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Apr 16, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content From Steam to Speed: The Ever-Evolving Journey of Railways Naval Commanders’ Conference 2026 From Steam to Speed: The Ever-Evolving Journey of Railways Why in News?  15 April 2026 (PIB): Highlights 173 years of Indian Railways, showcasing near-complete electrification (99.6%), modernisation, and record operational performance (2025–26). Issue in Brief Indian Railways transitioned from steam-based colonial network (1853) to a modern, electrified, technology-driven system. Acts as backbone of India’s logistics, mobility, and economic growth, with massive scale and modernization push. Relevance GS III (Economy & Infrastructure) Logistics efficiency, infrastructure investment, industrial growth, freight economics GS III (Environment & S&T) Electrification, energy efficiency, green transport, indigenous technologies (Kavach, Vande Bharat) Practice Question “Indian Railways is central to India’s economic transformation but faces structural and operational challenges. Examine its role and suggest reforms for a future-ready railway system.” (250 words) Static Background  First train (1853): Bombay–Thane (34 km), operated by Great Indian Peninsula Railway. Gauge types: Broad (1.676 m), Metre (1 m), Narrow (<1 m), Standard (1.435 m). Post-independence: Integration of 42 railway systems → Indian Railways (1951–52 zones). Electrification: Shift from steam → diesel → electric traction for efficiency and sustainability. Key Data & Evidence 99.6% electrification of 70,142 km broad gauge network (March 2026). Passengers (2025–26): ~741 crore; Freight: 1,670 MT (record). Revenue: ~₹80,000 crore. Diesel savings: 180 crore litres (2024–25); ~₹6,000 crore savings. Kavach: 3,100 km operational, 24,400 km under implementation. Daily trains: ~25,000. Dimensions Governance / Infrastructure Railways function as critical public infrastructure, enabling national integration and last-mile connectivity. Supports PM Gati Shakti via 35 cargo terminals and multimodal logistics integration. Station redevelopment (Amrit Bharat Scheme) enhances urban infrastructure and service delivery. Economic Backbone of freight logistics (1,670 MT) → reduces logistics cost (~14% of GDP). Electrification reduces import dependence (diesel savings → improves current account balance). High capital outlay (₹2.78 lakh crore, Budget 2026–27) → multiplier effect on growth and employment. Social Provides affordable mass transport → ensures inclusive mobility for low-income groups. Amrit Bharat Express (non-AC) improves accessibility for economically weaker sections. Enhances regional connectivity → reduces spatial inequalities. Environmental 99.6% electrification significantly reduces carbon emissions and fossil fuel dependency. Rail transport is 4–5 times more energy efficient than road transport. Supports India’s net-zero commitments (2070). Science & Technology Kavach (ATP system): Indigenous automatic train protection to prevent collisions. IP-MPLS telecom backbone, AI surveillance, IPIS → digital transformation. Vande Bharat trains: Indigenous semi-high-speed technology (Make in India). High-speed rail (MAHSR: 320 km/h) → technological leap. Challenges / Criticism Infrastructure Bottlenecks Congested routes (~60% high-density network saturated) → limits speed and efficiency. Track capacity constraints despite upgrades → delays in freight prioritisation. Financial Stress High operating ratio (~98% historically) limits surplus for reinvestment. Dependence on budgetary support despite commercial operations. Safety Concerns Despite Kavach, full coverage pending → accident risks persist. Human error and signalling failures still major contributors to accidents. Technological Gaps Uneven digital adoption across zones; legacy systems coexist with modern tech. High-speed rail limited to select corridors, not nationwide transformation. Social & Regional Imbalance Focus on premium trains (Vande Bharat) vs neglect of ordinary passenger services. Connectivity gaps in Northeast, hilly, and tribal regions. Environmental Trade-offs Electrification depends on coal-based electricity mix (~70%), reducing net green gains. Large infrastructure projects → land acquisition and ecological disruption. Institutional & Governance Issues Bureaucratic delays, coordination gaps between ministries/states. Limited private sector participation in operations and innovation. Way Forward Capacity & Infrastructure Expansion Develop Dedicated Freight Corridors (DFCs) and multi-tracking to decongest high-density routes. Expand connectivity in Northeast and aspirational districts. Financial Reforms Improve operating ratio via rationalised tariffs and efficiency gains. Leverage PPP models for station redevelopment, logistics parks, and rolling stock. Safety Enhancement Accelerate pan-India rollout of Kavach with strict timelines. Integrate AI-based predictive maintenance systems for accident prevention. Green Transition Shift to renewable energy-powered electrification (solar, wind integration). Promote modal shift from road to rail for freight → reduces emissions. Technological Modernisation Expand Vande Bharat and high-speed corridors beyond elite routes. Standardise digital platforms (RailOne, IPIS, NTES integration) across all zones. Inclusive Development Balance investment between premium and affordable trains. Enhance last-mile connectivity (rail + bus + metro integration). Institutional Reforms Strengthen independent railway regulator for tariff and service efficiency. Improve centre-state coordination under PM Gati Shakti framework. Prelims Pointers First train (1853): Bombay–Thane (34 km), GIPR. Broad Gauge in India: 1.676 metres (not 1.435 m). Kavach: Indigenous Automatic Train Protection system. Electrification (2026): ~99.6% of broad gauge network. Vande Bharat: India’s indigenously built semi-high-speed train (2019 launch). MAHSR: India’s first high-speed rail corridor (Mumbai–Ahmedabad, 320 km/h). Naval Commanders’ Conference 2026 Why in News?  14 April 2026: First edition of Naval Commanders’ Conference 2026 held at Nausena Bhawan,. Focus on combat readiness, maritime security, emerging technologies, and Indo-Pacific engagements. Issue in Brief Conference deliberated on India’s maritime security challenges amid West Asia tensions and Indo-Pacific dynamics. Emphasised jointness, indigenisation, and future-ready naval capabilities. Relevance GS III (Internal Security) Maritime security, SLOC protection, Indo-Pacific strategy, naval modernisation GS II (International Relations) Indo-Pacific geopolitics, QUAD, SAGAR vision, maritime diplomacy Practice Question “Maritime security has become central to India’s strategic interests in the Indo-Pacific. Analyse the challenges faced by the Indian Navy and suggest measures to strengthen its capabilities.” (250 words) Static Background  Indian Navy Role Maritime arm of armed forces → defence of maritime borders, SLOC security, power projection. Operates under Integrated Theatre framework (evolving) and Chief of Defence Staff (CDS). Indian Ocean Region (IOR) Handles ~80% of global oil trade and ~90% of India’s trade by volume. Strategic chokepoints: Hormuz, Malacca, Bab-el-Mandeb. Jointness Concept Integration of Army, Navy, Air Force operations for optimal resource utilisation and synergy. Indigenisation Guided by Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence, promoting domestic shipbuilding, weapons, and systems. Key Data & Evidence India’s trade: ~95% by volume, 70% by value via sea routes. Energy security: ~85% crude oil imports dependent on maritime routes. Indian Navy: Over 130 ships, 220 aircraft, with expansion underway (DRDO/Make in India push). Dimensions Security / Strategic Rising tensions in West Asia threaten Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs) → critical for energy security. Need for blue-water navy capability to operate beyond IOR (Indo-Pacific outreach). Focus on multi-domain warfare (cyber, space, electronic warfare). Science & Technology Adoption of AI, autonomous systems, network-centric warfare, surveillance tech. Emphasis on indigenous defence tech (shipbuilding, sensors, weapons). Challenges / Criticism Capability Gaps Submarine shortage (conventional + nuclear) vs expanding Chinese naval presence in IOR. Limited aircraft carrier battle groups relative to ambitions. Budgetary Constraints Defence allocation constrained → capital-intensive naval modernisation slows down. High dependence on imports for critical technologies (engines, electronics). Jointness Implementation Issues Inter-service rivalry and doctrinal differences hinder full integration. Delay in theatre command rollout. Technological Challenges Rapid evolution of AI warfare, cyber threats, unmanned systems → capability lag risk. Dependence on foreign tech ecosystems. Geopolitical Pressures Increasing Chinese naval presence (String of Pearls) in IOR. Instability in West Asia, piracy zones (Gulf of Aden). Human Resource & Training Need for specialised skills in cyber, AI, electronic warfare. Retention and training challenges in high-tech domains. Way Forward Capability Enhancement Accelerate submarine acquisition (Project 75I) and carrier battle group expansion. Strengthen maritime domain awareness (MDA) via satellite and surveillance networks. Jointness & Reforms Fast-track theatre command implementation under CDS. Develop integrated logistics and unified command structures. Technological Advancement Invest in AI-driven warfare, unmanned naval systems, cyber defence. Promote DRDO-private sector collaboration for indigenous innovation. Economic & Industrial Base Expand indigenous shipbuilding ecosystem under Atmanirbhar Bharat. Encourage defence exports and global supply chain integration. Diplomatic Strategy Deepen Indo-Pacific partnerships (QUAD, IORA) and naval exercises. Strengthen SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) vision. Human Capital Develop specialised training institutions for emerging warfare domains. Focus on skill upgradation and retention strategies. Prelims Pointers Naval Commanders’ Conference: Highest-level internal naval deliberative forum. CNS: Head of Indian Navy; CDS: coordinates tri-service integration. IOR chokepoints: Hormuz, Malacca, Bab-el-Mandeb. SAGAR: India’s maritime cooperation doctrine. Project 75I: Submarine acquisition programme. Blue-water navy: Capability to operate globally beyond coastal waters.

Apr 16, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Women’s reservation and delimitation should be delinked Implications of increasing the size of the Lok Sabha Women’s Reservation, Delimitation & Census Linkages Why in News? Parliament is holding a special three-day sitting (16–18 April 2026) of the extended Budget Session to consider three key bills: the Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026, the Delimitation Bill, 2026, and the Union Territories Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026. These aim to operationalise the 33% women’s reservation in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies. Issue in Brief The proposals seek to implement one-third reservation for women in legislatures by conducting a fresh delimitation exercise and increasing the size of the Lok Sabha. The government intends to use the latest available Census data (primarily 2011) to redraw constituencies and enable the reservation to take effect from the 2029 Lok Sabha elections. Critics argue that linking the reservation with delimitation and seat expansion may complicate the process and create federal tensions. Relevance GS Paper II (Polity & Governance): Representation, constitutional amendments, electoral reforms, gender justice. GS Paper II (Federalism): Delimitation, Centre–State relations, North–South balance, cooperative federalism. Practice Question “While the 131st Constitutional Amendment Bill seeks to fast-track 33% women’s reservation through delimitation and Lok Sabha expansion, it has raised concerns over federal balance and implementation design. Discuss the key issues and suggest a balanced way forward.” (250 words) Static Background Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (106th Amendment, 2023): Provides 33% reservation for women (including SC/ST sub-quota) in Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, and UT Assemblies with legislatures. Originally, implementation was linked to the first Census after 2026 and subsequent delimitation. Delimitation: Redrawing of electoral constituencies based on population under the Delimitation Act, 2002. Last nationwide exercise: 2002–2008 (based on 2001 Census). A freeze on readjustment of seats has been in place since the 42nd & 84th Amendments (based on 1971 Census figures). Constitutional Provisions: Articles 81 & 82: Allocation and readjustment of seats in Lok Sabha. Articles 330–332: Reservation for SCs/STs based on population. Article 334A: Introduced by the 106th Amendment (links women’s reservation to delimitation). Key Data & Evidence Women in Lok Sabha (18th Lok Sabha, 2024): 74 MPs (~13.6%). Women in State Assemblies (2024–25): Approximately 123 out of ~1,276 seats (~9–10%). SC/ST reserved seats (based on 2001 delimitation): 84 SC, 47 ST in Lok Sabha. Proposed change: Lok Sabha strength to increase from current 543 elected seats to a maximum of 850 (815 from States + 35 from UTs). Dimensions Government’s Perspective Expediting Empowerment: Amends Article 334A to allow 33% women’s reservation to take effect immediately after the new delimitation (target: 2029 elections), avoiding further delay from waiting for the next full Census. Fair Representation: Increasing seats to 850 allows reservation without reducing existing general seats. Delimitation based on latest available data ensures “one person, one vote” principle and reflects current population realities. Proportional Growth: Government sources indicate every State’s seats will increase proportionately, with no absolute loss for any State. Rotation of women-reserved seats after each delimitation. Broader Reforms: Modernises parliamentary structure, accommodates urbanisation and population growth, and strengthens democratic representation. Critics’ / Opposition Perspective Federal Imbalance: Using 2011 Census data shifts more seats toward high-population Northern and Hindi-heartland States (UP, Bihar, Rajasthan), potentially reducing the relative representation of Southern States (Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka) that have better population control. Bundling Concern: Women’s reservation (widely supported) is being used as a “cover” for a larger delimitation and seat-redistribution exercise, raising fears of political advantage and gerrymandering. Delay vs Speed: While the government calls it fast-tracking, critics argue the complex process (new Delimitation Commission, redrawing boundaries, State Assembly changes) could still face delays or legal/political challenges. Equity & Intersectionality: Adequate sub-quota and rotation mechanisms for SC/ST women need safeguards; low overall women’s representation (~10–14%) demands urgent action without conditionalities. Challenges Federal Tensions (North–South Divide): Risk of penalising States with successful family planning; potential strain on cooperative federalism. Data & Timing Issues: 2011 Census is over 15 years old; the ongoing 2026–27 Census could provide fresher data but would delay implementation. Political Sensitivities: Allegations of partisan advantage, trust deficit, and impact on regional political equations. Administrative & Operational: Forming a new Delimitation Commission, redrawing thousands of constituencies, infrastructure for a larger House, and synchronising with electoral cycles. Bicameral & Governance Impact: Larger Lok Sabha may affect joint sitting dynamics and deliberative quality if sittings and committee scrutiny remain limited. Way Forward Consensus Building: Hold wider consultations with States through the Inter-State Council or a special committee to address Southern and low-growth States’ concerns (e.g., hybrid formula combining population with performance indicators like fertility rate or development index). Safeguards for Federal Balance: Ensure proportionate seat increase for all States and transparent methodology for the Delimitation Commission with adequate judicial or parliamentary oversight. Implementation Clarity: Provide a clear, time-bound roadmap for the Delimitation Commission and rotation of reserved seats. Equity Measures: Strengthen sub-quotas and monitoring mechanisms for SC/ST/OBC women; consider phased rollout if needed. Institutional Reforms: Maintain independence of the Delimitation Commission; expedite digital tools for Census and boundary mapping. Bipartisan Approach: Encourage cross-party support to uphold the spirit of women’s political empowerment while preserving India’s federal character. Prelims Pointers 106th Constitutional Amendment (2023): Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam – 33% women’s reservation. Article 334A: Links women’s reservation to delimitation (being amended). Delimitation Commission: Decisions have the force of law (limited judicial challenge). Last Delimitation: 2002–2008 (2001 Census). Proposed Change: Lok Sabha cap increased to 850 (815 States + 35 UTs). SC/ST Reservation: Proportionate to population. Implications of increasing the size of the Lok Sabha Why in News?  Government introduced Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, Delimitation Bill, 2026, and UT extension Bill; likely discussion in extended Budget Session (April 16–18, 2026). Issue in Brief Proposals aim to increase Lok Sabha size (550 → 850), implement women’s reservation post-delimitation, and redraw constituencies using 2011 Census. Raises concerns on federal balance, parliamentary functioning, and institutional design. Relevance GS Paper II (Polity & Constitution) Parliament structure, bicameralism, delimitation, constitutional amendments GS Paper II (Federalism) Representation imbalance, North–South divide, cooperative federalism Practice Question “Increasing the size of the Lok Sabha may improve representation but poses challenges to parliamentary efficiency and federal balance. Analyse.” (250 words) Static Background  Delimitation Framework Governed by Delimitation Act 2002; based on Census data. Freeze on seat redistribution (42nd & 84th Amendments) till 2026. Parliament Structure Article 81: Composition of Lok Sabha (max 550 earlier). Article 82: Readjustment after Census. Council of Ministers cap: 15% of Lok Sabha (91st Amendment, 2003). Women’s Reservation Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam: 33% reservation post-delimitation, valid for 15 years.  Key Data & Evidence Proposed Lok Sabha expansion: ~815–850 seats (~50% increase). Current strength: 543 Lok Sabha vs 245 Rajya Sabha. Parliament sittings: <70 days/year (India) vs ~150 days/year (UK). <20% Bills referred to Parliamentary Committees (India). Dimensions Constitutional / Institutional Balance Expansion of Lok Sabha without increasing Rajya Sabha alters bicameral balance. In joint sittings, Lok Sabha dominance increases from 2.2x → ~3.3x, weakening federal chamber (Rajya Sabha). Governance / Parliamentary Functioning Larger House reduces probability of MPs participating (questions, Zero Hour). With limited sittings, deliberative quality and accountability may decline. Weak committee scrutiny exacerbates legislative inefficiency. Federal / Political Representation Seat redistribution based on 2011 Census shifts power toward high population states (UP, Bihar, Rajasthan). Southern states (TN, Kerala) may lose relative representation → federal tension. Equalises vote value (one person, one vote) but raises equity vs federalism trade-off. Economic / Governance Efficiency Larger Council of Ministers cap (~81 → ~122) may increase administrative expenditure. Bigger legislatures could lead to coordination inefficiencies and governance complexity. Social / Representation Women’s reservation gains institutional backing, but delayed till delimitation. Redistribution impacts regional political voice, influencing policy priorities. Challenges / Criticism Institutional Imbalance Weakening of Rajya Sabha’s federal role undermines checks and balances. Joint sittings may become majoritarian tools, reducing bicameral scrutiny. Federal Tensions Penalises states with successful population control policies. May trigger north-south political divide and cooperative federalism concerns. Deliberative Deficit Larger House + fewer sittings → reduced MP participation and debate quality. Low committee referral rate weakens legislative scrutiny. Executive Dominance Increased Council of Ministers size strengthens executive influence over legislature. Flexibility to choose Census and delimitation timing may lead to political discretion. Data & Representation Issues Use of 2011 Census may not reflect current demographic realities. Impacts SC/ST seat allocation accuracy. Operational Complexity Managing 800+ member House requires major upgrades in infrastructure, procedures, and digital systems. State legislatures may also become unwieldy (e.g., UP ~600 seats). Way Forward Institutional Safeguards Consider proportionate increase in Rajya Sabha strength to maintain bicameral balance. Introduce weighted voting or safeguards in joint sittings. Federal Balance Build consensus with states, especially those with low population growth. Explore hybrid formula (population + performance indicators). Strengthening Parliamentary Functioning Increase annual sittings to 100–120 days. Mandate committee scrutiny for all major Bills. Delimitation Transparency Ensure independent Delimitation Commission with judicial oversight. Use latest Census data to maintain representational fairness. Administrative Reforms Digitise proceedings, expand e-Parliament systems for efficiency. Rationalise Council of Ministers size despite constitutional cap increase. Phased Implementation Implement seat increase and reservation in phases to avoid disruption. Synchronise with electoral cycles and Census completion. Prelims Pointers Article 81: Composition of Lok Sabha. 91st Amendment (2003): Limits Council of Ministers to 15% of Lok Sabha. Delimitation Commission: Decisions have force of law. Freeze on delimitation: Till 2026 (based on 1971 Census initially). Joint sitting: Each MP has one vote (Lok Sabha dominance).  

Apr 16, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content WPI Inflation Hits 3-Year High Ease of Doing R&D in India – NITI Aayog Reports Explained Amaravati Quantum Computing Facility Borrowers’ Platform by Developing Countries Boat Capsize in Andaman Sea China Blocking Scarborough Shoal WPI Inflation Hits 3-Year High  Why in News? 15 April 2026: India’s Wholesale Price Index (WPI) inflation rose to 3.88% in March 2026, the highest in 38 months, driven by sharp crude oil price surge amid West Asia conflict. Issue in Brief WPI inflation surged sharply due to fuel, energy, and petrochemical price increases, reflecting strong global commodity price transmission into domestic wholesale markets. Indicates cost-push inflation building within production systems, even as retail inflation remains relatively moderate due to policy interventions. Relevance GS Paper III (Economy) Inflation, monetary policy, external sector vulnerability, energy economics GS Paper III (International Relations – Economic) Impact of geopolitical conflicts on global commodity markets GS Paper II (Governance) Fiscal policy, subsidy management, inflation control measures Practice Question “Rising WPI inflation reflects structural vulnerabilities in India’s energy-dependent economy. Analyse its causes, implications, and policy responses.” (250 words) Static Background WPI measures price changes at the wholesale/producer level, with base year 2011–12, and acts as a leading indicator of inflation trends in the economy. CPI measures retail inflation faced by consumers and is used by RBI for inflation targeting (4% ±2%), unlike WPI which captures supply-side pressures. Cost-push inflation occurs when rising input costs (fuel, raw materials) increase production costs, which are eventually passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices. Key Data & Evidence WPI inflation increased to 3.88% in March 2026 from 2.13% in February, marking the highest level since mid-2022 amid global energy disruptions. Crude petroleum prices surged by 49.1% month-on-month, reflecting the sharpest increase and the primary driver of overall wholesale inflation rise. Ammonia gas prices rose by 22.3% and PVC by 8.4%, indicating strong inflationary pressures in fertiliser and petrochemical sectors. Fuel products such as LPG, petrol, diesel, and ATF recorded 4–8% price increases, contributing significantly to energy-led inflationary pressures. Plastic products saw a 4.1% increase in wholesale prices, highlighting transmission of petrochemical cost increases into everyday consumer goods. Overview Global geopolitical tensions in West Asia disrupted crude oil supply chains, leading to a sharp spike in international oil prices, directly impacting India’s import-dependent energy economy. India’s heavy dependence on crude imports (around 85%) amplifies vulnerability, making domestic inflation highly sensitive to global commodity price fluctuations. Price increases in petrochemicals have cascading effects across sectors, including plastics, packaging, fertilisers, and manufacturing inputs, thereby broadening inflationary impact. WPI inflation rising faster than CPI indicates suppressed retail inflation, partly due to government interventions like fuel tax adjustments and administered pricing mechanisms. Sustained increase in wholesale prices is likely to transmit into retail inflation, especially if firms pass higher input costs to consumers over time. Industrial sector faces margin pressures due to rising input costs, particularly affecting MSMEs with limited capacity to absorb cost shocks. Higher crude prices may widen India’s Current Account Deficit, increase import bills, and exert downward pressure on the rupee, worsening imported inflation. Challenges / Concerns  India’s structural dependence on imported crude oil exposes it to recurring external shocks, making inflation management difficult during geopolitical crises. Persistent wholesale inflation may eventually pass through to consumers, increasing retail inflation and reducing purchasing power, especially for lower-income households. Rising input costs can slow industrial growth by reducing profitability, discouraging investments and affecting employment generation in manufacturing sectors. Policy dilemma for RBI arises between controlling inflation and supporting growth, as aggressive rate hikes may dampen economic recovery. Fiscal pressures may increase if government reduces fuel taxes or increases subsidies, impacting fiscal consolidation targets and budgetary stability. Agriculture sector may face rising input costs due to higher fertiliser and fuel prices, potentially leading to future food inflation and rural distress. Way Forward Reduce dependence on imported crude oil by accelerating renewable energy adoption, including solar, wind, and green hydrogen under India’s energy transition strategy. Expand and effectively utilise Strategic Petroleum Reserves to cushion short-term supply shocks, ensuring energy security during global disruptions. Adopt calibrated monetary policy approach balancing inflation control and growth, avoiding excessive tightening that could harm investment and consumption. Implement targeted fiscal measures such as temporary fuel tax rationalisation, rather than broad subsidies, to manage inflation without excessive fiscal burden. Strengthen domestic petrochemical and fertiliser production capacity, reducing reliance on imports and enhancing supply chain resilience. Provide targeted support to MSMEs through credit and input subsidies, helping them absorb cost shocks and sustain industrial output. Prelims Pointers WPI base year is 2011–12, and it measures inflation at the wholesale or producer level, not retail level. CPI, not WPI, is used by RBI for inflation targeting under monetary policy framework in India. Fuel and power have around 13% weight in WPI, but exert disproportionate influence due to linkages with other sectors. Cost-push inflation is caused by rising input costs such as crude oil, unlike demand-pull inflation driven by excess demand. India imports approximately 85% of its crude oil requirement, making it vulnerable to global price shocks. Ease of Doing R&D in India – NITI Aayog Reports Explained Why in News?  Recently NITI Aayog released reports on “Ease of Doing Research & Development in India” and survey report based on 850+ researchers and 400+ institutions. Issue in Brief Reports propose ROPE framework (Remove Obstacles, Promote Enablers) to reform India’s R&D ecosystem and improve efficiency, funding, and innovation output. Emphasis on lab-to-market translation, private sector participation, and trust-based governance to transform India into a global innovation hub. Relevance GS Paper III (Science & Technology) Innovation ecosystem, R&D, technology development GS Paper III (Economy) Knowledge economy, industrial competitiveness, productivity GS Paper II (Governance) Institutional reforms, regulatory framework, ease of doing research Practice Question “India’s R&D ecosystem faces structural bottlenecks despite improving innovation indicators. Examine the challenges and suggest reforms in light of recent policy initiatives.” (250 words) Static Background R&D (Research & Development): Systematic activity aimed at knowledge creation, innovation, and technological advancement, critical for economic growth and competitiveness. GERD (Gross Expenditure on R&D): Key indicator of innovation capacity, expressed as percentage of GDP spent on research activities. Global Innovation Index (GII): Published by WIPO, ranks countries based on innovation inputs and outputs. Key Data & Evidence India’s GERD remains low at ~0.64–0.7% of GDP, significantly below USA (~3.5%), China (~2.4%), South Korea (~4.8%). Global Innovation Index 2025: India ranked 38th, improving from 48th in 2020; top among lower-middle-income economies. Patent landscape: India ranks 6th globally in patent applications, with patent-to-GDP ratio rising from 144 (2013) to 381 (2023). Human capital gap: Only ~260 researchers per million population, compared to 4000+ in developed economies. Overview ROPE Framework Significance: Focuses on removing bureaucratic bottlenecks and regulatory rigidities while promoting enablers like funding access, collaboration, and institutional autonomy. Lab-to-Market Gap: India produces high volume of research publications, but struggles to convert them into commercial technologies, patents, and scalable products. Funding Structure Imbalance: Unlike global ecosystems where private sector contributes ~70% of R&D funding, India relies heavily on public sector (>60%), limiting innovation dynamism. Institutional Rigidities: Procurement delays, fragmented funding, and compliance-heavy systems reduce research efficiency and discourage experimentation. Innovation Ecosystem Progress: Rise in patents, startups, and innovation ranking indicates improvement, supported by initiatives like ANRF, Atal Innovation Mission, Startup India. Human Capital Challenge: Despite strong STEM output, brain drain and lack of merit-based incentives limit retention of high-quality researchers. Challenges / Concerns Low R&D Investment Trap Persistent sub-1% GERD restricts scale and quality of innovation, limiting India’s ability to compete with global technology leaders. Weak Private Sector Participation Industry prefers importing mature technologies rather than investing in domestic R&D, weakening indigenous innovation ecosystems. Fragmented Funding Architecture Absence of performance-linked funding and unified mechanisms leads to inefficiency, duplication, and suboptimal resource allocation. Bureaucratic Overregulation Rigid procurement rules (e.g., L1 tender system) delay acquisition of critical equipment, slowing research timelines significantly. Lab-to-Market Disconnect Lack of Technology Transfer Offices (TTOs) and weak industry linkages result in poor commercialization of research outputs. Siloed Institutional Structures Weak University–Industry–Government collaboration and rigid departmental divisions hinder interdisciplinary innovation. Human Resource Constraints Low researcher density, lack of merit-based career progression, and inadequate early-stage support drive talent migration abroad. Quality vs Quantity Gap High publication volume but low citation impact (CNCI) and limited presence in high-impact global journals reflect quality concerns. Way Forward Increase R&D Investment Target GERD of 1.5–2% of GDP through enhanced public funding and incentives for private sector participation. Mobilise Private & CSR Funding Provide tax incentives, matching grants, and CSR channels to support startups, deep-tech research, and university innovation ecosystems. Reform Governance & Procurement Replace rigid L1 procurement rules with quality-based systems, and grant researchers financial and operational autonomy. Strengthen Lab-to-Market Linkages Establish Technology Transfer Offices (TTOs) and institutionalise industry-academia collaboration frameworks. Mission-Mode R&D Focus Prioritise strategic sectors like AI, Quantum Computing, Semiconductors, Green Hydrogen through time-bound national missions. Human Capital Development Introduce merit-based career progression, competitive funding, and global collaboration opportunities to retain talent. Break Institutional Silos Promote interdisciplinary research funding and flexible institutional structures to enable cross-domain innovation. Strengthen ANRF Implementation Ensure effective rollout of Anusandhan National Research Foundation to democratise research funding beyond elite institutions. Prelims Pointers GERD: Measures total R&D expenditure as % of GDP. GII: Published by World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). India ranks 6th globally in patent applications. ROPE Framework: Removing Obstacles, Promoting Enablers. ANRF: Apex body to fund and promote research across institutions. Amaravati Quantum Computing Facility  Why in News? 14April 2026: India’s first indigenous quantum computing testing facility (AQRF) launched at Amaravati under National Quantum Mission, positioning it as a global quantum hub. Issue in Brief Establishment of Amaravati Quantum Reference Facility (AQRF) provides sovereign, open-access quantum infrastructure for research, testing, and innovation. Part of Amaravati Quantum Valley initiative, aiming to build a global-scale quantum ecosystem with industry-academia partnerships. Relevance GS Paper III (Science & Technology) Emerging technologies, quantum computing, cybersecurity GS Paper III (Internal Security) Quantum threat to encryption, strategic technologies Practice Question “Quantum computing represents a transformative frontier technology. Analyse India’s preparedness and challenges in building a competitive quantum ecosystem.” (250 words) Static Background Quantum Computing: Uses qubits (superposition + entanglement) to perform computations exponentially faster than classical systems for specific problems. National Quantum Mission (2023–31): Aims to develop quantum computing, communication, sensing, and cryptography capabilities in India. Qubit: Basic unit of quantum information, unlike classical bit (0/1), can exist in multiple states simultaneously. Key Data & Evidence Amaravati facility includes indigenous “Amaravati 1Q system” and open-access 1S system for research visibility. Planned deployment of IBM 133-qubit quantum computer, indicating global collaboration. 80+ industry and academic partnerships established under Quantum Valley initiative. India aims to position Amaravati among top 5 global quantum hubs. Overview Strategic Technological Leap: Establishes sovereign quantum infrastructure, reducing dependence on foreign quantum cloud services and enhancing technological autonomy. Ecosystem Approach: Combines hardware (AQRF), cloud access, skilling, and innovation, creating a full-stack quantum ecosystem rather than isolated research initiatives. Global Competitiveness: Entry into quantum race alongside US, China, EU, critical for future dominance in AI, cybersecurity, and advanced computing. Industry-Academia Synergy: 80+ partnerships indicate strong collaboration, addressing India’s traditional weakness in lab-to-market translation of research. Open Access Model: Availability of 1S system for researchers promotes democratisation of quantum research and talent development. Challenges / Concerns  Technological Complexity & Early Stage Nature Quantum computing remains nascent with high error rates and decoherence issues, limiting immediate large-scale commercial applications. High Capital & Infrastructure Costs Quantum systems require extreme cooling (near absolute zero) and specialised infrastructure, making scaling expensive and resource-intensive. Talent Deficit Shortage of quantum scientists, engineers, and interdisciplinary experts may constrain utilisation and innovation potential. Global Competition & Technology Gap Advanced economies have significant lead in quantum hardware and algorithms, posing challenges for India to catch up rapidly. Limited Industrial Adoption Private sector participation remains limited due to uncertain commercial viability and long gestation period. Cybersecurity Risks Quantum computing could break existing encryption systems, necessitating urgent development of quantum-safe cryptography frameworks. Fragmented Ecosystem Risk Without coordination, multiple initiatives may lead to duplication of efforts and inefficient resource utilisation. Way Forward Strengthen Indigenous Capability Invest in domestic quantum hardware manufacturing, cryogenic systems, and control electronics to reduce import dependence. Human Capital Development Establish specialised quantum education programs, fellowships, and global collaborations to build skilled workforce. Mission-Mode Research Focus Prioritise applications in drug discovery, materials science, climate modelling, and logistics optimisation. Public-Private Partnerships Encourage industry participation through incentives, co-funding, and startup ecosystem support in quantum technologies. Cybersecurity Preparedness Develop post-quantum cryptography standards and integrate into national cybersecurity architecture. Global Collaboration Strategy Engage with trusted international partners while safeguarding strategic autonomy in critical technologies. Integrated Ecosystem Governance Align National Quantum Mission, academia, industry, and startups under a coordinated national framework. Prelims Pointers Qubit: Can exist in superposition, unlike classical bit. National Quantum Mission: Covers quantum computing, communication, sensing, cryptography. Quantum advantage: Ability to solve problems faster than classical computers in specific domains. Decoherence: Loss of quantum state due to environmental interaction. Post-quantum cryptography: Encryption resistant to quantum attacks. Borrowers’ Platform by Developing Countries  Why in News?  IMF–World Bank Spring Meetings 2026: Developing countries launched the first-ever Borrowers’ Platform, with UNCTAD as secretariat, to strengthen collective voice on sovereign debt. Issue in Brief Platform aims to coordinate borrowing countries, enhance debt management capacity, and address structural imbalances in global financial architecture dominated by creditors. Responds to rising debt distress, high servicing burdens, and unequal borrowing conditions faced by developing economies. Relevance GS Paper II (International Relations) Global economic governance, IMF–World Bank reforms, South-South cooperation GS Paper III (Economy) Sovereign debt, fiscal sustainability, global financial architecture Practice Question “The proposed Borrowers’ Platform reflects structural inequities in the global financial architecture. Critically examine its significance and limitations.” (250 words) Static Background Sovereign Debt: Borrowing by governments from domestic or external sources to finance deficits and development. Paris Club: Informal group of creditor nations coordinating debt relief for distressed countries. Debt Sustainability: Ability of a country to service debt without compromising growth or fiscal stability. Key Data & Evidence External debt (developing countries): $11.7 trillion (2024); global public debt: $102 trillion. Developing countries’ debt: ~$31 trillion, growing twice as fast as developed economies since 2010. Debt servicing burden: ~10% of revenues, while LDCs spend ~25%. 54 countries (3.4 billion people) spend more on debt servicing than health or education. Borrowing costs: Developing nations pay 2–4 times higher interest than US. Negative net resource transfer (2023): Paid $25 billion more than received. Overview Structural Imbalance in Global Finance: Existing mechanisms like Paris Club are creditor-driven, limiting negotiating power and coordination among borrowing countries. Need for Collective Voice: Platform enables peer learning, coordination, and unified representation, addressing fragmentation among developing economies. Debt Distress & Development Trade-off: High servicing burdens crowd out spending on health, education, and climate action, undermining long-term development goals. Shift Toward Inclusive Architecture: Marks transition from creditor-centric governance to more balanced participation of borrowers in global financial decision-making. Technical Cooperation Focus: Platform is non-confrontational, focusing on capacity building, transparency, and best practices, rather than direct debt restructuring negotiations. Market Signalling Effect: Improved coordination and transparency may reduce risk perception, potentially lowering borrowing costs over time. Challenges / Concerns Limited Mandate & Authority Platform is not a negotiation or restructuring forum, limiting its ability to directly influence debt relief outcomes. Coordination Complexity Diverse interests of developing countries (income levels, debt profiles) may hinder consensus-building and unified positions. Creditor Resistance Existing institutions dominated by advanced economies may resist reforms that dilute creditor influence. Implementation & Continuity Risks Sustaining momentum requires institutionalisation, governance mechanisms, and long-term commitment. Data Transparency Gaps Many countries lack robust debt data systems, limiting effectiveness of coordination and policy formulation. Geopolitical Fragmentation Competing global blocs may influence participation and alignment within the platform. Moral Hazard Concerns Collective platforms may create perception of leniency or coordinated pressure on creditors, affecting credit discipline. Way Forward Strengthen Institutional Framework Develop clear governance structures, regular engagement mechanisms, and accountability systems for sustained functioning. Enhance Technical Capacity Expand UNCTAD’s DMFAS programme to improve debt transparency, analytics, and management capabilities. Integrate with Global Institutions Ensure formal linkages with IMF, World Bank, and G20 frameworks for greater policy influence. Promote Fair Borrowing Conditions Advocate for equitable interest rates, restructuring norms, and responsible lending practices globally. Data & Transparency Reforms Standardise debt reporting and disclosure mechanisms across developing countries. South-South Cooperation Strengthen knowledge sharing and best practices among developing economies. Link with SDGs & Climate Finance Align debt strategies with SDG financing and climate resilience goals, ensuring sustainable development. Prelims Pointers UNCTAD: UN body focusing on trade, development, and finance issues. Paris Club: Group of creditor nations, not borrowers. Debt sustainability: Ability to service debt without fiscal stress. DMFAS: UNCTAD programme for debt management capacity building. Negative net resource transfer: Country pays more to creditors than it receives. Boat Capsize in Andaman Sea  Why in News? 15 April 2026: Around 250 people reported missing, including Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi nationals, after a boat capsized in the Andaman Sea en route to Malaysia. Issue in Brief Incident highlights irregular maritime migration and human trafficking risks in Southeast Asia involving vulnerable Rohingya refugees. Reflects ongoing humanitarian crisis and unsafe migration routes, despite international monitoring and interventions. Relevance GS Paper II (International Relations) Refugee crisis, regional cooperation, humanitarian diplomacy GS Paper III (Internal Security) Maritime security, human trafficking, illegal migration Practice Question “Irregular maritime migration in the Bay of Bengal reflects deeper humanitarian and governance failures. Analyse the causes and suggest solutions.” (250 words) Static Background Rohingya Crisis: Ethnic minority from Myanmar’s Rakhine State; victims of statelessness and persecution, leading to mass displacement since 2017. Andaman Sea: Part of eastern Indian Ocean, key route for irregular migration toward Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia. Refugee Protection: Governed globally by United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, though many countries are not signatories to refugee conventions. Key Data & Evidence ~250 people missing, only 9 rescued (3 Rohingya, 6 Bangladeshis) after capsizing. Rohingya population: ~1 million refugees in Bangladesh (Cox’s Bazar). UN estimates: Thousands attempt dangerous sea crossings annually in Bay of Bengal–Andaman region. Overview Humanitarian Dimension: Rohingyas undertake perilous sea journeys due to lack of citizenship, livelihood, and security, reflecting persistent humanitarian failure. Migration Drivers: Push factors include persecution in Myanmar, poverty, overcrowded refugee camps, and lack of durable solutions in Bangladesh. Human Trafficking Nexus: Smuggling networks exploit refugees, leading to unsafe vessels, overcrowding, and frequent maritime disasters. Regional Security Concern: Irregular migration creates maritime security challenges, illegal entry concerns, and strain on coastal surveillance systems. International Governance Gap: Absence of coordinated regional refugee framework in South and Southeast Asia limits effective response and burden-sharing. Challenges / Concerns Statelessness & Legal Vacuum Rohingyas lack citizenship recognition, limiting access to legal migration channels and forcing reliance on dangerous routes. Weak Regional Cooperation Countries in the region lack binding agreements on refugee protection and rescue coordination, leading to fragmented responses. Human Trafficking Networks Organised syndicates exploit vulnerable populations, with limited cross-border enforcement mechanisms. Overburdened Host Countries Bangladesh faces economic, environmental, and social pressures hosting large refugee populations. Maritime Safety Deficits Poorly equipped vessels, lack of monitoring, and limited search-and-rescue capacity increase fatality risks. Limited International Support Declining global attention and funding for Rohingya crisis affect humanitarian assistance and long-term solutions. Way Forward Regional Cooperation Framework Develop Bay of Bengal–ASEAN coordination mechanisms for search and rescue, anti-trafficking, and refugee management. Address Root Causes Push for safe repatriation of Rohingyas to Myanmar with citizenship guarantees and rights protection. Strengthen Maritime Surveillance Enhance coast guard coordination, satellite monitoring, and early warning systems to prevent such incidents. Combat Trafficking Networks Strengthen international policing cooperation (Interpol, regional agencies) to dismantle smuggling syndicates. Humanitarian Support Expansion Increase global funding and burden-sharing mechanisms for refugee-hosting countries like Bangladesh. Legal Migration Pathways Explore safe, regulated migration channels and resettlement programs to reduce irregular migration risks. Prelims Pointers Rohingya: Stateless ethnic minority from Myanmar’s Rakhine State. Andaman Sea: Part of Indian Ocean, between Myanmar, Thailand, and Andaman & Nicobar Islands. UNHCR: UN agency for refugee protection. Irregular migration: Movement outside legal frameworks. Human trafficking vs smuggling: Trafficking involves exploitation, smuggling is facilitation of illegal entry. China Blocking Scarborough Shoal Why in News?  China deployed ships and floating barriers to restrict access to Scarborough Shoal, escalating tensions with the Philippines in the South China Sea. Issue in Brief China is tightening control over Scarborough Shoal by restricting entry, reinforcing its territorial claims in disputed waters. Move intensifies China–Philippines maritime confrontation, raising concerns over regional stability. Relevance GS Paper II (International Relations) Indo-Pacific geopolitics, maritime disputes, international law GS Paper III (Security) Maritime security, naval strategy, grey-zone warfare Practice Question “China’s actions in the South China Sea challenge the rules-based international order. Discuss with reference to Scarborough Shoal dispute.” (250 words) Static Background  Scarborough Shoal Disputed atoll in South China Sea, claimed by China, Philippines, and Taiwan. Located within Philippines’ Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) (~200 nautical miles). Legal Framework Governed by United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. 2016 PCA ruling (Philippines v. China) invalidated China’s Nine-Dash Line claims, but China rejected the verdict. South China Sea Importance Handles ~1/3rd of global trade (~$3–5 trillion annually). Rich in fisheries, hydrocarbons, and strategic sea lanes. Key Data & Evidence China using maritime militia, coast guard ships, and barriers to control access. Scarborough Shoal standoff (2012) led to China gaining de facto control. Region sees frequent naval patrols and stand-offs between China and Southeast Asian states. Overview Assertion of Maritime Sovereignty: China’s actions reflect incremental expansion strategy (“salami slicing”) to consolidate control without full-scale conflict. Challenge to International Law: Blocking access within another country’s EEZ undermines UNCLOS principles and 2016 arbitral ruling. Regional Security Implications: Heightens risk of naval confrontation, miscalculation, and escalation in Indo-Pacific waters. Impact on Philippines: Restricts fishing rights and economic activities, affecting livelihoods and sovereignty claims. Great Power Competition: Issue intersects with US–China rivalry, as the US supports freedom of navigation operations (FONOPs). Challenges / Concerns Erosion of Rules-Based Order Continued disregard for international rulings weakens global maritime governance frameworks. Grey-Zone Warfare Tactics Use of coast guard and militia instead of navy complicates response and avoids conventional escalation thresholds. ASEAN Disunity Lack of unified stance among ASEAN countries limits collective bargaining power against China. Escalation Risks Close encounters between vessels increase chances of accidental conflict or militarisation. Economic & Livelihood Impact Fishing restrictions affect coastal communities, creating socio-economic instability. Delayed Code of Conduct (CoC) Slow progress on China–ASEAN CoC negotiations prolongs uncertainty and disputes. Way Forward Strengthen International Law Enforcement Promote adherence to UNCLOS and arbitral rulings, with support from global institutions. ASEAN Unity & Negotiation Accelerate binding South China Sea Code of Conduct with enforceable provisions. Confidence-Building Measures Establish hotlines, joint patrol norms, and incident prevention mechanisms. Diversify Strategic Partnerships Countries like Philippines to enhance ties with Quad nations and regional allies for maritime security. Capacity Building Strengthen coast guard capabilities, surveillance, and maritime domain awareness. Diplomatic Engagement Encourage multilateral dialogue platforms to prevent escalation and ensure peaceful resolution. Prelims Pointers Scarborough Shoal: Disputed feature in South China Sea within Philippines’ EEZ. UNCLOS: Defines territorial waters (12 nm) and EEZ (200 nm). Nine-Dash Line: China’s expansive claim rejected by 2016 PCA ruling. FONOPs: Conducted to ensure freedom of navigation in international waters.