Content
India–Azerbaijan Relations Reset
India’s Major Ports Performance (FY 2025–26)
Yuva Sangam
Hectocotylus in Octopus Reproduction
Air Pollution & NCAP Performance
India’s Updated NDCs
India–Azerbaijan Relations Reset
Why in News?
6th India–Azerbaijan Foreign Office Consultations (2026, Baku) signal diplomatic reset after tensions post “Operation Sindoor” and renewed focus on trade, energy, connectivity, and counter-terrorism.
Strategic relevance for India’s Central Asia policy, INSTC operationalisation, and Eurasian geopolitics.
Relevance
GS II (International Relations)
Bilateral relations, Eurasian geopolitics, connectivity corridors (INSTC)
GS III (Economy)
Energy security, trade diversification, connectivity
Practice Question
Q1.Discuss the strategic significance of Azerbaijan in India’s Eurasian connectivity and foreign policy.(250 Words)
Static Background
India recognised Azerbaijan in December 1991 post USSR dissolution, establishing diplomatic ties rooted in Silk Route linkages.
Historical-cultural connect via Ateshgah Fire Temple (Baku) with Devanagari and Gurmukhi inscriptions, reflecting civilisational exchanges.
Key Dimensions
Geostrategic Dimension: Azerbaijan lies at the crossroads of Europe–Asia (Caucasus region), making it critical for India’s Eurasian connectivity strategy.
Connectivity Dimension (INSTC): Azerbaijan is the central transit node in International North-South Transport Corridor, linking India–Iran (Chabahar)–Russia–Europe, bypassing Pakistan.
Ensures secure, cost-effective trade route, reducing transport cost by ~30% and time by ~40% (estimated) compared to Suez Canal route.
Energy Security Dimension: Azerbaijan part of hydrocarbon-rich Caspian Basin, vital for India’s oil diversification strategy.
ONGC Videsh investment > USD 1.2 billion in Azeri-Chirag-Gunashli (ACG) fields and BTC pipeline, strengthening long-term energy access.
Economic Dimension: Bilateral trade peaked at USD 1.88 billion (2022) but declined to USD 401 million (2025), reflecting limited diversification beyond crude oil.
Potential sectors: pharmaceuticals, IT, digital public infrastructure (DPI), tourism, and manufacturing.
Security Dimension: Cooperation on counter-terrorism aligns with SCO-RATS framework, helping India internationalise concerns on cross-border terrorism.
Reset prevents Pakistan–Turkey–Azerbaijan axis from dominating regional narrative against India.
Foreign Policy Doctrine (De-hyphenation): India maintains independent ties with Armenia and Azerbaijan, similar to Israel–Arab and Iran–Saudi balancing strategy.
Enhances strategic autonomy and credibility as neutral partner in conflict-prone regions.
Regional Geopolitics Dimension:
Azerbaijan’s proximity to Russia, Iran, Central Asia enhances India’s multi-vector diplomacy.
Participation in COP29 (Baku 2024) and WTDC-25 reflects multilateral engagement expansion.
Institutional & Capacity Building: India supports Azerbaijan via ITEC programme, enhancing soft power and institutional linkages.
People-to-People Dimension: India is 4th largest tourist source (2025) with ~1,000 diaspora, strengthening societal connect and soft diplomacy.
Challenges / Criticisms
Armenia Factor: India’s defence exports (Pinaka, Swathi radar) to Armenia create strategic friction with Azerbaijan.
Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict introduces regional instability affecting connectivity corridors.
Pakistan–Turkey–Azerbaijan axis complicates India’s strategic outreach and narrative control.
China’s BRI dominance in Caucasus undermines India’s connectivity competitiveness.
Sanctions on Iran & Russia affect INSTC viability and financial transactions.
Divergence on Kashmir: Azerbaijan’s alignment with OIC stance limits political convergence.
Trade imbalance due to overdependence on crude imports and weak export base.
Way Forward
Strengthen INSTC + integrate with Trans-Caspian “Middle Corridor”, enhancing multi-modal connectivity from Mumbai to Eurasia.
Maintain strict de-hyphenation policy, balancing Armenia defence ties with Azerbaijan engagement.
Diversify trade into IT, pharma, DPI, renewable energy, reducing oil dependency.
Institutionalise Caspian-India Dialogue for regional cooperation in energy, trade, and maritime security.
Enhance financial mechanisms (local currency trade, INSTC banking solutions) to bypass sanction constraints.
Prelims Pointers
Azerbaijan located in South Caucasus (Caspian Sea region)
INSTC: India–Iran–Azerbaijan–Russia corridor
ONGC Videsh investment in ACG oil fields
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute: Armenia vs Azerbaijan
BTC pipeline connects Caspian oil to Mediterranean
India’s Major Ports Performance (FY 2025–26)
Why in News?
Major Ports handled 915.17 MT cargo in FY 2025–26, exceeding target of 904 MT with 7.06% YoY growth, reflecting efficiency gains and logistics reforms.
Aligns with Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision 2047 aiming to position India as a global maritime powerhouse.
Relevance
GS Paper III (Economy & Infrastructure)
Logistics, ports, trade, infrastructure development
GS Paper II (Governance)
Port reforms, institutional frameworks (Major Port Authorities Act)
Practice Question
Q1.“Ports are critical enablers of trade and economic growth in India.”Examine in light of recent performance trends of major ports.(250 Words)
Static Background
India has 12 Major Ports (under Union Government) and 200+ Non-major ports (State control) under Indian Ports Act, 1908 & Major Port Authorities Act, 2021.
Ports handle ~95% of India’s trade volume and ~70% by value, making them critical for external trade and logistics ecosystem.
Key Dimensions
Economic Dimension: Record cargo 915.17 MT (2025–26) with 7.06% growth, indicating trade expansion, industrial demand recovery, and export-import dynamism.
Top performers: Deendayal Port (160.11 MT), Paradip (156.45 MT), JNPA (102.01 MT), highlighting regional industrial clustering and cargo specialisation.
Infrastructure & Capacity Dimension: Growth driven by port modernisation, mechanisation, and capacity augmentation, reducing congestion and enhancing throughput efficiency.
Turnaround time improvements and deep-draft ports enable handling of large vessels, reducing logistics costs.
Logistics & Connectivity Dimension: Strengthening of multimodal connectivity (rail, road, inland waterways) improves hinterland integration and supply chain efficiency.
Synergy with PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan enhances end-to-end logistics optimisation.
Governance & Reforms Dimension: Major Port Authorities Act, 2021 grants autonomy in tariff setting and operations, improving ease of doing business and private participation.
Digital initiatives like Port Community System (PCS) and smart ports enhance transparency and efficiency.
Sectoral Composition: Growth driven by coal, crude oil, containers, fertilizers, and POL cargo, reflecting energy demand and industrial expansion.
Global Trade Dimension: Ports act as gateways to global trade, strengthening India’s integration into global value chains (GVCs).
Supports India’s ambition to become $5 trillion economy and export hub.
Environmental Dimension: Increasing focus on green ports, shore power, LNG bunkering, and renewable energy adoption, aligning with decarbonisation goals.
Strategic Dimension: Ports enhance maritime security, supply chain resilience, and Indo-Pacific presence, supporting initiatives like SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region).
Regional Development Dimension: Port-led industrialisation under Sagarmala Programme promotes coastal economic zones, employment generation, and regional balance.
Efficiency Indicators: High growth ports like Mormugao (15.91%), Kolkata Dock (14.28%), JNPA (10.74%) reflect operational optimisation and capacity utilisation gains.
Challenges / Criticisms
High logistics cost (~13–14% of GDP) compared to global average (~8–10%), reducing export competitiveness.
Port congestion and last-mile connectivity gaps persist in some regions.
Imbalance between major and non-major ports, with underutilisation of smaller ports.
Environmental concerns: coastal erosion, marine pollution, and carbon emissions.
Global uncertainties (geopolitics, trade slowdown) may impact cargo growth sustainability.
Way Forward
Accelerate Sagarmala projects and multimodal logistics parks, reducing logistics cost to <10% of GDP.
Promote port digitisation (AI, blockchain) for real-time cargo tracking and efficiency gains.
Develop transshipment hubs (Vizhinjam, Galathea Bay) to reduce dependence on foreign ports (Colombo, Singapore).
Strengthen green port initiatives (renewables, electrification) for sustainable maritime growth.
Enhance PPP participation and private investment in port infrastructure and operations.
Prelims Pointers
Major Port Authorities Act, 2021 → autonomy to ports
Sagarmala Programme → port-led development
Deendayal Port = highest cargo handling (2025–26)
Ports handle ~95% trade volume of India
PCS = digital platform for port operations
Yuva Sangam
Why in News?
Yuva Sangam Phase-VI (2026) launched under Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat (EBSB), expanding to 22 States/UTs with structured 5–7 day exposure tours.
Gains relevance amid NEP 2020 focus on experiential learning and Union Budget 2026–27 emphasis on youth-driven development (Viksit Bharat 2047).
Relevance
GS Paper II (Governance & Social Policy)
National integration, youth policy, cooperative federalism
GS Paper I (Society)
Diversity, unity, social cohesion
Practice Question
Q1.“National integration requires not only political unity but also social and cultural cohesion.”
Discuss with reference to initiatives like Yuva Sangam.(250 Words)
Static Background
Yuva Sangam (2023) is a youth exchange programme (18–30 years) implemented by Ministry of Education via Higher Education Institutions (HEIs).
Anchored in Ek Bharat Shreshtha Bharat (2015) aiming to promote national integration through cultural exchange and mobility.
Key Dimensions
Governance & Policy Dimension: Operationalises EBSB vision by creating structured inter-state engagement platforms, strengthening cooperative federalism and national unity.
Aligns with NEP 2020, promoting experiential, multidisciplinary, and real-world learning beyond classrooms.
Social Integration Dimension: Facilitates inter-cultural exposure across language, traditions, and lifestyles, reducing regional stereotypes and fostering national identity.
Builds “emotional integration”, complementing political integration of India.
Human Capital Dimension: Targets youth aged 18–30 years, including students, NSS, NYKS volunteers, enhancing skills, awareness, and leadership capacity.
Supports demographic dividend utilisation, with youth forming ~65% of India’s population below 35 years.
Educational Dimension: Promotes experiential learning model, linking theory with field exposure (institutions, startups, governance systems).
Reinforces learning-by-doing approach envisioned under NEP 2020.
Economic & Development Dimension: Exposure to innovation hubs, industrial projects, and startups builds entrepreneurial mindset and regional development awareness.
Supports Education–Employment–Enterprise linkage highlighted in Budget 2026–27.
Institutional Dimension: Implemented via 22 HEIs in Phase-VI, coordinating with universities, district administrations, community organisations, ensuring multi-stakeholder governance model.
Cultural Diplomacy (Domestic): Functions as internal soft power tool, strengthening cultural cohesion in a diverse society.
Promotes “unity in diversity” ethos, critical for nation-building.
Inclusivity Dimension: Selection ensures balanced representation across gender, regions (including rural/remote), and disciplines, promoting equitable participation.
Programme Evolution :
Phase I (2023): 1,178 participants, 29 tours
Phase III: ~30,000 registrations, ~1,000 selected
Phase IV: 45,000 registrations (267% increase)
Reflects rapid scale-up and rising youth engagement.
Behavioural & Ethical Dimension: Encourages respect for diversity, discipline, and cultural sensitivity, fostering constitutional values (fraternity, unity, dignity).
Challenges / Criticisms
Limited scale vs large youth population, restricting universal outreach and impact.
Short duration (5–7 days) may limit deep engagement and long-term outcomes.
Urban bias risk despite inclusion efforts, potentially excluding marginalised youth.
Evaluation mechanisms weak, lacking quantifiable impact assessment on skills and attitudes.
Funding and institutional capacity constraints may affect sustainability and scalability.
Way Forward
Expand programme into credit-based academic module integrated with HEI curriculum.
Increase duration and frequency of exchanges for deeper immersion and learning outcomes.
Develop digital alumni network platform for sustained inter-regional collaboration.
Strengthen monitoring & evaluation frameworks with measurable indicators (skills, integration outcomes).
Ensure greater inclusion of rural, tribal, and economically weaker youth through targeted outreach and scholarships.
Prelims Pointers
Yuva Sangam launched under EBSB initiative
Age group: 18–30 years
Implemented by Ministry of Education via HEIs
Focus: experiential learning + national integration
Phase-VI covers 22 States/UTs
Hectocotylus in Octopus Reproduction
Why in News?
Recent research shows male octopus hectocotylus acts as both sperm-transfer organ and sensory ‘tasting’ appendage, detecting progesterone in females via CRT1 receptor.
Highlights evolutionary innovation linking reproduction with sensory biology in cephalopods.
Relevance
GS Paper III (Science & Technology / Biology)
Animal physiology, evolutionary biology, biodiversity
Practice Question
Q1.Discuss how evolutionary adaptations in organisms enhance reproductive efficiency, with reference to recent findings in cephalopods.(250 Words)
Static Background
Hectocotylus is a modified arm in male octopus used for transfer of spermatophores into female mantle cavity.
Found in cephalopods (octopus, squid)—marine molluscs with advanced nervous systems, large brains, and complex behaviour.
Key Dimensions
Biological / Scientific Dimension: Hectocotylus functions as dual organ—reproductive + sensory, enabling mate identification and precise sperm delivery.
Detects progesterone hormone in female tissues, allowing accurate recognition even in absence of visual cues.
Evolutionary Dimension: CRT1 receptor evolved from neurotransmitter receptors, demonstrating molecular adaptation leading to new behavioural functions.
Reflects principle of exaptation, where existing structures acquire new functions through evolution.
Behavioural Ecology Dimension: Octopuses are solitary organisms, making efficient mate detection critical for reproductive success.
Hectocotylus allows chemical communication through touch (chemoreception) in dark marine environments.
Functional Integration Dimension: Combines sensory detection + reproductive role in single appendage, reducing energy cost and increasing efficiency.
Neurobiology Dimension: Demonstrates interaction between nervous system and reproductive system, highlighting complex neural control in cephalopods.
Marine Biodiversity Dimension: Shows how molecular-level changes in proteins drive species-specific adaptations, contributing to diversity in marine ecosystems.
Comparative Zoology Dimension: Unique among animals where reproductive appendage also acts as sensory organ, unlike separate organ systems in higher vertebrates.
Technological / Biomimicry Potential: Insights may inform design of multifunctional sensors and robotic appendages integrating detection + action.
Challenges / Scientific Questions
Mechanistic understanding of CRT1 receptor functioning still evolving, requiring further molecular and genetic studies.
Environmental changes (ocean warming, pollution) may disrupt chemical signalling and reproductive behaviour.
Limited knowledge on species-specific variations across cephalopods.
Way Forward
Promote marine biological research and deep-sea exploration to understand complex adaptations.
Strengthen conservation of marine ecosystems to preserve behavioural and reproductive diversity.
Encourage interdisciplinary studies (neurobiology + evolution + biochemistry) for deeper insights.
Prelims Pointers
Hectocotylus = modified arm in male octopus for sperm transfer
CRT1 receptor detects progesterone (chemoreception)
Cephalopods = octopus, squid, cuttlefish (class of molluscs)
Exaptation = structure gaining new function during evolution
Air Pollution & NCAP Performance
Why in News?
Ghaziabad recorded highest PM10 level: 215 µg/m³ (2025–26) among 96 NCAP cities, followed by Delhi (201 µg/m³) and Noida (195 µg/m³).
Despite improvements, 89/96 cities breached national PM10 standards, raising concerns over NCAP effectiveness (target: 40% reduction by 2026).
Relevance
GS Paper III (Environment)
Air pollution, environmental governance, public health
GS Paper II (Governance)
Policy effectiveness, regulatory institutions
Practice Question
Q1.Critically evaluate the effectiveness of the National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) in addressing air pollution in India.(250 Words)
Static Background
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP), 2019 aims to reduce PM10 and PM2.5 levels by 20–40% by 2026 (baseline: 2017–18).
PM10 standard (India): 60 µg/m³ (annual); WHO guideline: 15 µg/m³ (PM2.5 annual equivalent stricter norms).
Key Dimensions
Environmental Dimension: High PM10 levels (>3× national standards) indicate persistent particulate pollution from dust, construction, and vehicular emissions.
PM2.5 crisis: Only 3 cities met WHO guideline (15 µg/m³), while 94 NCAP cities breached it, showing severe health risks.
Data & Evidence Dimension:
79 cities improved since 2017–18, but only 27 achieved >40% reduction.
14 cities worsened, 3 stagnated, indicating uneven progress across regions.
Dehradun: 75% reduction (best performer); Visakhapatnam: 73% increase (worst deterioration).
Governance Dimension: NCAP is non-statutory, target-driven programme, relying on city action plans and inter-agency coordination (CPCB, SPCBs, ULBs).
Weak enforcement and fragmented institutional accountability limit effective implementation.
Urbanisation & Economic Dimension: Rapid urban growth, construction boom, industrial emissions, and vehicular expansion drive pollution in NCR and industrial clusters.
High pollution imposes economic costs (~5–8% of GDP via health impacts, World Bank estimates).
Health & Social Dimension: Air pollution linked to respiratory diseases, cardiovascular disorders, premature deaths (~1.6 million annually in India, Lancet estimates).
Disproportionate impact on urban poor, children, elderly, raising environmental justice concerns.
Technological Dimension: Differences between CAAQMS (continuous monitoring) and manual monitoring (104 readings/year) lead to data inconsistencies and policy gaps.
Regional Dimension: Pollution concentrated in Indo-Gangetic Plain (UP, Haryana, Delhi) due to geography (low wind speed, inversion), crop burning, and industrial density.
Policy Effectiveness Dimension: While NCAP achieved partial success, failure to meet universal compliance indicates need for stronger regulatory framework.
Challenges / Criticisms
Non-binding targets under NCAP reduce accountability and enforceability.
Inter-state coordination failure (e.g., stubble burning, regional pollution transport).
Inadequate monitoring infrastructure and data inconsistencies.
Focus on PM10 over PM2.5, despite PM2.5 being more harmful.
Urban planning failures (dust management, traffic congestion).
Way Forward
Convert NCAP into statutory framework with legally enforceable targets and penalties.
Adopt airshed-based approach (regional coordination across states).
Scale up clean technologies (EVs, cleaner fuels, dust suppression systems).
Improve real-time monitoring and data transparency using CAAQMS expansion.
Strengthen urban governance (waste management, construction regulation).
Prelims Pointers
NCAP launched in 2019; target: 20–40% PM reduction by 2026
PM10 = particulate matter ≤10 microns
PM2.5 more harmful than PM10
CAAQMS = Continuous Ambient Air Quality Monitoring System
WHO PM2.5 guideline stricter than India’s standard
India’s Updated NDCs
Why in News?
India announced updated Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the Paris Agreement, enhancing targets on emissions intensity, non-fossil capacity, and carbon sinks.
Debate on adequacy vs developmental constraints, amid global climate slowdown and financing gaps.
Relevance
GS Paper III (Environment & Economy)
Climate change, energy transition, sustainable development
GS Paper II (International Relations)
Global climate negotiations, climate justice
Practice Question
Q1.“India’s climate commitments reflect a balance between developmental needs and environmental responsibility.”Examine in the context of updated NDCs.(250 Words)
Static Background
NDCs are voluntary climate commitments under Paris Agreement (2015), revised every 5 years, with progress reported via Biennial Transparency Reports (BTR).
India follows principles of climate justice and CBDR-RC (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities) under UNFCCC (1992).
Key Dimensions
Climate Policy Dimension: India adopted incremental enhancement approach, ensuring continuity with previous NDCs while strengthening ambition within national capacity limits.
Reflects pragmatic climate strategy balancing mitigation with economic growth needs.
Targets & Data Dimension:
Emissions intensity reduction: 47% by 2035 (from 2005 levels) (earlier 45% by 2030).
60% installed power capacity from non-fossil sources.
Carbon sink: 3.5–4 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent via forests/tree cover.
Economic Dimension: Transition to renewables and EVs entails high capital costs, including trillions of rupees for battery storage and grid balancing infrastructure.
Trade-off between climate commitments and industrial growth, manufacturing expansion, and urbanisation.
Energy Security Dimension: India remains coal-dependent for base-load power, unlike countries with gas/hydro flexibility, making renewable integration costlier and complex.
Curtailment of RE and cycling of thermal plants increase operational costs and inefficiencies.
Technological Dimension: Deployment of green hydrogen, EVs, CCUS, energy efficiency measures, reflecting multi-sector decarbonisation strategy.
However, storage technologies and grid infrastructure lag behind renewable expansion needs.
Environmental Dimension: Enhanced carbon sinks support biodiversity, ecosystem restoration, and climate mitigation, aligning with nature-based solutions.
Global Climate Justice Dimension: India’s per capita emissions are ~1/3 of global average, justifying moderate commitments relative to historical emitters.
Developed countries’ weak action and climate finance gaps undermine global mitigation efforts.
Governance Dimension: Implementation requires coordination across Centre, States, industries, supported by policies (NAPCC, PAT scheme, EV policies).
International Relations Dimension: India positions itself as responsible yet pragmatic actor, resisting pressure to over-commit beyond developmental capacity.
Challenges / Criticisms
Criticism of “low ambition” relative to 1.5°C target, though global trajectory itself off-track.
High financial burden without adequate climate finance and technology transfer.
Grid instability and storage limitations constrain renewable scalability.
Coal dependence persists, raising concerns over long-term decarbonisation trajectory.
Measurement debate: Installed capacity vs actual renewable generation share.
Way Forward
Enhance climate finance mobilisation (Green Climate Fund, multilateral banks) to reduce domestic fiscal burden.
Invest in battery storage, smart grids, and transmission infrastructure for RE integration.
Accelerate just transition policies ensuring livelihood security in coal-dependent regions.
Promote energy efficiency and demand-side management to reduce overall emissions intensity.
Strengthen international climate diplomacy to push for equity-based commitments and technology transfer.
Prelims Pointers
NDC = voluntary commitments under Paris Agreement
India target: 47% emissions intensity reduction by 2035
Carbon sink target: 3.5–4 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent
BTR = Biennial Transparency Report
CBDR-RC principle under UNFCCC