathway — strategically essential for long-term energy independence. PHWR technology: Uses natural uranium as fuel with heavy water as moderator; India has indigenously developed PHWRs from 200 MW (Rajasthan-1, 1973) → 500 MW → 700 MW units now under construction. Rajasthan Unit 7 connected to the grid in March 2025; Rajasthan Unit 8 expected 2026 — both 700 MW indigenous PHWRs. India–US Civil Nuclear Deal (2008): Ended international sanctions that followed India's 1974 Peaceful Nuclear Explosion (PNE); enabled free import of natural uranium and civil nuclear cooperation — but the NSG waiver permanently prohibits transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technology to India. Light Water Reactors (LWRs): Use enriched uranium + ordinary water moderator; the global mainstream technology; India currently imports LWRs (e.g., Kudankulam — Russian VVER-type). India lacks indigenous enrichment technology under NSG waiver restrictions — creating a strategic dependency if India scales up imported LWRs without developing its own enrichment capability. PFBR milestone: The 500 MWe PFBR at Kalpakkam — built by BHAVINI (Bharatiya Nabhikiya Vidyut Nigam Limited), technology by IGCAR (Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic Research) — attained first criticality on 6 April 2026. India becomes only the second country after Russia with an operational fast breeder reactor. Uses MOX fuel (plutonium + depleted uranium from spent PHWR fuel). SHANTI Act, 2025 (Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India): Passed by Parliament on 18 December 2025; Presidential assent December 2025. Repeals the Atomic Energy Act 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act (CLND Act) 2010. Enables private Indian companies and JVs to build, own, operate and decommission nuclear plants under DAE licence. Enrichment, heavy water production and spent fuel management remain with the government. Caps liability at a five-tier structure (max ~300 million SDRs / ~$430 million per incident). Grants statutory recognition to AERB (previously derived authority only from the 1962 Act). India's current nuclear capacity: ~8.78 GW (24 reactors); with 8 reactors under construction (6,600 MW) and 10 more sanctioned (7,000 MW), capacity is projected to reach ~22.38 GW by 2031–32. 3 — Key Dimensions The cost-competitiveness dividend: India's indigenous 700 MW PHWRs cost approximately $1,700/kW — significantly cheaper than South Korean plants (~$2,200/kW), French (~$5,500/kW) and US plants (~$15,000/kW). This positions India as a potential global exporter of nuclear plants. Importing costlier technology would raise electricity costs and create new technological dependencies, negating decades of indigenisation investment. The enrichment technology gap: LWRs need enriched uranium; the NSG waiver bars enrichment technology transfer to India. Importing LWRs at scale therefore creates a perpetual fuel-supply dependency on supplier nations — the same strategic vulnerability sanctions created before 2008, except now self-imposed. The article recommends India develop its own LWR technology as a strategic priority. 100 GW target and SHANTI framework: The Nuclear Energy Mission (Budget 2025–26) targets 100 GW by 2047 — roughly an 11× increase from today's 8.78 GW. The SHANTI Act enables private participation to accelerate this, with ₹20,000 crore allocated for SMR R&D. The article cautions that private entrants must prove safety culture before scaling. SMR caution: Small Modular Reactors (SMRs, typically <300 MW) are being considered globally for AI data centres and hard-to-abate industries. The AEC has offered its 200 MW technology to new domestic entrants. The article argues that foreign-designed SMRs should demonstrate satisfactory overseas operation for several years before deployment in India — preventing India from becoming a testing ground for unproven foreign designs. The Chernobyl lesson: The 1986 Chernobyl disaster triggered a near-complete halt to new nuclear construction in Western Europe and the US for nearly three decades. India's nuclear safety record has been exemplary — a single major accident could cause the same public backlash and end India's nuclear ambitions precisely when they are gaining momentum. Scale economics vs. safety culture tension: Large programmes reduce per-unit costs through scale effects, but India's construction-sector accident rates — among the world's highest — pose a genuine challenge for an industry that demands zero-accident tolerance. The article flags this candidly as a challenge for the rapid private-sector expansion SHANTI Act envisages. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Self-reliance dividend is real: Sanctions post-1974 forced indigenisation that produced a genuinely cost-competitive technology. India's PHWR advantage is not theoretical — Rajasthan 7 connected to the grid in March 2025 using indigenous 700 MW design, with Rajasthan 8 expected in 2026. Abandoning this advantage for expensive imports would be strategically and economically costly. In favour — NSG enrichment bar makes LWR import dependency strategic risk: Importing LWRs without the ability to independently produce enriched fuel replicates pre-2008 dependency — except self-imposed. Developing indigenous LWR technology, as the article recommends, is a legitimate long-term strategic investment aligned with India's energy sovereignty goals. In favour — PFBR success validates indigenisation: The PFBR's first criticality (6 April 2026) — achieved entirely through indigenous R&D by IGCAR and BHAVINI — demonstrates that India's domestic nuclear technology capacity is world-class when given adequate resources. The PFBR also unlocks India's thorium pathway, critical for long-term energy security. In favour — Safety culture is a genuine risk: India's construction sector accident rates are among the highest globally. Applying this culture to nuclear plant construction — where a single accident can have irreversible consequences — is a real, not hypothetical, safety risk requiring proactive AERB oversight. Against — Domestic technology has a scale problem: Scaling from ~8.78 GW to 100 GW by 2047 through indigenous PHWRs alone would require an unprecedented construction rate. Foreign technology — even at higher cost — may be necessary to fill the gap and meet timelines, especially as global nuclear supply chains are becoming more accessible post-SHANTI. Against — Lifecycle cost comparison needs nuance: The $1,700/kW figure covers construction cost — but total lifecycle cost (including decommissioning, waste management and long-term fuel supply) may look different. Western plants, despite higher construction costs, have longer operational experience and more developed long-term maintenance frameworks. Against — SMR caution may mean missing the technology transition: If India insists on SMRs being proven abroad before domestic deployment, it may arrive late to a technology wave that competitors — especially China — adopt faster, ceding first-mover advantages in a technology India has the manufacturing base to lead. Against — SHANTI liability cap adequacy: Critics argue the ~$430 million per-incident cap under SHANTI may be inadequate for a major nuclear accident, and that ambiguous liability provisions could deter the private investment the Act seeks to attract — repeating the problem the CLND Act 2010 created with supplier liability. 5 — Way Forward Prioritise and scale indigenous PHWR technology: New private entrants under SHANTI Act should first deploy proven 700 MW PHWR technology offered by AEC/NPCIL — cheaply, safely, and at scale — before attempting more complex designs. Launch a dedicated Indian LWR programme: given the NSG enrichment technology bar, India should invest in indigenous LWR development as a medium-term strategic goal — possibly through an IGCAR/AEC-led programme with dedicated public funding, modelled on the patient PFBR approach. SMR deployment with a 'proven-abroad' gateway: For foreign-designed SMRs, AERB should require a satisfactory overseas operational track record (3–5 years at commercial scale) before licensing in India. For domestic SMRs (AEC's 200 MW design), phased development through AEC–private sector JVs is prudent. Safety culture as a regulatory priority: AERB should be fully resourced for real-time third-party safety audits at all construction sites; new private entrants should be required to demonstrate nuclear-specific safety certifications and establish internal safety cultures before scaling up. Gradual private-sector onboarding: New entrants should complete two or three plants and demonstrate operational safety records over a full fuel cycle before being permitted to expand — the 100 GW target's 2047 timeline allows for this phased, safety-first approach without compromising ambition. Leverage India's nuclear export potential: With the lowest nuclear construction costs globally, India should actively pursue bilateral plant-export agreements with Global South partners — a natural complement to its geopolitical stature and a potential technology-export revenue stream. 6 — Data & Key Facts ~8.78 GWIndia's current nuclear capacity (24 operational reactors); projected ~22.38 GW by 2031–32 100 GWIndia's nuclear capacity target by 2047 under the Nuclear Energy Mission (Budget 2025–26) $1,700/kWCost of India's indigenous 700 MW PHWR — cheapest in the world (S. Korea ~$2,200; France ~$5,500; US ~$15,000) 6 Apr 2026PFBR at Kalpakkam attains first criticality — India enters Stage 2 of three-stage programme; 2nd country after Russia with operational FBR ₹20,000 CrNuclear Energy Mission outlay for SMR R&D (Budget 2025–26) ~$430 MnMaximum per-incident liability cap under SHANTI Act 2025 (300 million SDRs, five-tier structure) SHANTI Act 2025: Passed 18 December 2025; Presidential assent December 2025. Repeals Atomic Energy Act 1962 + CLND Act 2010. Enables private Indian companies/JVs to build, own, operate and decommission nuclear plants under DAE licence. Enrichment, heavy water production and spent fuel management retained by government. AERB granted statutory recognition. 8 reactors under construction (6,600 MW): Includes indigenous 700 MW PHWRs (RAPP-8, GHAVP-1&2), PFBR, and Russian-cooperation LWRs (KKNPP-3&4, KKNPP-5&6). 10 more sanctioned (7,000 MW): Kaiga 5&6, GHAVP-3&4, Chutka 1&2, Mahi Banswara 1&2 and 3&4. NSG waiver (2008): Key condition permanently prohibits transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technology to India — a critical strategic constraint for India's LWR ambitions. 7 — Prelims Pointers Three-Stage Nuclear Programme — Stage 1: PHWRs (natural U) → Stage 2: FBRs (plutonium; breed U-233 from thorium) → Stage 3: AHWRs (thorium/U-233); conceived by Dr. Homi Bhabha PFBR — 500 MWe; Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu; built by BHAVINI; technology by IGCAR; first criticality 6 April 2026; uses MOX fuel (Pu + depleted U); not under IAEA safeguards; India = 2nd country after Russia with operational FBR PHWR vs. LWR — PHWR = natural uranium + heavy water moderator (India's indigenous strength; PHWRs at Rajasthan, Kaiga, etc.); LWR = enriched uranium + ordinary water (global mainstream; Kudankulam = Russian VVER-type LWRs) SHANTI Act 2025 — Replaces Atomic Energy Act 1962 + CLND Act 2010; enables private Indian companies/JVs to build/own/operate nuclear plants; enrichment and heavy water remain with government; AERB gets statutory recognition NSG (Nuclear Suppliers Group) — Export control regime; India's 2008 waiver allows civil nuclear trade but permanently bars enrichment/reprocessing technology transfer to India NPCIL vs. BHAVINI vs. BARC — NPCIL: commercial nuclear power (PHWRs, LWRs); BHAVINI: fast breeder reactors (PFBR); BARC: research; all under Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) Exam note: Do not confuse PHWR (India's indigenously developed natural uranium reactor) with LWR (uses enriched uranium; largely foreign-technology based in India). The PFBR uses MOX fuel — not enriched uranium. Also distinguish NPCIL (commercial PHWRs/LWRs) from BHAVINI (fast breeders) and BARC (research). SHANTI Act enables private sector entry but enrichment and heavy water remain with the government. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's remarkable cost advantage in nuclear power plant construction places it at a strategic crossroads — between leveraging indigenous technology for energy security and opening up to international collaboration for faster scaling." Critically examine India's nuclear energy strategy in light of the 100 GW target by 2047.GS 3 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Energy Security + Science & Technology + Infrastructure Intro: Frame the PFBR milestone (April 2026) and the 100 GW target as twin coordinates of India's nuclear ambitions; note SHANTI Act 2025 as the enabling legislative framework. Body 1 — Indigenous strengths: Cost competitiveness ($1,700/kW vs. global peers), three-stage programme rationale, PFBR as strategic enabler for thorium utilisation, SHANTI Act enabling private participation without surrendering enrichment/heavy water to private hands. Body 2 — Structural challenges: Scale gap (8.78 GW → 100 GW in 22 years), LWR enrichment dependency under NSG bar, SMR deployment risks, private-sector safety culture concerns, SHANTI liability cap adequacy questions. Conclusion: A phased model — indigenous PHWRs first, indigenous LWR development alongside, safety-gatewayed SMR imports, gradual private entry with mandatory safety audits — preserving the self-reliance dividend while responsibly meeting the scale challenge. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding India's nuclear energy programme: 1. The Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam uses enriched uranium as its primary fuel. 2. The SHANTI Act 2025 repeals the Atomic Energy Act 1962 and the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act 2010, and allows private Indian companies to build and operate nuclear power plants. 3. India's NSG waiver of 2008 permanently prohibits the transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technology to India. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3

Jul 14, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents Edition: July 2026 Secondary Infertility in India: Causes, Challenges and Policy GapsGS Paper 2 NeoSep1 Trial: Combating Neonatal Sepsis and AMRGS Paper 2 / GS Paper 3 UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance: India's ParticipationGS Paper 2 / GS Paper 3 Made-in-India EXIM Shipping Container and Maritime Self-RelianceGS Paper 3 Compressed Biogas (CBG) and India's Energy SecurityGS Paper 3 India-Australia Uranium Supplies AgreementGS Paper 2 / GS Paper 3 Language Diversity, Genetic History and Linguistic HotspotsGS Paper 1 Ladakh: New Tehsils, Districts and Autonomous Hill CouncilsGS Paper 2 Metal-Organic Frameworks and Nuclear Wastewater FiltrationGS Paper 3 Supreme Court Backlogs: Special Benches for Oldest Pending CasesGS Paper 2 Article 01 Secondary Infertility in India: A Growing Reproductive Health Crisis GS Paper 2 — Health, Social Justice, Government Policies and Interventions Why in News Long-term tracking of the National Family Health Survey (NFHS) reveals a sharp upward trend in secondary infertility across India — from approximately 19.5% in the early 1990s to 28.6% by 2015–16, nearly a doubling within one generation. A confluence of delayed parenthood, lifestyle-related hormonal disruptions, post-pregnancy anatomical changes and widely ignored male fertility decline are together driving this trend into public health significance. Foundational Concepts Defining Infertility The World Health Organization (WHO) defines infertility as a disease of the reproductive system in which a pregnancy cannot be achieved despite twelve or more months of regular, unprotected sexual intercourse. Globally, roughly one in six people of reproductive age will encounter infertility at some stage of their lives. Its origins may lie with the male partner, the female partner, both simultaneously, or remain unexplained even after investigation. Primary vs. Secondary Infertility Primary Infertility: No pregnancy has ever been achieved. The couple starts from a baseline of zero conceptions. Secondary Infertility: At least one successful pregnancy exists in the history, yet subsequent attempts to conceive fail. This form is clinically and socially distinct — and systematically under-recognised in India because the presence of one child creates a presumption of fertility. Why Secondary Infertility is Rising: Key Drivers 1. The Biology of Delayed Parenthood Urban migration, career pressures and rising cost of living have progressively deferred first childbirth into the early thirties. By the time a couple considers a second child, the woman is frequently past 35 — the age at which Diminished Ovarian Reserve (DOR) accelerates. DOR involves a quantitative and qualitative decline in the egg supply: fewer eggs remain, and those that do have a higher rate of chromosomal error. On the male side, advancing age raises the proportion of sperm carrying fragmented DNA, reducing fertilisation success and increasing miscarriage risk. 2. Surgical and Infective Scarring from the First Delivery India's rising Caesarean section rate has introduced a new class of anatomical complications. The surgical incision can generate pelvic adhesions — bands of scar tissue that distort the relationship between the ovary, fallopian tube and uterus — or produce an isthmocele, a pocket-like defect at the scar site in the uterine wall that disrupts implantation. Separately, postpartum infections left untreated can progress to Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID), scarring the fallopian tubes and preventing egg-sperm union. 3. Worsening of Pre-Existing Reproductive Conditions Certain gynaecological conditions that were subclinical or absent at the time of the first pregnancy can develop or intensify in the inter-pregnancy interval. Endometriosis — where endometrial-like tissue grows outside the uterine cavity — and uterine fibroids (benign smooth muscle tumours) both impair implantation and tubal function, creating barriers to conception that did not exist when the couple previously succeeded. 4. Metabolic and Hormonal Disruption After the First Child Post-delivery weight gain combined with increasingly sedentary urban lifestyles disturbs the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Ovarian (HPO) axis — the three-gland hormonal circuit that governs the menstrual cycle and ovulation. When this axis is dysregulated, ovulation becomes irregular or ceases, directly reducing the number of fertile windows per year. 5. PCOS and Thyroid Dysfunction Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS) affects up to one in five Indian women and is characterised by excess androgens, irregular ovulation and insulin resistance. Although a woman may conceive her first child despite mild PCOS, the condition tends to worsen with weight gain and ageing, pushing her into chronic anovulation by the time she seeks a second pregnancy. Postpartum thyroiditis — an autoimmune inflammation of the thyroid gland that flares in the months after delivery — and subsequent hypothyroidism similarly suppress ovulatory function and disrupt menstrual regularity. 6. Deteriorating Male Reproductive Health Semen quality is not fixed for life. In the years following the birth of a first child, male partners commonly accumulate risk factors — weight gain, chronic work stress, tobacco use, alcohol consumption and occupational exposures — that progressively reduce sperm concentration, forward motility and normal morphology. A deeply rooted cultural assumption that fathering one child is permanent proof of male fertility causes Indian men to defer or refuse semen analysis for years, even as the evidence of declining sperm quality mounts. 7. Environmental Endocrine Disruptors and Air Pollution Prolonged environmental exposure adds a further layer of risk. Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs) — pesticide residues, industrial plasticisers and microplastics — mimic or block sex hormones, impairing gametogenesis in both sexes. Urban PM2.5 and heavy metal particulates induce systemic oxidative stress, damaging sperm DNA and impairing follicular development in the ovary. Structural Challenges in the Indian Context Regulatory Restrictions Under the Surrogacy Act The Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021 prohibits married couples who already have a living child from accessing surrogacy services, with a narrow carve-out only for cases where the existing child suffers from a life-threatening disorder or severe disability. For couples whose secondary infertility is medically severe and for whom surrogacy would be the appropriate clinical pathway, this restriction raises unresolved questions about reproductive autonomy under Article 21 of the Constitution. The Insurance and Public Health Gap A single cycle of In Vitro Fertilisation (IVF) or Intracytoplasmic Sperm Injection (ICSI) costs upwards of ₹1.5–2 lakh. Neither procedure is covered under Ayushman Bharat–Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (AB-PMJAY), India's flagship health insurance scheme, placing treatment beyond the reach of most households. The RMNCH+A framework — India's core reproductive and child health programme — prioritises contraception and maternal mortality reduction while leaving infertility care entirely outside its scope. Geographic Concentration of Specialist Care Assisted Reproductive Technology (ART) infrastructure is almost entirely confined to private clinics in Tier-1 and Tier-2 cities. District-level public hospitals lack embryology laboratories and reproductive endocrinologists. Patients in rural areas face not just distance but also a complete absence of referral pathways. Misinformation and Regulatory Gaps Despite the ART (Regulation) Act, 2021 establishing a licensing framework for fertility clinics, enforcement remains inconsistent. Unregulated clinics exploit social media to advertise implausible success rates, diverting emotionally vulnerable couples — particularly women over 35 whose ovarian reserve is falling rapidly — away from evidence-based care and toward unverified treatments. Existing Policy Instruments ART (Regulation) Act, 2021: Governs ART clinics and sperm/egg banks; prohibits sex selection and commercial sale of gametes. Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021: Permits only altruistic surrogacy; bars couples with a surviving child from accessing surrogacy (with limited exceptions). Jiyo Parsi Scheme (Ministry of Minority Affairs): Subsidised ART and medical support for Parsi couples to counter the community's demographic decline. ESIC Scheme: Free IVF for eligible women covered under the Employees' State Insurance Corporation. Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS): Partial IVF reimbursement for Central Government employees and pensioners. State-level schemes: Goa Free IVF Scheme, Tamil Nadu ART Scheme, Rajasthan ART Policy — indicating growing sub-national recognition of the problem. Way Forward: Addressing secondary infertility demands a rights-based reorientation of India's reproductive health architecture. Key steps include: reviewing the blanket surrogacy bar for medically diagnosed cases; integrating IVF/ICSI as a covered benefit under AB-PMJAY; embedding infertility screening within the RMNCH+A framework; establishing ART units within district hospitals; dismantling the cultural stigma that insulates male infertility from diagnosis; and regulating online fertility advertising to prevent exploitation of vulnerable couples. Prelims Pointers Secondary Infertility: Inability to conceive after at least one prior successful pregnancy. NFHS data shows prevalence rose from ~19.5% (early 1990s) to 28.6% (2015–16) in India. WHO Definition of Infertility: Failure to achieve pregnancy after 12+ months of regular unprotected intercourse; affects ~1 in 6 people of reproductive age globally. Diminished Ovarian Reserve (DOR): Age-related reduction in the number and quality of a woman's eggs; accelerates markedly after age 35. PCOS: Polycystic Ovary Syndrome — hormonal disorder causing excess androgens, irregular ovulation and insulin resistance; affects up to 20% of Indian women; can worsen between pregnancies. HPO Axis: Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Ovarian axis — the hormonal feedback circuit regulating ovulation and the menstrual cycle; disrupted by weight gain, stress and metabolic disorders. Isthmocele: A uterine niche or pocket at the site of a Caesarean section scar; can impair embryo implantation in subsequent pregnancies. EDCs (Endocrine-Disrupting Chemicals): Synthetic chemicals (pesticides, plasticisers, microplastics) that interfere with hormonal signalling; linked to impaired egg and sperm quality. ART (Regulation) Act, 2021: Licenses ART clinics and banks; prohibits sex selection, anonymous gamete donation and commercial sale of gametes in India. Surrogacy (Regulation) Act, 2021: Allows only altruistic surrogacy (close relative as surrogate); bars couples with a living child from accessing surrogacy except in narrow medical exceptions. RMNCH+A: Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health — India's integrated reproductive health framework under NHM; does not currently cover infertility treatment. Mains Practice Question Secondary infertility in India reflects a convergence of delayed parenthood, lifestyle disorders, inadequate male health awareness and systemic policy blind spots. Critically examine the structural barriers to addressing this growing reproductive health challenge and propose a comprehensive policy response within India's existing health architecture. GS Paper 2  |  Health, Social Justice  |  250 words MCQ Practice According to NFHS data analysis, what was the approximate prevalence of secondary infertility in India by 2015–16? A14.5% B19.5% C28.6% D35.2% Answer: C NFHS data tracking shows secondary infertility prevalence rising from approximately 19.5% in the early 1990s to 28.6% by 2015–16. Option B (19.5%) is the earlier baseline figure, not the 2015–16 figure. The near-doubling over a single generation reflects the combined impact of delayed parenthood, lifestyle-related hormonal disruption, post-caesarean complications and rising rates of PCOS and male factor infertility. Article 02 NeoSep1 Trial: India Joins the Global Fight Against Drug-Resistant Neonatal Sepsis GS Paper 2 — Health, International Institutions; GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology, Biotechnology Why in News JIPMER (Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research), Puducherry, has become the first Indian institution to enrol a newborn in the NeoSep1 international clinical trial — a landmark multicentre study designed to find reliable antibiotic combinations for newborns with drug-resistant sepsis. The expansion to India adds a critical data source: Indian neonatal wards carry a pathogen burden that is fundamentally different from — and far more resistant than — what most high-income country guidelines were designed to address. Foundational Concepts: Neonatal Sepsis What It Is Neonatal sepsis is a life-threatening bloodstream infection occurring in infants under 90 days of age. Because a newborn's immune defences are immature — and because passive antibody transfer from the mother remains incomplete, especially in preterm births — a localised infection can rapidly overwhelm the infant's defences, triggering a systemic inflammatory cascade leading to septic shock, multi-organ dysfunction and death. The condition can present as septicaemia, pneumonia or meningitis, or a combination of all three. Timing-Based Classification Early-Onset Sepsis (EOS): Manifests within the first 72 hours of life. The causative organisms typically originate from the maternal genital tract and are transmitted during labour and delivery — particularly when there is prolonged rupture of membranes, maternal fever or chorioamnionitis (infection of the amniotic sac). Late-Onset Sepsis (LOS): Develops between 72 hours and 90 days. The source is usually the hospital environment (nosocomial) or the community — spread through contaminated hands, equipment or feeding practices. India vs. High-Income Countries: A Divergent Pathogen Landscape Setting Dominant Pathogens Resistance Pattern High-Income Countries Group B Streptococcus (GBS); Escherichia coli Relatively low; respond to standard regimens India / LMICs Klebsiella pneumoniae, E. coli, Acinetobacter spp., Pseudomonas aeruginosa Frequently multidrug-resistant (MDR); ampicillin–gentamicin often ineffective Recognising Neonatal Sepsis Symptoms are frequently non-specific and overlap with other neonatal conditions, demanding a high index of suspicion. Key signs include temperature instability (either fever or hypothermia), respiratory distress (rapid breathing, grunting, apnoea), neurological deterioration (lethargy, seizures, abnormal tone) and gastrointestinal deterioration (feeding refusal, vomiting, abdominal distension). Rapid deterioration means any clinical suspicion must trigger immediate empirical antibiotic therapy, with blood cultures drawn first as the diagnostic gold standard. The Antimicrobial Resistance Problem at the Core The WHO recommends ampicillin combined with gentamicin as the standard first-line treatment for neonatal sepsis. However, studies across LMIC hospital settings have documented extremely high resistance to this combination, particularly against the Gram-negative MDR pathogens prevalent in Indian neonatal wards. When the recommended regimen fails, clinicians are forced toward more expensive, more toxic or genuinely last-resort antibiotics — accelerating the broader AMR crisis and creating severe equity implications for resource-limited settings. India's Neonatal Sepsis Burden Sepsis ranks as the second leading cause of neonatal mortality worldwide, accounting for over one million deaths each year. In India, neonatal sepsis is responsible for an estimated 30–40% of all neonatal deaths — approximately 2 to 2.5 lakh preventable deaths annually. Blood cultures — the diagnostic gold standard — require 48–72 hours and frequently fail to grow the causative organism due to small sample volumes or prior antibiotic exposure, forcing continued reliance on broad-spectrum empirical treatment. India's unique MDR pathogen profile makes it impossible to simply import treatment evidence from high-income country trials — locally derived data is essential. About the NeoSep1 Trial NeoSep1 is a multicentre international clinical trial sponsored by the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership (GARDP) — a not-for-profit organisation dedicated to developing treatments for drug-resistant infections, operating as a joint initiative of the Drugs for Neglected Diseases Initiative (DNDi) and the WHO. Enrolment Target: 3,000 newborns across Asia and Africa, to be completed by end-2028. Active Sites: Ghana, Kenya, South Africa, India (JIPMER first). Planned expansion: Vietnam, Pakistan, Malaysia, Bangladesh, Uganda. Objective: Systematically evaluate and rank multiple antibiotic regimens so that clinicians in LMICs have a hierarchy of effective, affordable and locally validated treatment options — and to ensure findings feed directly into updates of international and national treatment guidelines. Trial Design — PRACTical: The trial uses the PRACTical (Personalised Randomised Controlled Trial) design. Before randomisation, the treating neonatologist identifies which antibiotic regimens are clinically appropriate for that individual newborn, and random assignment operates only within that pre-approved set. This preserves clinical judgement, embeds real-world applicability and models responsible antimicrobial stewardship — avoiding the assignment of antibiotics that would be inappropriate for a given patient. Significance: India's enrolment in NeoSep1 directly confronts the evidence vacuum that forces Indian neonatologists to rely on guidelines built around a different pathogen landscape. By generating locally validated antibiotic ranking data, the trial can reduce mortality from one of India's largest causes of preventable infant death, while simultaneously contributing to global AMR stewardship by identifying effective alternatives to overburdened last-resort drugs. Prelims Pointers NeoSep1: Multicentre international clinical trial by GARDP; targets 3,000 newborns across Asia and Africa by 2028; first Indian enrolment at JIPMER, Puducherry; uses PRACTical trial design. GARDP: Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership — not-for-profit, joint DNDi–WHO initiative; develops treatments for drug-resistant infections in LMICs. Neonatal Sepsis: Systemic bloodstream infection in infants under 90 days; second leading cause of neonatal mortality globally; accounts for 30–40% of neonatal deaths in India (~2–2.5 lakh/year). EOS vs. LOS: Early-Onset Sepsis (within 72 hours, maternal transmission) vs. Late-Onset Sepsis (72 hours to 90 days, hospital/community-acquired). PRACTical Trial Design: Personalised Randomised Controlled Trial — clinician pre-selects clinically appropriate regimens for each patient before randomisation occurs; combines clinical individualisation with rigorous RCT methodology. WHO First-Line Regimen: Ampicillin + Gentamicin for empiric neonatal sepsis; facing extremely high resistance rates in LMIC hospital settings, particularly against MDR Gram-negative organisms prevalent in India. MDR Pathogens in Indian Neonatal Sepsis: Klebsiella pneumoniae, E. coli, Acinetobacter spp., Pseudomonas aeruginosa — all Gram-negative, frequently Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamase (ESBL) or carbapenem-resistant. Contrast with GBS/E. coli dominance in high-income countries. AMR (Antimicrobial Resistance): Capacity of microorganisms to survive concentrations of antimicrobial agents that would otherwise kill or inhibit them. Declared a global health emergency by WHO; LMIC neonatal wards are among the highest-burden settings. Mains Practice Question Antimicrobial resistance poses a disproportionate and distinct threat to neonatal health in countries like India, where the dominant pathogens and resistance profiles differ sharply from those in high-income countries. Using the NeoSep1 trial as a case study, evaluate India's neonatal sepsis burden and the systemic reforms needed in antimicrobial stewardship and newborn healthcare. GS Paper 2  |  Health, International Institutions  |  250 words MCQ Practice Assertion (A): India's neonatal sepsis burden is dominated by Gram-negative, multidrug-resistant pathogens, making the WHO-recommended ampicillin–gentamicin regimen increasingly ineffective in Indian hospitals. Reason (R): The NeoSep1 trial's PRACTical design allows treating physicians to pre-select clinically appropriate antibiotic regimens for each newborn before randomisation. Which of the following is correct? ABoth A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. BBoth A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A. CA is true but R is false. DA is false but R is true. Answer: B Both statements are independently correct. India's MDR Gram-negative pathogen profile does render the ampicillin–gentamicin combination largely ineffective, and the PRACTical design does allow pre-randomisation clinical selection. However, R does not causally explain A. The resistance pattern in Indian hospitals is driven by the local epidemiology of antibiotic overuse, MDR pathogen prevalence and hospital-acquired infection dynamics — none of which are a consequence of how the NeoSep1 trial is designed. R describes a methodological feature of the trial, not the cause of resistance. Hence B is correct. Article 03 UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance: Multilateral Regulation Takes Shape GS Paper 2 — International Relations, International Institutions; GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology, Emerging Technologies Why in News The first session of the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance convened in Geneva on July 6–7, 2026, bringing together member states, industry, academia and civil society under a single intergovernmental forum for the first time. India sent a delegation led by Union Minister of State for External Affairs Kirti Vardhan Singh, articulating a position centred on human oversight, equitable access and a rules-based AI order that does not sideline developing nations. Background: How the Dialogue Came to Exist The Governance Gap Before 2024 Until 2024, global AI governance was fragmented across national frameworks (the EU AI Act, US Executive Orders, China's generative AI rules), voluntary industry standards and regional bodies — with no binding or even consistent multilateral mechanism. The UN's own work on digital governance predated the current wave of generative AI and lacked the institutional authority to coordinate responses to frontier-model risks. The Pact for the Future and the Global Digital Compact (September 2024) At the UN Summit of the Future in September 2024, member states adopted the Pact for the Future — a comprehensive agenda for multilateral reform across peace, development, climate and digital governance. Annexed to the Pact was the Global Digital Compact, which established shared commitments on inclusive and safe digital cooperation, including a dedicated architecture for AI governance. The Compact's AI provisions became the legal basis for the Global Dialogue. UNGA Resolution 79/325 UN General Assembly Resolution 79/325 formally established the Global Dialogue on AI Governance as a universal, multi-stakeholder forum — meaning all UN member states participate as of right, and non-state actors (industry, civil society, technical community) are formally incorporated, not merely invited as observers. This distinguishes it from purely intergovernmental bodies. Structure of the Dialogue Co-Chairs: Egriselda Lopez (Permanent Representative of El Salvador) and Rein Tammsaar (Permanent Representative of Estonia) to the United Nations. Key Speakers at Inaugural Session: Annalena Baerbock (President, UNGA), Antonio Guterres (UN Secretary-General), Luc Frieden (Prime Minister of Luxembourg). Scientific Input — IISPA: The Dialogue is paired with the Independent International Scientific Panel on AI (IISPA), an independent body providing annual scientific assessments of AI capabilities, risks and opportunities — analogous in institutional logic to the IPCC for climate science. Four Thematic Clusters: (1) Social and economic implications of AI; (2) Bridging AI divides between developed and developing nations; (3) Safe and trustworthy AI systems; (4) Human rights in AI-mediated contexts. Second Session: Scheduled for New York, May 2027. Pre-Dialogue Consultations and India's Role Before the inaugural session, the Co-Chairs conducted several stakeholder consultations. One in-person consultation was held on the sidelines of the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi in February 2026 — a venue chosen to ensure Global South perspectives were incorporated into the Dialogue's framing from the outset. India's active hosting of this consultation reflects its intent to shape the Dialogue's direction, not merely respond to it. India's Position at the Dialogue Core Stance: Human-Centric, Inclusive AI India's delegation called for a governance framework that is simultaneously human-centric, inclusive, safe, secure and trustworthy, and in which meaningful human oversight is maintained over AI systems — particularly in high-stakes domains. India argued that AI governance must be grounded in the protection of fundamental rights and the prevention of discriminatory outcomes, while ensuring that the human decision-maker retains final authority in areas such as healthcare, law enforcement and judicial processes. Global South and Capacity Building A recurring emphasis in India's position was the structural disadvantage facing developing nations in AI: they are generating the data that trains AI systems, but the benefits — and the rule-making — are concentrated in a small number of technologically advanced economies. India argued that meaningful participation in global AI governance requires that developing nations receive technology transfer, financial support and institutional capacity building — not just a seat at the table. India's Domestic AI Framework India's stated domestic approach follows the principle of "AI for All" — embedded in both the National Strategy for Artificial Intelligence (NITI Aayog, 2018) and the subsequent National AI Governance Guidelines. The philosophy prioritises inclusive growth and democratised access to AI tools, while avoiding heavy pre-emptive regulation that could inhibit innovation. Complementing this is the IndiaAI Mission (₹10,372 crore, FY2024–25), which builds domestic compute infrastructure, data ecosystems, sector-specific applications and AI safety frameworks. Key Risks Surfaced at the Dialogue Synthetic media (deepfakes) enabling large-scale disinformation and targeted abuse, including sexual abuse imagery. Autonomous weapons systems operating outside meaningful human control. AI systems designed to deceive users about their nature or capabilities. The environmental cost of large-scale AI compute — data centre energy consumption and water use. Unequal access deepening existing gaps in economic opportunity, security capabilities and digital sovereignty between nations. Recommendations Emerging from the Dialogue Consensus-based multilateral governance frameworks that complement, rather than duplicate, national and regional initiatives. Harmonised safety testing standards and clear legal accountability for AI system developers and deployers. Mandatory environmental reporting for large AI systems and requirements for renewable-powered data centres. Stronger international child protection standards in AI-generated content contexts. Structured technology transfer and capacity-building mechanisms to bring developing nations into AI governance as genuine participants. Significance: The Global Dialogue on AI Governance marks the first time the international community has attempted to build a genuinely universal, intergovernmental-plus-multistakeholder framework for AI regulation. For India, it is simultaneously an opportunity to export its "AI for All" model as an alternative to both the EU's precautionary regulatory approach and the US's innovation-first posture, and a platform to ensure that the rules shaping the most consequential technology of the coming decades are not written exclusively by those who currently dominate its development. Prelims Pointers UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance: Universal multi-stakeholder forum; established under UNGA Resolution 79/325; inaugural session Geneva, July 6–7, 2026; second session New York, May 2027; co-chaired by El Salvador and Estonia. Global Digital Compact: Adopted at the UN Summit of the Future (September 2024) as an annex to the Pact for the Future; sets out principles for inclusive, open and safe digital cooperation; legal basis for the AI Governance Dialogue. IISPA (Independent International Scientific Panel on AI): Independent body providing annual scientific assessments of AI capabilities, risks and opportunities; promotes transparency and human oversight; reports to the Global Dialogue. Conceptually analogous to the IPCC (climate) but for AI. UNGA Resolution 79/325: Formally established the Global Dialogue on AI Governance following the adoption of the Global Digital Compact in 2024. Four Thematic Clusters: (1) Social and economic implications; (2) Bridging AI divides; (3) Safe and trustworthy AI; (4) Human rights in AI context. "AI for All": India's guiding philosophy for AI — democratised access, inclusive growth, innovation-enabling regulation; embedded in the NITI Aayog National Strategy for AI (2018) and National AI Governance Guidelines. IndiaAI Mission: ₹10,372 crore central programme (FY2024–25) to build AI compute infrastructure, open datasets, sector-specific applications, safety frameworks and an AI startup ecosystem in India. EU AI Act: First comprehensive binding AI legislation globally; enacted by the European Union; classifies AI systems by risk level (unacceptable, high, limited, minimal); provides regulatory contrast to India's innovation-first approach. Mains Practice Question The governance of artificial intelligence cannot be left to individual nations or market actors alone. Critically examine the prospects and structural limitations of the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance as a multilateral mechanism, and evaluate what India should seek from this forum to protect its interests as a major AI-consuming and AI-developing nation. GS Paper 2  |  International Institutions, Emerging Technologies  |  250 words MCQ Practice With reference to the UN Global Dialogue on AI Governance, which of the following statements is NOT correct? AIt was established under UN General Assembly Resolution 79/325, following the Global Digital Compact adopted in September 2024. BIts inaugural session was held in Geneva in July 2026, with a second session planned for New York in May 2027. CThe IISPA is a UN Security Council subsidiary body that issues binding recommendations on AI safety to member states. DIndia's domestic AI approach follows the "AI for All" philosophy, prioritising inclusive growth and avoiding unnecessarily restrictive regulation. Answer: C Option C is incorrect on two counts: the IISPA is an independent scientific panel (not a UN Security Council body), and it issues scientific assessments (advisory in nature), not binding recommendations. Options A, B and D are all factually correct per the source material. The question asks for what is NOT correct, making C the answer. Article 04 India's First EXIM Shipping Container: Breaking China's Manufacturing Monopoly GS Paper 3 — Economy, Infrastructure, Make in India, Supply Chains Why in News On July 3, 2026, Union Minister of Ports, Shipping and Waterways Sarbananda Sonowal unveiled India's first domestically manufactured export-import (EXIM) shipping container for global shipping major A.P. Moller–Maersk at the Maersk-CONCOR Inland Container Depot, Dadri, Uttar Pradesh. Maersk simultaneously placed a follow-on order for 1,000 additional India-manufactured containers from the DCM Shriram Group — signalling that the initial production was not a showcase exercise but the start of a commercial relationship. Why This Matters: The Container Import Dependency Problem China's Grip on Global Container Manufacturing Shipping containers appear deceptively simple — standardised steel boxes — but their manufacture requires precision fabrication, coating technology and economies of scale that have historically made China the source of over 90% of global container production. The major Chinese manufacturers (CIMC Group, Singamas Container Holdings) have maintained this dominance for decades through cost advantages, proximity to steel mills and integrated supply chains. India, despite being among the world's top trading nations, had zero meaningful domestic container manufacturing capacity before this initiative. The COVID-19 Supply Chain Wake-Up Call The pandemic of 2020–21 exposed the fragility of India's dependence on imported containers with brutal clarity. A global container shortage — caused by pandemic-induced trade imbalances and port congestion — triggered freight rate spikes of 500–800% on major shipping routes and forced Indian exporters, particularly in agriculture and textiles, to either delay shipments or absorb catastrophic cost increases. The policy push for domestic container manufacturing is a direct institutional response to this vulnerability. Understanding TEUs Container capacity is measured in Twenty-foot Equivalent Units (TEUs). One TEU equals a standard 20-foot intermodal container — approximately 6 metres long, 2.4 metres wide and 2.6 metres tall. Port throughput, ship capacity and rail freight capacity are all expressed in TEUs. The CMPS target of 7.5 lakh TEUs per year would, if achieved, place India among the world's significant container-producing nations. International Standards the Container Must Meet ISO Specifications: The International Organization for Standardization prescribes exact dimensional and structural requirements for shipping containers, ensuring that a container built in India can fit onto any ship, rail flat-car or truck chassis anywhere in the world. Compliance is a prerequisite for global deployment. International Convention for Safe Containers (CSC), 1972: Administered by the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the CSC sets mandatory safety standards for the construction, testing, inspection and approval of freight containers used in international transport. India's first EXIM container was manufactured in compliance with both ISO and CSC requirements. The Policy Instrument: Container Manufacturing Promotion Scheme (CMPS) The CMPS was announced in Union Budget 2026 with a framework allocation of ₹10,000 crore. It operates through three channels of support: Capital Expenditure (Capex) Support: Grants and subsidies for establishing new Greenfield container manufacturing plants and expanding existing Brownfield facilities — addressing the high upfront investment barrier that deterred private entry into this sector. Operational Expenditure (Opex) Support: Per-container subsidies to bridge the cost gap between Indian-manufactured containers and Chinese imports, making the domestic product commercially competitive in international procurement tenders. Research and Development (R&D) Support: Funding for materials research, testing facilities, skilling programmes and technology transfer agreements to accelerate the technological sophistication of Indian container manufacturing. The scheme targets a tenfold increase in India's annual container manufacturing capacity — from negligible current levels to 7.5 lakh TEUs per year — and is intended to reduce import dependence, build supply chain resilience and generate employment in manufacturing and associated logistics services. India's Wider Maritime Reform Architecture Legislative Overhaul Merchant Shipping Act, 2025: Replaced colonial-era shipping legislation; modernises ship registration, crew certification, liability frameworks and safety standards. Coastal Shipping Act, 2025: Dedicated legislation to promote coastal and inland waterway freight, reducing pressure on road and rail logistics corridors. Indian Ports Act, 2025: Overhauled port governance — greater autonomy for major ports, competitive tariff-setting and digital integration requirements. Digital Maritime Infrastructure One Nation One Port Process (ONOP): Standardises documentation, procedures and workflows across all major Indian ports, eliminating port-specific compliance variations that raised transaction costs for shippers. Maritime Single Window: Unified digital clearance portal integrating customs, port, shipping line and regulatory filings — reducing dwell time and administrative burden. e-Samudra: Digital platform for vessel traffic management, berth allocation and maritime logistics coordination. Major Infrastructure Investments ₹70,000 crore Shipbuilding Financial Assistance Package — to build a globally competitive Indian shipbuilding industry. Bharat Container Shipping Line — proposed India-owned national shipping line to reduce freight cost dependence on foreign carriers. India is the world's leading ship recycling nation by volume. Three Indian ports now ranked among the global top 30 in the Container Port Performance Index 2025. Greenfield projects under development: Vadhavan Port (Maharashtra), International Container Transshipment Port at Galathea Bay (Great Nicobar Island), Tuna Tekra Container Terminal and the Outer Harbour Container Terminal. Significance: India's first EXIM container is more than a manufacturing milestone — it marks the beginning of a strategic decoupling from near-total dependence on Chinese container supply. The CMPS framework, if implemented with discipline, can shift India from a price-taking importer of this trade-critical equipment to a producer capable of competing in international markets, while creating a domestic buffer against the kind of supply chain shock that paralysed Indian exporters during the pandemic. Prelims Pointers First India-made EXIM Container: Unveiled July 3, 2026 at Maersk-CONCOR ICD, Dadri, UP; manufactured for A.P. Moller-Maersk; produced by DCM Shriram Group; compliant with ISO specifications and the CSC 1972. CMPS (Container Manufacturing Promotion Scheme): ₹10,000 crore framework in Union Budget 2026; Capex + Opex + R&D support; targets tenfold capacity increase to 7.5 lakh TEUs/year. TEU (Twenty-foot Equivalent Unit): Standard measure of shipping container size and port/ship capacity. One TEU = a 20-foot intermodal container. Port throughput, rail capacity and ship capacity are all measured in TEUs. CSC (International Convention for Safe Containers), 1972: IMO-administered; mandates construction, testing, inspection and approval standards for freight containers in international trade; compliance essential for global deployment. Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision 2047: India's long-term maritime development roadmap; encompasses port development, shipbuilding, shipping, coastal trade and maritime manufacturing under a unified national strategy. ONOP (One Nation One Port Process): Standardises port procedures across all major Indian ports to eliminate compliance variation and reduce transaction costs in maritime trade. Vadhavan Port: Proposed deepwater Greenfield port in Dahanu, Maharashtra; designed to handle ultra-large container vessels; expected to become one of India's largest container terminals. Galathea Bay ICTP: International Container Transshipment Port planned on Great Nicobar Island; strategically located on the international east-west shipping lane connecting the Indian Ocean to the Pacific. Mains Practice Question India's near-total dependence on imported shipping containers exposed critical supply chain vulnerabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. Critically assess the Container Manufacturing Promotion Scheme (CMPS) as a step towards Atmanirbhar Bharat in the maritime sector, and evaluate the broader ecosystem reforms needed for India to emerge as a globally competitive maritime manufacturing hub. GS Paper 3  |  Economy, Infrastructure, Industry  |  250 words MCQ Practice Match the following maritime initiatives with their correct descriptions: 1. ONOP            A. Standardised container dimensional and structural requirements 2. CSC, 1972       B. Digital platform for vessel traffic and berth management 3. e-Samudra      C. Safety standards for construction and inspection of freight containers 4. ISO Specifications   D. Uniform port procedure standardisation across all major Indian ports A1-D, 2-A, 3-B, 4-C B1-A, 2-C, 3-D, 4-B C1-D, 2-C, 3-B, 4-A D1-B, 2-D, 3-A, 4-C Answer: C ONOP standardises port procedures across all major Indian ports (D). The CSC 1972 sets mandatory safety standards for the construction, testing and inspection of freight containers (C). e-Samudra is the digital platform for vessel traffic management and berth allocation (B). ISO Specifications set the standardised dimensional and structural requirements for containers, ensuring global interoperability (A). Hence 1-D, 2-C, 3-B, 4-A is correct. Article 05 Compressed Biogas (CBG): India's Alternative Fuel Push and the Challenges Ahead GS Paper 3 — Energy Security, Environment, Agriculture, Infrastructure Why in News Amid ongoing tensions in West Asia that continue to keep global energy markets on edge, India's push for Compressed Biogas (CBG) as an alternative fuel has come under renewed scrutiny. India imports nearly 85% of its crude oil requirements — much of it from West Asia — and around 90% of its LPG imports transit through the Strait of Hormuz, making any regional instability a direct threat to energy security. Despite ambitious policy targets and multiple government schemes, progress on CBG adoption has remained limited. Static Background: What is Biogas and CBG? Biogas is a mixture of methane, carbon dioxide (CO₂) and small quantities of other gases produced by the anaerobic digestion (breakdown of organic matter in the absence of oxygen) of biomass such as agricultural waste, animal manure, food waste and sewage. Compressed Biogas (CBG) is biogas that has been purified (CO₂ and other impurities removed) and compressed to produce a fuel that is chemically identical to Compressed Natural Gas (CNG). It is renewable, carbon-neutral (the CO₂ released during combustion was previously absorbed by plants), and can be produced from waste materials. It can be used for electricity generation, heating, cooking and as a vehicular fuel. Biogas vs. CNG: Key Distinction Parameter CNG (Compressed Natural Gas) CBG (Compressed Biogas) Source Fossil fuel (natural gas) Organic waste (renewable) Chemical Composition Primarily methane (CH₄) Primarily methane (CH₄) — identical Carbon Footprint Non-renewable; net GHG emitter Carbon-neutral (circular carbon) Existing Infrastructure Existing CNG pipelines and vehicles Can use same infrastructure as CNG Key Government Schemes for CBG Promotion 1. SATAT Initiative (2018) The Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation (SATAT) initiative was launched in 2018 with a target of establishing 5,000 CBG plants by 2023. As of June 3, 2026, only 132 plants have been completed — a stark shortfall against targets, highlighting the structural challenges in scaling the sector. 2. GOBARdhan Scheme The GOBARdhan (Galvanising Organic Bio-Agro Resources Dhan) scheme is India's flagship 'waste to wealth' programme for biogas: Offered grants of up to ₹50 lakh per district for community biogas plants. ₹564 crore earmarked for biomass collection machinery. ₹994 crore allocated for pipelines connecting biogas plants to the national gas grid. 3. Mandatory Blending Obligation (2023) The National Biofuels Coordination Committee approved mandatory CBG blending obligations in 2023. Gas distributors are required to blend CBG into their supply from FY26 onwards, starting at 1% and rising to 5% by FY29. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced in the Budget 2024 that phased blending of CBG in CNG for transport and Piped Natural Gas (PNG) for domestic purposes will be mandated. The Ethanol Blending Analogy The government hopes to replicate the success of India's Ethanol Blending Programme (EBP) with CBG. Under EBP, ethanol blending in petrol rose from just 1.5% in 2014 to 20% by December 2025 — five years ahead of the original 2030 target. However, CBG faces more complex challenges in feedstock procurement, plant economics and infrastructure connectivity. Challenges in Scaling CBG Production Infrastructure Deficit: Lack of pipeline connectivity between biogas plants and the national gas grid. Private Investment Gap: High upfront capital costs and uncertain revenue streams deter private players. Credit Access Difficulties: Biogas project developers face challenges in accessing formal credit from banks due to perceived technology and off-take risks. Global Production Concentration: Europe, China and the USA account for 90% of global biogas production. Germany, France, Denmark and the UK are the largest European producers. The Crop Diversion Risk: Lessons from Germany and India's Maize Problem A critical policy concern is the risk of crop diversion — when high biogas feedstock prices incentivise farmers to grow energy crops instead of food crops, threatening food security. Germany experienced a "corn mania" when maize became highly profitable for biogas plants and began replacing food crops; it was forced to introduce a cap on maize use in biogas. The same risk is evident in India. The Economic Survey 2026 noted that maize cultivation has increased sharply, with national maize yield rising from approximately 2.56 tonnes/hectare in FY16 to 3.78 tonnes/hectare by FY25. Meanwhile, yields for soybeans, sunflower, rapeseed, peanuts and millets have either stagnated or declined. India imports large quantities of pulses and edible oils to meet demand — and ethanol pricing that incentivises maize cultivation could inadvertently further divert acreage from these crops. Denmark's Model: Denmark — targeting exclusive biomethane use in its gas system by 2030 — addressed crop diversion by discouraging the use of food crops as feedstock. Its primary sources are livestock manure and agricultural waste, not energy crops. Way Forward: India must replicate Denmark's approach by prioritising agricultural waste, livestock manure and municipal solid waste as CBG feedstocks — avoiding maize and food crops. Fiscal incentives including accelerated depreciation, tax holidays and viability gap funding are needed to attract private investment. Pipeline connectivity grants and guaranteed off-take agreements can de-risk projects. Mandatory blending obligations, if enforced effectively, can create a stable demand signal to drive scale. Prelims Pointers Biogas: Mixture of methane and CO₂ produced by anaerobic digestion of organic matter; purified and compressed to get CBG, which is chemically identical to CNG. SATAT Initiative (2018): Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation; target of 5,000 CBG plants by 2023; only 132 completed as of June 2026. GOBARdhan Scheme: Galvanising Organic Bio-Agro Resources Dhan; 'waste to wealth' programme; grants up to ₹50 lakh/district for community biogas plants; ₹994 crore for pipeline connectivity. Mandatory Blending Obligation: Approved by National Biofuels Coordination Committee (2023); gas distributors to blend CBG starting 1% from FY26, rising to 5% by FY29. Ethanol Blending Programme (EBP): Petrol blending with ethanol rose from 1.5% in 2014 to 20% by December 2025 — five years ahead of the 2030 target; often cited as the benchmark for CBG scale-up. CBG vs. CNG: CBG is chemically identical to CNG but sourced from renewable organic waste; uses the same distribution infrastructure (pipelines, dispensers, vehicles) as CNG. Strait of Hormuz: Critical maritime chokepoint through which approximately 90% of India's LPG imports transit; instability here directly threatens India's energy security. Anaerobic Digestion: The microbial breakdown of organic matter in the absence of oxygen, producing biogas (methane + CO₂) and digestate (nutrient-rich biofertiliser). Mains Practice Question India's push for Compressed Biogas (CBG) as an alternative fuel holds promise for energy security but risks replicating the crop diversion problems seen in Germany. Critically evaluate India's CBG policy framework and suggest how it can be restructured to simultaneously advance energy security and protect food security. GS Paper 3  |  Energy Security, Agriculture, Environment  |  250 words MCQ Practice Consider the following statements about Compressed Biogas (CBG): 1. CBG is chemically identical to Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) and can use existing CNG distribution infrastructure. 2. Under the SATAT initiative launched in 2018, the government targeted 5,000 CBG plants by 2023, all of which have been commissioned as of 2026. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? A1 only B2 only CBoth 1 and 2 DNeither 1 nor 2 Answer: A Statement 1 is correct: CBG, once purified and compressed, is chemically identical to CNG and can utilise the same pipeline, dispensing and vehicular infrastructure. Statement 2 is incorrect: The SATAT target was 5,000 plants by 2023; as of June 3, 2026, only 132 plants have been completed — a major shortfall demonstrating the structural challenges of scaling CBG production in India. Article 06 India-Australia Uranium Supplies Agreement: Nuclear Energy and Strategic Significance GS Paper 2 — India's Foreign Policy, International Relations; GS Paper 3 — Energy Security, Nuclear Programme Why in News During Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Australia, India and Australia "finalised the administrative arrangements" required to enable commercial export of uranium from Australia to India — exclusively for peaceful purposes and under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards — under the Australia-India Nuclear Cooperation Agreement, 2015. The finalisation clears the path for private Australian mining companies to conclude commercial contracts with Indian private sector companies and joint ventures for uranium supply. Static Background: India's Nuclear Journey and the NPT Question Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) is a landmark international treaty (opened for signature in 1968, entered into force in 1970) with three main pillars: (1) non-proliferation of nuclear weapons, (2) disarmament, and (3) the right to peaceful use of nuclear energy. The NPT recognises only five Nuclear Weapon States (NWS): USA, Russia, UK, France and China (the P5). India, Pakistan, Israel and South Sudan have never signed the NPT. North Korea withdrew from it in 2003. India's position: India conducted its first nuclear test (Pokhran-I, "Smiling Buddha") in 1974 and a second series of tests (Pokhran-II, "Operation Shakti") in 1998. As a non-NPT state possessing nuclear weapons, India was long excluded from international civil nuclear cooperation. The India-US Civil Nuclear Deal (2008) — The Game Changer The Indo-US Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement (123 Agreement), signed under PM Manmohan Singh and President George W. Bush, was a watershed moment. India signed a safeguards agreement with the IAEA in 2008 covering its civilian nuclear facilities, which allowed it to separate civilian from military nuclear infrastructure. Subsequently, the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) — a 48-member export control regime — granted India a country-specific exemption, allowing member states to engage in civil nuclear trade with India despite its non-NPT status. This exemption became the legal basis for India's civil nuclear agreements with multiple countries. Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) The NSG is a multilateral export control regime established in 1974 (after India's Pokhran-I test) with 48 member countries. It controls the export of nuclear-related materials, equipment and technology to prevent their diversion to nuclear weapons programmes. The 2008 NSG exemption to India was diplomatically unprecedented — allowing India civil nuclear trade without NPT membership. Australia's Uranium Policy and the India Exception Australia holds more than a quarter of global uranium reserves and has traditionally maintained a strict policy of supplying uranium only to NPT signatories. Its policy has been guided by the principle that support for nuclear non-proliferation is among its "paramount" considerations. Countries that have historically received Australian uranium include the USA, Japan, South Korea, France, Sweden, Belgium, Finland, the UK and Germany — all NPT signatories. The Australia-India Nuclear Cooperation Agreement was signed in 2014 and came into force in 2015 — making India an exception to Australia's NPT-signatories-only rule, underpinned by India's strong IAEA safeguards record and the broader NSG exemption framework. According to the World Nuclear Association, at least 300 tonnes of uranium were exported from Australia to India since 2018 under a "test run" arrangement. The latest finalisation of administrative arrangements signals a shift to full commercial-scale deliveries. The SHANTI Act, 2025 and Private Sector Participation The significance of the 2026 finalisation is amplified by the SHANTI Act (December 2025), which opened India's nuclear sector to private players for the first time. Previously, nuclear energy in India was the exclusive domain of government entities under the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE). The SHANTI Act allows private Indian companies to participate in nuclear power generation and, by extension, in uranium procurement through commercial contracts with foreign suppliers including Australian mining companies. Strategic Timing: West Asian Energy Crisis The announcement comes at a time when India's energy sector is under severe stress due to the US-Israel-Iran conflict, which has disrupted hydrocarbon supply chains from West Asia. India has been forced to diversify crude oil sourcing — buying from Russia, the USA and Venezuela — while also accelerating its long-term shift to nuclear and renewable energy. Uranium from Australia directly supports India's long-term energy security by diversifying the fuel base for its expanding nuclear power programme. Negotiating History 2009: PM Kevin Rudd's visit to India — first discussions on energy cooperation including nuclear options; joint statement noted mutual commitment against nuclear weapons proliferation. 2014: Australia-India Nuclear Cooperation Agreement signed. 2015: Agreement entered into force; initial administrative arrangements operationalised. 2018 onwards: First uranium exports to India (~300 tonnes as a "test run"). 2026: Finalisation of full commercial administrative arrangements enabling private sector participation on both sides. Significance: The India-Australia uranium arrangement represents the convergence of India's civil nuclear maturation (2008 IAEA safeguards + NSG exemption), domestic nuclear privatisation (SHANTI Act, 2025) and the strategic energy diversification imperative (West Asian instability). Australia's willingness to supply uranium to a non-NPT state based on safeguards and track record sets a precedent in global nuclear diplomacy and cements the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership between the two Quad members. Prelims Pointers Australia-India Nuclear Cooperation Agreement: Signed 2014, entered into force 2015; enables uranium exports from Australia to India for peaceful purposes under IAEA safeguards; ~300 tonnes exported since 2018 as a test run. NPT (Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty): 1968 treaty with three pillars: non-proliferation, disarmament and peaceful use; recognises only five NWS (P5). India, Pakistan, Israel are non-signatories. NSG (Nuclear Suppliers Group): 48-member export control regime; India received a country-specific exemption in 2008, allowing civil nuclear trade despite non-NPT membership — the legal basis for India's multiple civil nuclear agreements. India-IAEA Safeguards Agreement (2008): India agreed to place civilian nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards, separating them from military facilities; a precondition for the NSG exemption and subsequent civil nuclear deals. SHANTI Act, 2025: Opened India's nuclear sector to private players for the first time; enables Indian private companies to participate in nuclear power generation and uranium procurement. Australia's Uranium Reserves: Australia holds more than a quarter of global uranium reserves; traditionally supplied only to NPT signatories; India became an exception based on its IAEA safeguards record and NSG exemption. Pokhran Tests: Pokhran-I (1974, "Smiling Buddha") — first nuclear test; Pokhran-II (1998, "Operation Shakti") — series of five tests. Both conducted in Rajasthan's Thar Desert. 123 Agreement: The Indo-US Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement signed under PM Manmohan Singh and President George W. Bush; named after Section 123 of the US Atomic Energy Act, which governs nuclear cooperation agreements. Mains Practice Question India's finalisation of uranium supply administrative arrangements with Australia demonstrates how a non-NPT state can integrate into global civil nuclear commerce through safeguards and strategic partnerships. Critically examine the significance of this development for India's energy security and foreign policy, with reference to the evolving nuclear non-proliferation regime. GS Paper 2  |  India's Foreign Policy, International Relations  |  250 words MCQ Practice Which of the following statements about the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) is correct? AThe NSG was established after India's Pokhran-II tests in 1998 to prevent nuclear technology transfer to non-NPT states. BThe NSG currently has 58 member countries and India is a full member. CThe NSG granted India a country-specific exemption in 2008, allowing NSG members to engage in civil nuclear trade with India despite its non-NPT status. DUnder the NSG exemption, India is permitted to share nuclear technology with other non-NPT states for peaceful purposes. Answer: C Option C is correct. The NSG exemption granted to India in 2008 was country-specific — it allowed NSG member states to conduct civil nuclear trade with India despite India not being an NPT signatory, given India's strong non-proliferation track record and IAEA safeguards agreement. Option A is incorrect: the NSG was established in 1974 (after Pokhran-I, not Pokhran-II). Option B is incorrect: the NSG has 48 members, and India is NOT a member (it has only an exemption). Option D is incorrect: the exemption relates to trade with India, not India's right to transfer technology to other non-NPT states. Article 07 Language Diversity and Genetic History: Why Isolated Populations Harbour More Linguistic Variety GS Paper 1 — Art & Culture, History, Geography; GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology (Genetics) Why in News A new study published in PNAS (May 2026) by researchers from Europe and Japan — led by Anna Graff, a biological anthropologist at the University of Zurich — has found a significant correlation between human genetic diversity patterns and linguistic structural diversity. Regions with long histories of relative geographic isolation tend to harbour more diverse linguistic features, while regions shaped by large-scale migration and sustained inter-population contact tend to have languages that are more structurally alike. Static Background: Language Families and Linguistic Diversity Languages are grouped into families based on shared ancestry — languages that evolved from a common ancestor (proto-language). The major language families include Indo-European (which encompasses Hindi, Bengali, Punjabi, Marathi as well as European languages), Dravidian (Tamil, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam), Sino-Tibetan, Austronesian, and Niger-Congo, among others. Linguistic diversity can be measured in two distinct ways: (1) the number of languages spoken in a region, or (2) the degree of structural difference between those languages (how differently they are organised). This study focused on the second measure — structural linguistic diversity — which captures how distinctly languages in a region differ from each other in terms of grammar, phonology, syntax and vocabulary. What are Linguistic Features? Linguistic features are structural characteristics that describe how a language is organised. Examples include: Verb position: Some languages place verbs near the beginning of a sentence (VSO order, as in Classical Arabic); others place them at the end (SOV order, as in Hindi, Japanese and Turkish). Lexical distinctions: Some languages distinguish between a "hand" and a "finger" with separate words, while others use the same term for both. Tone systems, case marking, evidentiality, politeness levels — all are structural features that vary across languages and language families. The Study: Methodology and Key Findings Dataset The researchers assembled one of the largest datasets of its kind: Linguistic data from more than 4,200 languages using a checklist of 333 structural characteristics. Genetic data from over 5,700 individuals representing 650 populations worldwide. The world was divided into hundreds of roughly 500-km-wide hexagonal cells; for each cell, the researchers calculated both structural linguistic diversity and genetic diversity. Key Finding: Isolation Breeds Linguistic Diversity Regions whose populations had been relatively isolated over long periods tended to have more diverse linguistic features among the languages spoken there. The effect was statistically equivalent to making approximately 11 out of 333 checklist characteristics vary substantially across languages in a region — modest but remarkably persistent across multiple statistical tests. Spread Zones vs. Accumulation Zones The researchers categorised regions into two types: Spread Zones: Regions repeatedly reshaped by large population movements associated with the spread of farming, state expansion, empire-building and colonialism. Languages here tend to converge structurally as contact causes borrowing and diffusion of features. Accumulation Zones: Regions with long histories of relative isolation where linguistic differences have accumulated over time without being smoothed out by migration and contact. New Guinea — home to more than 800 languages — is the classic example. Why Does Contact Reduce Diversity? This finding seems counterintuitive. One might expect that contact between populations would produce more diversity. But the study argues the opposite: as people migrate, trade and interact, languages borrow words, sounds and grammatical features from each other, causing them to gradually converge. Isolation, by contrast, allows languages to evolve independently, increasing the chances that they grow more structurally different over time. Relevance to India India is a compelling case study. The dramatic structural differences between Basque and Spanish (cited in the study as an example of high diversity) finds a parallel in the difference between Hindi and Tamil — not merely in vocabulary but in verb position, case-marking systems, phonology and script. In contrast, Tamil and Kannada — both Dravidian languages — share many features because they share a common ancestor. India's linguistic diversity reflects its complex history of both isolation (Dravidian languages preserving pre-Indo-Aryan structures in the South) and contact (Indo-Aryan languages influencing northern Dravidian languages). Implications: The Loss of Small Languages The study's findings have urgent conservation implications. Linguistically diverse "accumulation zones" such as New Guinea and Amazonia — where communities preserved unique grammatical and phonological structures through relative isolation — are increasingly threatened as globalization and migration accelerate contact and language shift. The loss of small, isolated languages is therefore not just a cultural loss but the loss of rare linguistic data about the full range of human cognitive and communicative capacity. India, with 780+ languages (Census 2011) including hundreds of tribal and endangered languages in the Northeast, Andaman Islands and Central India, faces a similar challenge. Significance: The study demonstrates that human genetic history — specifically, the patterns of population isolation versus migration — leaves legible signatures on the structural diversity of languages. This has implications for understanding prehistoric human migration, language evolution and the conservation of linguistic heritage. It also underscores the irreplaceable value of linguistic diversity in regions like Amazonia, New Guinea and Northeast India — places that preserve structural features of human language that have disappeared elsewhere due to contact and migration. Prelims Pointers Accumulation Zone: A region with long-term population isolation where linguistic structural differences have accumulated over time without being smoothed out by migration or contact; example: New Guinea (800+ languages). Spread Zone: A region repeatedly reshaped by large population migrations (farming spread, empires, colonialism); languages here tend to converge structurally through borrowing and contact. Structural Linguistic Diversity: Measured not by the number of languages but by how structurally different neighbouring languages are from each other in grammar, phonology, syntax and lexicon. PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences): One of the world's most prestigious multidisciplinary scientific journals, published by the US National Academy of Sciences. Dravidian Language Family: A family of ~80 languages spoken primarily in South India and Sri Lanka, including Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam; unrelated to the Indo-European family; considered to predate Indo-Aryan migration into India. SOV Word Order: Subject-Object-Verb — the sentence structure in which the verb comes last; found in Hindi, Tamil, Japanese and Turkish. Contrasts with SVO (Subject-Verb-Object) order of English. India's Linguistic Diversity: India has 780+ languages (Census 2011) across Indo-European (Aryan branch), Dravidian, Austro-Asiatic and Sino-Tibetan families — making it one of the world's most linguistically diverse countries. Mains Practice Question A recent study published in PNAS found an inverse correlation between structural linguistic diversity and human genetic diversity, suggesting that population isolation preserves unique linguistic features. Discuss the implications of this finding for understanding India's linguistic diversity and the importance of conserving endangered languages. GS Paper 1  |  Art & Culture, Indian Languages  |  150 words MCQ Practice According to a 2026 study published in PNAS on language diversity and genetic history, which of the following best describes an "accumulation zone"? AA region repeatedly reshaped by large population migrations and empire-building, where languages converge structurally due to contact. BA region where the number of languages spoken is maximised due to administrative fragmentation. CA region with a long history of relative population isolation where linguistic structural differences have accumulated over time without being smoothed out by migration and contact. DA region where genetic diversity is highest due to mixing of multiple migrant populations over centuries. Answer: C Option C correctly defines an "accumulation zone" as used in the study — regions where isolation has allowed linguistic features to diverge and accumulate over time. Option A describes a "spread zone." Option B conflates the number of languages with structural diversity (the study specifically measures structural differences, not language count). Option D describes a genetically diverse region due to migration — which the study found to be associated with reduced (not increased) linguistic structural diversity, as contact causes convergence. Article 08 Ladakh: New Districts, New Tehsils and the Extension of Autonomous Hill Councils GS Paper 2 — Governance, Constitutional Provisions, Federalism, Union Territories Why in News The Ladakh Administration announced the creation of 17 new tehsils to strengthen grassroots governance, bringing the total number of tehsils in the Union Territory to 32. The administration also stated that the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council (LAHDC) Act will be extended to all seven districts of the region through appropriate legal provisions. Earlier, Ladakh had only two districts (Leh and Kargil); five new districts — Sham, Nubra, Changthang, Zanskar and Drass — were notified in April 2026. Static Background: Ladakh as a Union Territory Prior to August 5, 2019, Ladakh was a region within the state of Jammu and Kashmir. Following the abrogation of Article 370 and passage of the Jammu and Kashmir Reorganisation Act, 2019, the former state was bifurcated into two Union Territories: Jammu and Kashmir — UT with a legislature (restored to statehood status in elections held in 2024). Ladakh — UT without a legislature, administered directly by the Centre through a Lieutenant Governor. This is significant because Ladakh lacks a directly elected legislative assembly — a key demand of civil society groups and political parties in the region. Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Councils (LAHDC) The LAHDC was established under the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Councils Act, 1997 to provide a measure of democratic and developmental self-governance at the district level in Ladakh, which then lacked a separate state legislature. Two Hill Councils existed — one for Leh and one for Kargil. These councils have legislative and executive powers over specified subjects including agriculture, land use, animal husbandry, minor irrigation and cultural preservation, but function within the constitutional framework of a UT without legislature. Article 371 and the Sui Generis Model for Ladakh Article 371 of the Constitution contains special provisions for certain states (Maharashtra, Gujarat, Nagaland, Assam, Manipur, Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Sikkim, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh and Goa). Each sub-clause of Article 371 provides tailored protections — for tribal rights, land rights, customary law or governance structures — for specific states. Recent discussions suggest the Centre is considering a customised "sui generis" (one of its kind) model for Ladakh under the provisions of Article 371, to protect Ladakh's land, culture and identity while promoting inclusive development — without granting it a full legislative assembly. Administrative Developments New Districts (Notified April 2026) District Carved from Sham Erstwhile Leh district Nubra Erstwhile Leh district Changthang Erstwhile Leh district Zanskar Erstwhile Kargil district Drass Erstwhile Kargil district New Tehsils and Allocation Controversy The 17 new tehsils have been allocated as follows: 12 to the erstwhile Leh district and 5 to the erstwhile Kargil district. The Kargil Democratic Alliance (KDA), a Kargil-based civil society organisation, has raised concerns about this allocation, noting that Kargil has a larger population and more villages than the five newly created districts (Sham, Nubra, Changthang, Zanskar and Drass) combined. The KDA also pointed out that Drass — a district with substantial population and administrative requirements — has not been granted a single additional tehsil. Additional Governance Measures Posting orders issued for tehsildars in all 17 newly created tehsils. Four new divisions created under the Public Health Engineering (PHE) and Flood Control Department. Five new divisions under the Public Works Department (PWD) and PMGSY (Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana) to strengthen service delivery in remote areas including Zanskar, Drass, Nubra, Changthang and Sham. Constitutional Safeguards: The Ongoing Demand The extension of LAHDC and the creation of new districts do not resolve the core political demand from Ladakh: constitutional safeguards for Ladakh's land, culture and identity, and a degree of legislative autonomy. Several rounds of discussions have been held with representatives of religious organisations and civil society. The Ladakh Chief Secretary noted broad consensus on protecting land, culture and identity. A draft model being discussed involves a customised sui generis framework under Article 371 provisions — distinct from full statehood but providing stronger protections than a standard UT arrangement. Way Forward: The administrative restructuring of Ladakh — new districts, new tehsils and extension of the LAHDC Act — brings governance closer to remote communities. However, the unresolved demand for constitutional safeguards, the controversy over tehsil allocation between Leh and Kargil, and the absence of a legislative assembly remain significant governance gaps. A sui generis Article 371-type model, developed in genuine consultation with all communities, could provide a durable constitutional settlement for Ladakh's unique requirements. Prelims Pointers Ladakh as a UT without legislature: Created under the J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019 after Article 370 abrogation; administered by an LG; no directly elected legislative assembly — a key civil society demand. LAHDC (Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council) Act, 1997: Established district-level autonomous hill councils for Leh and Kargil; now proposed to be extended to all 7 new districts of Ladakh. New Districts of Ladakh (April 2026): Five new districts added — Sham, Nubra, Changthang (from erstwhile Leh); Zanskar, Drass (from erstwhile Kargil). Total now 7 districts. Article 370: Gave special autonomous status to Jammu and Kashmir; abrogated on August 5, 2019 through a Presidential Order and the J&K Reorganisation Act, 2019. Article 371: Contains special provisions for specific states (not UTs) to protect tribal rights, land, culture and customary law. A sui generis model under Article 371 provisions is being discussed for Ladakh's unique constitutional needs. Sui Generis: Latin for "of its own kind"; refers to a unique or one-of-a-kind constitutional model tailored to a specific region's requirements rather than applying a standard framework. Tehsil: An administrative subdivision below the district level in India (also called Taluka in some states); headed by a Tehsildar; responsible for revenue administration and grassroots service delivery. PMGSY (Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana): Central Sector Scheme launched in 2000 to provide all-weather road connectivity to unconnected rural habitations; now being extended with new PWD divisions in remote Ladakh. Mains Practice Question The Union Territory of Ladakh presents a unique constitutional challenge — a region with distinct cultural identity, strategic significance and democratic aspirations, governed without a legislature. Critically examine whether a sui generis model under Article 371 can provide a durable constitutional settlement for Ladakh's governance needs. GS Paper 2  |  Governance, Constitutional Provisions, Federalism  |  250 words MCQ Practice With reference to the Ladakh Autonomous Hill Development Council (LAHDC) Act, 1997, consider the following statements: 1. The LAHDC was established to provide district-level democratic self-governance in Ladakh prior to its bifurcation from Jammu and Kashmir. 2. Currently, the LAHDC covers only the districts of Leh and Kargil. 3. The Government of India has proposed to extend the LAHDC Act to all seven districts of Ladakh through appropriate legislation. Which of the statements given above are correct? A1 and 2 only B2 and 3 only C1, 2 and 3 D1 and 3 only Answer: C All three statements are correct. Statement 1: The LAHDC Act was enacted in 1997 to provide a measure of democratic self-governance at the district level in Ladakh (then part of J&K), which lacked a state legislature. Statement 2: Currently two Hill Councils exist — for Leh and Kargil (the only two districts until April 2026). Statement 3: Following the notification of five new districts in April 2026, the Ladakh administration announced the LAHDC Act will be extended to all seven districts through appropriate legal provisions. Article 09 Metal-Organic Frameworks and the Fukushima Challenge: A Breakthrough in Tritiated Water Filtration GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology, Environment, Nuclear Energy Why in News A new study published in Environmental Science & Technology has demonstrated a highly efficient method to filter tritiated water (water containing radioactive tritium) using a metal-organic framework (MOF) — a class of porous materials whose development won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2025. The breakthrough is directly relevant to the ongoing challenge of managing treated wastewater from Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, which has been releasing tritiated water into the Pacific Ocean since 2023. Static Background: The Fukushima Context In 2011, a magnitude 9.0 earthquake and subsequent tsunami caused three reactor meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in Japan — the most severe nuclear accident since Chernobyl (1986). The disaster created an acute problem: contaminated cooling water needed to prevent molten fuel from overheating. Japan has been collecting and treating this water in the Advanced Liquid Processing System (ALPS), which removes most heavy radioactive elements. However, ALPS cannot remove tritium. Since August 2023, Japan has begun a decades-long release of ALPS-treated water into the Pacific Ocean — a highly controversial decision that drew strong objections from China, South Korea and Pacific Island nations. What is Tritium and Tritiated Water? Tritium (³H or T) is a radioactive isotope of hydrogen. Ordinary hydrogen has 1 proton and 0 neutrons; deuterium has 1 proton and 1 neutron; tritium has 1 proton and 2 neutrons. Tritium is produced naturally in the upper atmosphere through cosmic ray interactions with nitrogen, and artificially as a byproduct of nuclear fission reactions. When tritium bonds with oxygen, it forms tritiated water (HTO). Because tritiated water is chemically almost identical to regular water (H₂O), conventional water treatment systems cannot distinguish between the two — making separation extremely difficult. Unlike heavy metals or other radionuclides that can be filtered by standard methods, HTO behaves like ordinary water in biological systems and is "easily absorbed by the bodies of living creatures" and rapidly distributed via the bloodstream. Radiation Concern Tritium is a beta emitter — it emits low-energy beta particles during radioactive decay into helium-3. Its biological half-life (the time for half to leave the body) is approximately 10 days, while its physical half-life is approximately 12.3 years. Regulatory bodies globally allow small amounts of tritium in drinking water, but environmental and biological concentration through the food chain in ocean waters closer to Japan (particularly between South Korea and China) remains a concern. The Current Industrial Problem: Water Distillation The most practical existing method to remove tritium from water is water distillation — exploiting the slightly different boiling points of H₂O, HTO and D₂O (heavy water). However, the boiling point difference is so small that the process requires distillation towers hundreds of metres tall, which are prohibitively expensive, energy-intensive and physically impractical for the millions of tonnes of water stored at Fukushima. Standard distillation towers use "packings" — materials inside the tower that provide surfaces for steam-liquid interaction during separation. The New Solution: Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs) What are Metal-Organic Frameworks? A metal-organic framework (MOF) is a class of porous crystalline materials made from metal ions or clusters coordinated to organic molecules (ligands) to form repeating, cage-like three-dimensional structures. Their key property is an extraordinarily high surface area — some MOFs have surface areas exceeding 7,000 m² per gram. This makes them extraordinarily effective as molecular sieves, adsorbents and catalysts. The development of MOFs was recognised with the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2025. How the New Study Works The research team (from across China) coated a stainless-steel mesh with a MOF called NH₂-MIL-101(Cr) (a chromium-based MOF with amino group modifications) to create an "active" packing material for distillation towers: Surface Area Amplification: Adding NH₂-MIL-101(Cr) increased the available surface area of the packing by 32-fold — dramatically increasing the steam-liquid interaction surface available for isotope separation. Active Tritium Capture: The chromium-oxygen clusters inside the MOF "grabbed" tritium atoms from the liquid and swapped them with regular hydrogen atoms. Nitrogen and hydrogen attachments within the MOF structure facilitated this hydrogen isotope exchange. Separation Efficiency: In laboratory tests, the modified packing achieved a separation efficiency of 42.5 theoretical plates per metre — a record-setting figure in chemical engineering. At an industrial height of 10 metres, the new material would be 134 times more effective than the current best-reported material, and one million times more effective than standard commercial packings. Key Technical Concept: Theoretical Plates In chemical engineering, a "theoretical plate" (or theoretical stage) is a conceptual unit representing an ideal separation stage in a distillation column. More theoretical plates per metre of column height means more separation efficiency — the column can achieve the same degree of separation in a shorter height, making the process more economical and practical. Significance: This MOF-based approach could transform the management of tritiated water in nuclear power operations globally. If scaled industrially, it could reduce the need for ocean discharge of tritiated water and strengthen the environmental case for nuclear energy as a clean power source. India, which is expanding its nuclear power programme and now has access to Australian uranium, has a direct interest in advanced nuclear waste management technologies of this kind. Prelims Pointers Tritium (³H): Radioactive isotope of hydrogen with 1 proton and 2 neutrons; forms tritiated water (HTO) when bonded with oxygen; chemically near-identical to H₂O; low-energy beta emitter; physical half-life ~12.3 years; biological half-life ~10 days. Tritiated Water (HTO): Water formed when tritium replaces one or both hydrogen atoms in H₂O; chemically indistinguishable from regular water; cannot be removed by conventional filtration or ALPS treatment; enters living organisms as easily as regular water. Metal-Organic Framework (MOF): Porous crystalline material made from metal ions/clusters coordinated with organic ligands; has extraordinarily high surface area; used as molecular sieves, adsorbents, and catalysts. Development won the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry. NH₂-MIL-101(Cr): Chromium-based amino-modified MOF used in the new study; coated on stainless-steel mesh to create active packing for distillation towers; increased packing surface area by 32-fold; achieved record separation efficiency of 42.5 theoretical plates/metre. Theoretical Plates (Distillation): A measure of separation efficiency in a distillation column; more theoretical plates per metre = more efficient separation in less column height. The MOF packing achieved 134x improvement over the current best material. Fukushima Daiichi: Site of the 2011 nuclear disaster in Japan (triggered by earthquake + tsunami); ALPS-treated water being discharged into Pacific Ocean since August 2023; tritium cannot be removed by ALPS — a key controversy. ALPS (Advanced Liquid Processing System): Japan's water treatment system at Fukushima that removes most radioactive contaminants from cooling water except tritium; filtered water is then diluted and released into the Pacific Ocean. Mains Practice Question Japan's decision to release ALPS-treated tritiated water from Fukushima into the Pacific Ocean has raised serious environmental and diplomatic concerns. In light of a new breakthrough using metal-organic frameworks for tritium removal, discuss the scientific, environmental and geopolitical dimensions of nuclear wastewater management. GS Paper 3  |  Environment, Science & Technology, Nuclear Energy  |  250 words MCQ Practice Assertion (A): Conventional water distillation is ineffective at practically removing tritium from large volumes of nuclear wastewater like those stored at Fukushima. Reason (R): Tritiated water (HTO) and ordinary water (H₂O) have such similar boiling points that separating them requires distillation towers hundreds of metres tall, which are energy-intensive and impractical at the required scale. Which of the following is correct? ABoth A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. BBoth A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A. CA is true, but R is false. DA is false, but R is true. Answer: A Both A and R are true, and R directly explains A. The near-identical boiling points of H₂O and HTO are precisely the reason why conventional distillation is impractical — the minimal difference requires towers hundreds of metres tall, making the process prohibitively expensive and energy-intensive for millions of tonnes of wastewater. The MOF-based active packing material developed in the new study addresses this limitation by providing a 32-fold increase in surface area and active isotope exchange, achieving 42.5 theoretical plates per metre — making industrial-scale tritium removal feasible at practical tower heights. Article 10 Supreme Court Pendency Crisis: Four New Special Benches to Clear Oldest Pending Cases GS Paper 2 — Governance, Judiciary, Constitutional Bodies Why in News Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant has created four new specialised benches exclusively to hear the oldest pending civil and criminal matters in the Supreme Court — a structured attempt to address the mounting backlog of cases at the apex court. As of the latest data from the National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG), the Supreme Court has 96,045 pending cases. Static Background: India's Judicial Pendency Problem India faces one of the world's most severe judicial backlog crises. As of recent estimates, over 5 crore (50 million) cases are pending across all courts in India — from district courts to the Supreme Court. This backlog is a systemic challenge rooted in the low judge-to-population ratio, procedural delays, frequent adjournments, vacancies in the judiciary and inadequate court infrastructure. Judge-to-Population Ratio India has approximately 21 judges per million population — far below the Law Commission's recommended ratio of 50 judges per million. The USA has approximately 107 judges per million. This structural deficit is a primary driver of pendency at all levels of the judiciary. The National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG) The NJDG is a real-time online database of pending and disposed-of cases across all High Courts and district courts in India, managed by the Supreme Court's e-Committee as part of the eCourts Mission Mode Project. It enables the public and policymakers to track case pendency, disposal rates and judge performance across the country. It is a key tool under India's judicial technology reform agenda. Scale of the Supreme Court Backlog Category Pending Cases Notable Oldest Total Pending 96,045 — Civil Matters 74,244 Oldest case pending since 1986 Criminal Matters 21,801 Oldest case registered in 1991 Civil cases over 30 years old 24 cases Filed before 1996 Criminal cases over 30 years old 2 cases Filed before 1996 Civil cases 10–20 years old 7,993 Filed 2004–2014 Criminal cases 10–20 years old 1,585 Filed 2004–2014 The New Bench Structure Civil Matters Benches: Two division benches headed by Justices P.K. Mishra and S.V.N. Bhatti (two judges each), dedicated solely to the oldest pending civil cases. Criminal Matters Benches: Two division benches headed by Justices Manoj Misra and Ujjal Bhuyan, dedicated solely to the oldest pending criminal matters. Sitting Days: These special benches will operate on non-miscellaneous days — Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays — when "regular matters" requiring detailed arguments are heard. This frees them from the burden of fresh filings heard on Mondays and Fridays ("miscellaneous days"). The Pendency Paradox The growing backlog presents a productivity paradox: the Supreme Court has actually increased its case disposal rate over the last five years, recovering markedly from pandemic-era reduced functioning to record disposal figures. Yet total pendency has continued to rise. This is because the rate of new case intake is outpacing the rate of disposal. With increased accessibility through e-filing and virtual hearings, new case registrations have risen exponentially — reaching an unprecedented 75,402 new filings in 2025 alone. Strategies of Past Chief Justices CJI Key Strategy U.U. Lalit (2022) Rigorous listing mechanism with distinct time slots for fresh matters and long-pending regular hearings to prevent old cases from being buried under new filings. D.Y. Chandrachud SC-JUDICARE project to automate classification of pending cases; grouped similar legal issues for joint hearing; special benches for death penalty references; Special Lok Adalat week. Sanjiv Khanna Focus on "admission matters" — fresh cases clogging the system before admission; temporarily halted listing of older regular matters on Wednesdays and Thursdays; Centre for Research and Planning tasked to weed out infructuous cases. B.R. Gavai Despite high-capacity functioning, massive surge in new filings pushed total pendency past 90,000 mark. Surya Kant (current) Four dedicated special benches for oldest pending civil and criminal cases; reducing pendency and formulating a unified national disposal policy stated as top priorities. SC-JUDICARE Project Launched under CJI Chandrachud, SC-JUDICARE uses artificial intelligence to automatically classify pending cases in the Supreme Court and group matters involving similar legal questions so they can be heard together — saving court time on repetitive arguments. It represents the integration of legal technology into judicial workflow management. Way Forward: The four special benches are a targeted structural response to the pendency paradox. However, long-term solutions require: increasing the sanctioned strength of judges across all courts, establishing more fast-track and specialist courts, enforcing mandatory ADR (Alternative Dispute Resolution) before certain categories of litigation, reforming adjournment practices through procedural amendments, accelerating judge appointments to fill existing vacancies, and ensuring NJDG data is used proactively for systemic reform rather than merely monitoring. Prelims Pointers CJI Surya Kant: Current Chief Justice of India (took office late November 2025); stated reducing pendency and formulating a unified national disposal policy as top priorities; created 4 special benches for oldest pending cases. Supreme Court Pendency (as of 2026): 96,045 total pending cases — 74,244 civil, 21,801 criminal. Oldest civil case: 1986. Oldest criminal case: 1991. New filings in 2025 alone: 75,402. National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG): Real-time online database of pending and disposed cases across High Courts and district courts; managed by the SC's e-Committee under the eCourts Mission Mode Project; key judicial transparency and monitoring tool. Miscellaneous Days vs. Regular Days: Mondays and Fridays at the Supreme Court are "miscellaneous days" for fresh filings and preliminary hearings; Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays are "regular days" for detailed arguments. New special benches sit on regular (non-miscellaneous) days. SC-JUDICARE: AI-based project launched under CJI Chandrachud to automate classification and grouping of similar pending cases for joint hearing; part of India's judicial technology modernisation. Pendency Paradox: Supreme Court has increased disposal rates yet total pendency keeps rising — because the rate of new case intake (75,402 filings in 2025) exceeds the disposal rate; structural outcome of increased accessibility through e-filing and virtual hearings. Judge-to-Population Ratio (India): Approximately 21 judges per million population; Law Commission recommended 50 per million; USA has ~107 per million. Structural deficit is a primary driver of judicial backlog at all levels. Lok Adalat: A statutory alternative dispute resolution mechanism under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987; decisions are final, binding and non-appealable; no court fees charged; used to fast-track settlement of pending and pre-litigation matters. Mains Practice Question The Supreme Court's creation of special benches for the oldest pending cases highlights a structural challenge: India's judiciary is disposing of more cases than ever before, yet pendency continues to grow. Critically analyse the structural causes of this "pendency paradox" and evaluate the institutional reforms needed for a lasting solution. GS Paper 2  |  Judiciary, Governance  |  250 words MCQ Practice With reference to the Supreme Court's pending case data as recently reported, which of the following statements is correct? ACriminal matters constitute the largest share of the Supreme Court's pending cases, with over 70,000 criminal cases pending. BThe oldest criminal case currently pending before the Supreme Court was registered in 1986. CThe Supreme Court had a total of 96,045 pending cases, of which civil matters (74,244) constitute the bulk of the backlog. DThe total pendency of cases in the Supreme Court has been consistently declining over the last five years due to increased disposal rates. Answer: C Option C is correct: total Supreme Court pendency stands at 96,045 cases, with civil matters (74,244) forming the bulk and criminal matters at 21,801. Option A is incorrect: it is civil (not criminal) matters that constitute the larger share. Option B is incorrect: the oldest criminal case was registered in 1991, while 1986 refers to the oldest civil case. Option D is incorrect: despite increased disposal rates, total pendency has continued to rise due to the pendency paradox — new case intake (75,402 filings in 2025 alone) exceeds disposal rates.