Content
Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026) – Right to Die with Dignity
Falcon 9 Re-entry Pollution – Emerging Environmental Challenge in the Second Space Age
Andhra Pradesh Declared “Naxal-Free” (2026) – Milestone in Left Wing Extremism (LWE) Eradication
CMS COP15 ends in Brazil with 40 new species being accorded protection
FATF Report on Offshore VASPs – India’s Emerging “Digital Border Enforcement” Framework
Great Indian Bustard (GIB) Conservation – “Jumpstart Approach” Success in Gujarat
Lights off at India Gate for a cause
Bhavasagara” Referral Centre Designated as India’s National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna
Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026) – Right to Die with Dignity
Why in News?
In 2026, the Supreme Court in Harish Rana v. Union of India allowed withdrawal of Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration (CANH) for the first time in India.
The judgment reaffirmed that Right to Die with Dignity is part of Article 21, marking a shift from life preservation at all costs → dignity and autonomy-based approach.
The Court declared the term “passive euthanasia” as legally imprecise, preferring “withholding/withdrawing life-sustaining treatment (LST)”.
Patient details: Case involved a 31–32-year-old man in Persistent Vegetative State (PVS) for ~13 years (no living will; family petitioned).
Relevance
GS II (Polity / Constitution)
Article 21: expansion to include dignity in death and bodily autonomy.
Judicial evolution of euthanasia jurisprudence and living wills.
GS II (Governance)
Institutional protocols: medical boards, hospital ethics frameworks.
Reduced judicial intervention → faster decision-making.
GS III (Health)
Palliative care integration and end-of-life care systems.
Reducing futile medical expenditure.
Practice Question
Q. Critically examine the implications of the Supreme Court’s recognition of the “Right to Die with Dignity” under Article 21. Discuss ethical concerns and necessary safeguards in end-of-life decision-making. (250 words)
Evolution of Jurisprudence (2011–2026)
Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India (2011) recognised passive euthanasia for the first time, placing decision-making under High Court supervision as parens patriae.
Common Cause v. Union of India (2018) declared Right to Die with Dignity as a Fundamental Right under Article 21, and legally recognised Living Wills (Advance Directives).
Common Cause v. Union of India (2023) simplified procedures by removing excessive bureaucratic hurdles and easing validation of living wills.
Harish Rana (2026) marks the final doctrinal shift, expanding scope to include withdrawal of CANH and eliminating conceptual confusion around “passive euthanasia”.
Constitutional and Legal Basis
Article 21 – Expansive Interpretation
Article 21 guarantees Right to Life and Personal Liberty, judicially expanded to include:
Right to dignity
Right to privacy
Right to refuse medical treatment
Court held that:
Right to live with dignity includes right to die with dignity in terminal conditions, ensuring autonomy over bodily integrity.
Legal Clarification by the Court
Distinction made between:
Active euthanasia (illegal) → direct act to end life
Withholding/withdrawing treatment (permissible) → allowing natural death
Court emphasised:
Doctor is not causing death, but removing artificial prolongation of life
Ethical Framework Underlying the Judgment
1. Autonomy
Recognises patient’s right to:
Accept or refuse medical treatment
Execute Living Will/Advance Directive
Shifts locus of decision-making from State → Individual
2. Beneficence
Doctors must act in best interest of patient, including relief from prolonged suffering in terminal illness.
3. Non-Maleficence
Continuing futile treatment causing prolonged agony may itself amount to harm, violating medical ethics.
4. Justice
Ensures decision is:
Not influenced by poverty, neglect, or social discrimination
Equitable and ethically justified
5. Doctrine of Double Effect (Thomas Aquinas)
Withdrawal of treatment has:
Intended effect → relief from suffering
Foreseen but unintended effect → death
Action remains ethical if primary intent is alleviation of suffering, not causing death.
Procedural Safeguards (Post-2023/2026 Framework)
Primary Medical Board:
Minimum three experts with ~20 years experience certify terminal condition
Review Board:
Independent confirmation within hospital, ensuring medical consensus
No mandatory judicial approval:
Courts intervene only in case of disputes, reducing delays
Mandatory palliative care:
Withdrawal of life support does not mean abandonment; comfort care must continue
Significance of the Judgment
Legal Significance
Completes transition from:
Sanctity of life doctrine → dignity-centric jurisprudence
Clarifies ambiguity around euthanasia terminology and strengthens legal certainty
Governance and Medical Practice
Provides clear operational guidelines for hospitals and doctors, reducing fear of legal liability
Enables ethical decision-making within structured institutional safeguards
Human Rights Perspective
Reinforces:
Bodily autonomy
Right against cruel and inhuman treatment (prolonged suffering)
Aligns with global jurisprudence on end-of-life care rights
Economic and Social Context
Addresses reality of:
Catastrophic health expenditure in terminal illness cases, especially in lower-income households
Prevents:
Financial ruin of families due to prolonged futile treatment
Concerns and Criticism
Risk of Misuse
Vulnerable groups (elderly, disabled, poor) may face:
Coercion or indirect pressure to withdraw treatment
Ethical Dilemmas
Conflict between:
Religious/moral beliefs (sanctity of life)
Secular rights-based approach (autonomy and dignity)
Socio-economic Inequality
Decision-making may be influenced by:
Financial constraints rather than genuine patient choice
Slippery Slope Argument
Fear that acceptance of withdrawal of treatment could gradually lead to:
Acceptance of active euthanasia
Institutional Capacity
Need for:
Robust hospital ethics committees
Trained palliative care systems
Way Forward
Strengthen palliative care infrastructure across public healthcare system to ensure dignified end-of-life care.
Create standardised national guidelines and training modules for medical professionals on end-of-life decisions.
Ensure strict monitoring mechanisms to prevent coercion or misuse in vulnerable populations.
Promote awareness about:
Living wills
Patient rights
Integrate ethical decision-making into medical education and hospital governance systems.
Prelims Pointers
Right to Die with Dignity:
Part of Article 21
Living Will:
Advance directive refusing life-sustaining treatment
Active euthanasia:
Illegal in India
Withdrawal of life support:
Legally permitted under strict safeguards
Falcon 9 Re-entry Pollution – Emerging Environmental Challenge in the Second Space Age
Why in News?
A February 2026 study in Communications Earth & Environment provided the first empirical evidence linking rocket re-entry (Falcon 9) to chemical alteration of the upper atmosphere.
Researchers detected a metal vapour plume (especially lithium) at ~96 km altitude, confirming that space traffic is actively polluting the mesosphere–thermosphere region.
The findings shift global concern from orbital debris (Kessler Syndrome) to atmospheric pollution from satellite burn-up, especially due to mega-constellations like Starlink.
Relevance
GS III (Environment)
Emerging pollution in upper atmosphere (mesosphere–thermosphere).
Ozone depletion and climate implications.
GS III (Science & Technology)
Satellite ablation, atmospheric chemistry, space sustainability.
GS II (International Relations)
Regulatory vacuum in global space governance.
Practice Question
Q. Space activities are increasingly posing environmental challenges beyond Earth’s surface. Analyse the issue of rocket re-entry pollution and suggest a governance framework. (250 words)
Static Background
Second Space Age and Satellite Proliferation
The world is witnessing a “Second Space Age”, characterised by rapid expansion of:
Satellite-based communication, navigation, and Earth observation systems
Thousands of satellites already in orbit, with tens of thousands more planned (mega-constellations)
Typical satellite lifespan:
~5 years, after which they de-orbit and burn in atmosphere
Atmospheric Layers Involved
Re-entry occurs mainly in:
Mesosphere (50–85 km)
Lower Thermosphere (~85–100 km)
These regions are:
Crucial for atmospheric chemistry
Poorly understood compared to lower layers
Key Scientific Findings
1. Direct Detection of Metal Vapour Plume
Researchers tracked a Falcon 9 re-entry (Feb 2025) using resonance lidar in Germany.
Observations showed:
Lithium concentration spike at 96 km altitude, about 10 times higher than natural background levels
Backward trajectory modelling confirmed:
The plume travelled ~1600 km from Ireland to Germany within ~20 hours
2. Chemical Signature – Anthropogenic vs Natural
Natural meteors contribute:
Only ~80 grams of lithium globally per day
In contrast:
A single Falcon 9 stage releases ~30 kg lithium, along with large quantities of aluminum
Indicates a massive anthropogenic override of natural atmospheric chemistry
3. Atmospheric Dispersion Dynamics
Metallic vapours:
Do not remain localised
Spread rapidly through upper atmospheric circulation (mesospheric jet streams)
Creates a globalised pollution footprint from individual re-entry events
4. Ablation Physics
During re-entry (~7.5 km/s):
Satellites and rocket stages atomise into fine metallic aerosols rather than simply burning
Composition:
Lithium-aluminum alloys (structural materials)
Lithium-ion batteries
Result:
Formation of metallic clouds in upper atmosphere
Environmental Implications
1. Ozone Layer Depletion Risk
Aluminum oxide particles act as catalysts for chlorine activation, accelerating ozone breakdown reactions.
Similar mechanism observed in:
Volcanic aerosols
CFC-induced ozone depletion
Raises concerns about long-term stratospheric ozone stability
2. Climate and Radiative Forcing
Metallic particles may contribute to formation of:
Noctilucent clouds (highest clouds in atmosphere)
These can alter:
Earth’s albedo (reflectivity)
Heat trapping and radiation balance
Current climate models do not adequately account for metal-induced radiative forcing
3. Chemical Transformation of Upper Atmosphere
Transition from:
Naturally iron-dominated meteoric input
To aluminum-lithium dominated anthropogenic input
Could fundamentally alter:
Atmospheric chemistry
Ionisation processes
Space-weather interactions
4. Scale of the Problem (Mega-Constellations)
Starlink and similar projects plan 40,000+ satellites
With ~5-year lifespan:
~20–25 satellites re-enter daily in future scenarios
By 2030:
Human-made metal input may equal or exceed natural meteoric input, marking a tipping point
Significance
Environmental Governance
Highlights a new dimension of space pollution, beyond orbital debris, requiring regulatory attention.
Scientific Advancement
Demonstrates ability to:
Track upper atmospheric pollutants
Attribute them to specific re-entry events
Opens new field: Atmospheric Ablation Science
Policy Implications
Challenges “green” narrative of reusable rockets and satellite internet systems.
Necessitates integration of space activities into environmental governance frameworks.
Strategic Relevance
As India expands its space programme (Gaganyaan, satellite constellations), similar concerns will arise.
Requires proactive approach in:
Space sustainability
Environmental impact assessment
Challenges
Regulatory Vacuum
No comprehensive global framework governing:
Atmospheric pollution from space re-entry
Outer Space Treaty focuses primarily on space debris, not atmospheric chemistry
Scientific Uncertainty
Limited long-term data on:
Ozone depletion effects
Climate impacts
Upper atmosphere remains under-researched domain
Commercial Pressure
Private space companies prioritise:
Cost efficiency and rapid deployment
Environmental considerations remain secondary
Monitoring Limitations
Tracking requires:
Advanced lidar systems
Global observational networks
Currently limited to a few research centres
Way Forward
Develop international regulatory norms under UNCOPUOS for managing re-entry pollution.
Mandate Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA) for large satellite constellations.
Promote research on:
Alternative materials with lower atmospheric impact
Establish global monitoring networks for upper atmosphere chemistry.
Encourage controlled re-entry and recovery mechanisms to minimise atmospheric ablation.
Integrate space sustainability into climate governance frameworks (UNFCCC, IPCC studies).
Prelims Pointers
Mesosphere: 50–85 km altitude
Thermosphere: Above ~85 km
Lidar: Laser-based atmospheric sensing technology
Noctilucent clouds: Highest clouds, visible in mesosphere
Falcon 9: Reusable rocket by SpaceX
Andhra Pradesh Declared “Naxal-Free” (2026) – Milestone in Left Wing Extremism (LWE) Eradication
Why in News?
Andhra Pradesh was officially declared “Naxal-free” on March 30, 2026, following the surrender of key Maoist leaders including a Central Committee member of CPI (Maoist).
The announcement came just before the Union Government’s March 31, 2026 deadline for eliminating Left Wing Extremism nationwide.
The surrender of Chelluri Narayana Rao (alias Suresh), a top leader of CPI (Maoist), marks the collapse of the Andhra-Odisha Border Special Zonal Committee (AOBSZC).
Relevance
GS III (Internal Security)
Decline of Left Wing Extremism and counter-insurgency strategies.
GS II (Governance)
Development-security synergy and Centre-State coordination.
Practice Question
Q. Evaluate the role of integrated security and development strategies in the decline of Left Wing Extremism in India. (250 words)
Static Background
Left Wing Extremism (LWE) in India
LWE refers to Maoist insurgency inspired by Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, aiming to overthrow the Indian state through armed struggle.
Origin traced to Naxalbari Uprising, which triggered the Naxalite movement.
Strongholds historically:
Red Corridor spanning Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Maharashtra
Organizational Structure
Main outfit: Communist Party of India (Maoist)
Armed wing: People’s Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA)
Hierarchical structure:
Central Committee → Zonal Committees → Area Committees
Legal and Policy Framework
Activities classified under Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), 1967
Key initiatives:
SAMADHAN doctrine (Smart leadership, Aggressive strategy, Motivation, etc.)
Security Related Expenditure (SRE) scheme
Aspirational District Programme for development
Key Event Details
1. Collapse of AOBSZC
Andhra-Odisha Border Special Zonal Committee was:
One of the last operational Maoist strongholds in the region
Its dismantling indicates:
Loss of territorial and operational depth
Breakdown of cross-border insurgency networks
2. Meaning of “Naxal-Free”
Indicates:
No active underground Maoist cadre operating within state boundaries
However:
Does not imply ideological elimination, but operational neutralisation
Continued vigilance required against:
Cross-border infiltration
Urban sleeper cells
Data and Evidence (Decline of LWE)
LWE-related incidents reduced by ~89% between 2010 and 2026
Affected districts reduced from 120+ to less than 25 core districts
Andhra Pradesh:
Neutralised 18 Maoists in recent operations
Recovered 120+ weapons (INSAS, .303 rifles)
Indicates a clear long-term downward trajectory of insurgency
Factors Behind Success
1. Security Strategy
Effective deployment of elite forces like:
Greyhounds (Andhra Pradesh) known for intelligence-driven operations
Improved coordination with:
Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs)
Focus on:
Targeted strikes rather than large-scale combing operations
2. Intelligence and Technology
Use of:
Drone surveillance
Real-time intelligence networks
Penetration of Maoist communication channels weakened organisational secrecy
3. Surrender and Rehabilitation Policy
Attractive incentives:
Immediate financial assistance (₹20,000 + rewards)
Skill development and reintegration support
Reduced appeal of insurgency by offering mainstream livelihood alternatives
4. Developmental Interventions
Expansion of:
Roads, telecom connectivity, banking access in tribal areas
Welfare schemes:
Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), PDS, education, healthcare
Reduced alienation of tribal populations, historically the Maoist support base
5. Loss of Ideological and Social Support
Maoists losing legitimacy due to:
Violence against civilians and public representatives
Tribal communities increasingly aligning with state-led development initiatives
Significance
A.Internal Security
Marks a major achievement in counter-insurgency operations, reducing one of India’s longest-running internal security threats.
B.Governance
Enables deeper state penetration into previously inaccessible areas, improving service delivery and administrative reach.
C.Economic Development
Opens up tribal and forest regions for:
Infrastructure development
Investment and livelihood generation
D.Federal Cooperation
Demonstrates success of Centre-State coordination in internal security management.
Challenges Ahead
Residual Threats
Maoist presence still persists in:
Parts of Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Odisha
Risk of regrouping in border areas
Socio-Economic Vulnerabilities
Core issues remain:
Land alienation
Tribal displacement
Forest rights implementation gaps
Human Rights Concerns
Allegations of:
Excessive force
Need for balanced approach between security and rights
Ideological Persistence
Maoist ideology may continue in:
Urban networks (“Urban Naxals” debate)
Requires long-term counter-radicalisation efforts
Way Forward
Shift focus from security-centric to development-centric consolidation phase in former LWE areas.
Strengthen implementation of:
Forest Rights Act, 2006
PESA Act for tribal self-governance
Enhance border area coordination between states to prevent resurgence.
Promote:
Education, skill development, and local employment generation
Institutionalise community policing and trust-building mechanisms.
Prelims Pointers
Naxalbari uprising: 1967 (West Bengal)
CPI (Maoist): Main LWE organisation
Greyhounds: Elite anti-Naxal force of Andhra Pradesh
Red Corridor: LWE-affected belt across central-eastern India
SAMADHAN doctrine: India’s counter-LWE strategy
CMS COP15 ends in Brazil with 40 new species being accorded protection
Why in News?
At the 15th Conference of Parties (COP15) to the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), held in Brazil (March 2026), 40 new migratory species were added to protected lists.
The decision was based on alarming findings from the “State of the World’s Migratory Species: Interim Report (2026)”, which shows accelerating decline and extinction risks across taxa.
Species such as the Cheetah, Striped hyena, Snowy owl, Giant otter, and Great hammerhead shark were included due to mounting threats across migratory routes.
Relevance
GS III (Environment)
Conservation of migratory species and ecosystem connectivity.
GS II (International Relations)
Multilateral environmental agreements and cooperation.
Practice Question
Q. Conservation of migratory species requires transboundary and ecosystem-based approaches. Discuss in light of recent CMS developments. (250 words)
Static Background
Convention on Migratory Species (CMS)
CMS (also called Bonn Convention, 1979) is a UN-backed environmental treaty aimed at conserving migratory species across national boundaries.
It operates through two appendices:
Appendix I: Species threatened with extinction requiring strict protection measures.
Appendix II: Species needing international cooperation for conservation management.
India is a signatory and hosts CMS COP13 (Gandhinagar, 2020), indicating active global engagement.
Migratory Species – Ecological Importance
Migratory species traverse multiple ecosystems and national jurisdictions, linking habitats across continents and oceans.
They play critical roles in:
Pollination, seed dispersal, and pest control
Maintaining ecosystem connectivity and resilience
Conservation requires transboundary cooperation, unlike sedentary species.
Key Outcomes of CMS COP15 (2026)
1. Addition of 40 Species to Protected Lists
Species were added to CMS Appendices based on scientific evidence of rapid population decline and increasing extinction risk.
Examples with threats:
Cheetah: Habitat fragmentation and human-wildlife conflict reducing movement corridors.
Great hammerhead shark: Overfishing and bycatch in international waters affecting migratory routes.
Giant otter: Habitat degradation and mercury pollution in Amazon basin ecosystems.
Snowy owl: Climate-induced prey fluctuations impacting survival and breeding cycles.
This expansion reflects a shift toward precautionary conservation based on emerging scientific evidence rather than post-extinction crisis response.
2. Interim Report (2026) – Data of Decline
Nearly 49% of CMS-listed migratory species are experiencing population decline, indicating systemic conservation failures.
About 24% of migratory species face extinction risk, highlighting urgency of intervention.
Total 188 migratory species are at high extinction risk, including:
103 bird species
26 fish species
28 terrestrial mammals
23 aquatic mammals
Additionally, 26 CMS-listed species (including 18 shorebirds) have been uplisted to higher threat categories, indicating worsening conservation status.
3. Key Biodiversity Areas (KBA) Gap
Over 9,000 Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) have been identified globally as critical for migratory species survival.
However, 47% of these KBAs remain outside formal protection frameworks, exposing them to development pressures.
This highlights a major implementation gap between scientific identification and policy protection.
4. Emerging Threats Highlighted
COP15 emphasised new-age threats beyond traditional habitat loss:
Deep-sea mining disrupting marine migratory pathways and ecological balance
Underwater noise pollution affecting navigation and communication of marine species
Plastic pollution and marine debris impacting ingestion and habitat quality
Linear infrastructure (roads, railways, power lines) fragmenting terrestrial corridors
Recognition of these threats indicates a shift toward holistic ecosystem-based conservation approaches.
5. Multi-Species Conservation Plans
Adoption of regional multi-species action plans, especially for the Amazon, recognising ecosystems as interconnected migratory corridors.
Emphasis on:
Protecting entire migratory routes rather than isolated habitats
Integrating freshwater, terrestrial, and marine ecosystems
Significance
Ecological Significance
Reinforces the concept that species survival depends on connectivity of habitats rather than isolated conservation zones.
Protects ecosystem services such as pollination, nutrient cycling, and marine food chains.
Governance Significance
Strengthens global environmental governance through collective action and treaty-based obligations across countries.
Highlights need for policy convergence across sectors such as infrastructure, fisheries, and climate policy.
Scientific Significance
Demonstrates increasing reliance on data-driven conservation using global biodiversity monitoring frameworks.
Promotes adaptive conservation strategies based on real-time ecological evidence and risk assessment.
India-Specific Relevance
Many CMS species overlap with Indian biodiversity hotspots (e.g., migratory birds, marine species), requiring:
Strengthening of flyway conservation (Central Asian Flyway)
Integration with national programmes like Project Dolphin and Project Tiger
India’s infrastructure expansion (roads, renewables) must align with wildlife corridor protection.
Challenges and Gaps
Implementation Deficit
Listing species under CMS does not automatically ensure protection unless backed by strong national-level enforcement mechanisms.
Habitat Fragmentation
Increasing infrastructure development leads to disruption of migratory corridors, reducing survival and breeding success.
Climate Change Impacts
Alters migration timing, breeding patterns, and food availability, causing phenological mismatches.
Weak Transboundary Coordination
Conservation efforts vary across countries, leading to inconsistent protection along migratory routes.
Funding and Capacity Constraints
Many developing countries lack resources for monitoring, enforcement, and habitat restoration.
Way Forward
Shift from species-centric to corridor-based conservation, ensuring protection of entire migratory pathways.
Integrate biodiversity considerations into infrastructure planning using tools like Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA).
Strengthen international cooperation through data sharing, joint monitoring, and funding mechanisms.
Expand protected area networks to cover critical KBAs and ecological corridors.
Promote community participation and indigenous knowledge in conservation of migratory habitats.
Align CMS implementation with CBD targets and SDG 15 (Life on Land) and SDG 14 (Life Below Water).
Prelims Pointers
CMS:
Also called Bonn Convention (1979)
Two appendices: I (strict protection), II (cooperation)
India hosted CMS COP13 in Gandhinagar (2020)
Key concept:
Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) = critical habitats for species survival
New threats:
Deep-sea mining, underwater noise, plastic pollution
FATF Report on Offshore VASPs – India’s Emerging “Digital Border Enforcement” Framework
Why in News?
A March 2026 report by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) highlighted India’s proactive measures to mitigate risks posed by offshore Virtual Asset Service Providers (oVASPs).
The report acknowledged enforcement actions by agencies such as Financial Intelligence Unit – India, Enforcement Directorate, and National Investigation Agency against money laundering and terror financing via crypto channels.
It noted India’s transition from tax-centric regulation (post-2022 VDA regime) to active surveillance and enforcement of cross-border crypto flows.
Relevance
GS III (Economy)
Regulation of virtual digital assets and financial systems.
GS III (Security)
Money laundering and terror financing via crypto.
GS II (Governance)
Digital sovereignty and cross-border regulatory enforcement.
Practice Question
Q. Discuss the challenges posed by offshore Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) to financial regulation and examine India’s response. (250 words)
Static Background
What are Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs)?
VASPs are entities that facilitate exchange, transfer, custody, or issuance of virtual digital assets (VDAs) such as cryptocurrencies.
Offshore VASPs (oVASPs) operate outside India’s jurisdiction but provide services to Indian users, often bypassing domestic regulatory compliance.
FATF Framework on Virtual Assets
FATF introduced global AML/CFT standards for virtual assets in 2019, including:
Travel Rule (sharing originator and beneficiary details)
Customer Due Diligence (CDD) and KYC norms
Countries are required to regulate VASPs under Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Countering Financing of Terrorism (CFT) frameworks.
India’s Regulatory Context
VDAs taxed since 2022:
30% tax on gains
1% TDS on transactions
Brought under Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 in 2023, mandating compliance with AML norms.
Regulatory oversight primarily through FIU-India under the Ministry of Finance.
Key Findings of FATF Report
1. Emergence of Offshore Crypto Risk Ecosystem
Offshore platforms are increasingly used to:
Convert illicit funds into crypto assets
Route them through compliant Indian exchanges into legitimate banking channels
Example:
Scam compounds in Myanmar–Thailand border, Cambodia, Laos exploiting trafficked individuals for cyber fraud operations
2. “Flight to Offshore” After Tax Regime
Post-2022 taxation, a significant proportion of Indian crypto users migrated to offshore exchanges to avoid compliance burdens.
Estimated $3.8 billion (~₹32,000 crore) trading volume shifted offshore, weakening domestic regulatory oversight.
Offshore platforms encourage:
Use of VPNs
Shell companies
No-KYC trading
3. Typologies of Illicit Activities
Crypto used for:
Money laundering through layering and integration stages
Gambling platforms acting as laundering channels (“win-loss” mechanism)
Terror financing through anonymous wallets
Caribbean-based gambling platform case exposed AML blind spots in cross-border transactions.
India’s Enforcement Architecture
1. Financial Intelligence and Surveillance
Financial Intelligence Unit – India leverages Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) from registered VASPs to detect abnormal patterns.
Detection of:
Unusual deposit flows from offshore wallets
Conversion of illicit crypto into fiat money via Indian banking system
2. Virtual Asset Lab (Emerging Tool)
Proposed high-tech analytical hub for continuous monitoring of crypto ecosystem.
Key capabilities:
Heuristic clustering to identify linked wallet networks
Automated web surveillance scanning social media and dark web platforms
Open-source intelligence (OSINT) mapping offshore infrastructure
3. Principal Officer (PO) Mandate
Mandatory requirement for VASPs to appoint a Principal Officer based in India with full legal accountability.
Ensures:
Direct regulatory interface
Personal liability in case of AML violations
Ends anonymity of offshore platforms operating in Indian market indirectly.
4. Sahyog Portal – Digital Enforcement Tool
Launched by the Ministry of Home Affairs to coordinate with intermediaries for content takedown and enforcement actions.
FIU has used it to:
Block 85 URLs of non-compliant offshore VASPs
Enables faster response to:
Illegal crypto platforms
Fraud-linked digital infrastructure
5. Multi-Agency Coordination Mechanism
Virtual Assets Contact Sub-Group (2023) under Department of Revenue ensures:
Coordination among enforcement, intelligence, and regulatory bodies
Sharing of typologies, trends, and case studies
Agencies involved:
FIU, ED, NIA, CBI, Income Tax Department
Significance of India’s Approach
Financial Security
Strengthens ability to detect and disrupt illicit financial flows, including terror financing and organised cybercrime.
Regulatory Sovereignty
Extends India’s regulatory reach beyond borders through “digital perimeter enforcement”, targeting offshore entities serving Indian users.
Technological Governance
Adoption of advanced analytics and surveillance tools reflects shift toward data-driven financial regulation in digital economy.
Global Leadership
Aligns with FATF standards, enhancing India’s credibility in global financial integrity and compliance frameworks.
Challenges and Concerns
Jurisdictional Limitations
Offshore entities operate beyond India’s direct legal jurisdiction, making enforcement dependent on intermediaries and international cooperation.
Regulatory Arbitrage
Users can still exploit:
VPNs
Decentralised exchanges (DEXs)
Creates persistent enforcement gaps
Innovation vs Regulation Trade-off
Excessive regulation and taxation may:
Drive innovation offshore
Reduce competitiveness of Indian crypto ecosystem
Data Privacy and Surveillance Concerns
Increased monitoring through OSINT and web surveillance raises concerns regarding:
Privacy rights
Potential misuse of data
Capacity Constraints
Need for specialised expertise in:
Blockchain forensics
Cyber intelligence
Institutional capacity still evolving
Way Forward
Develop a comprehensive Virtual Digital Asset regulatory framework balancing innovation and risk mitigation.
Enhance international cooperation mechanisms for cross-border enforcement and data sharing.
Promote RegTech and SupTech tools for real-time monitoring of crypto transactions.
Rationalise taxation to reduce incentive for offshore migration of users.
Strengthen capacity building in blockchain analytics and cyber forensics across agencies.
Encourage regulated domestic crypto ecosystem to improve compliance and investor protection.
Prelims Pointers
FATF: Intergovernmental body for AML/CFT standards
VASPs: Entities dealing in virtual digital assets
FIU-India: Nodal agency for financial intelligence under Ministry of Finance
PMLA, 2002: Covers virtual digital assets since 2023
Sahyog Portal: Used for takedown of illegal online platforms
Great Indian Bustard (GIB) Conservation – “Jumpstart Approach” Success in Gujarat
Why in News?
A Great Indian Bustard (GIB) chick was successfully hatched in Gujarat’s Kutch region in March 2026 using a novel “jumpstart approach”, marking the first such success in nearly a decade.
The initiative involved inter-state transfer of a fertile egg from Rajasthan to Gujarat, coordinated by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, State Forest Departments, and the Wildlife Institute of India.
This breakthrough is significant as Gujarat had only three surviving female GIBs, all laying infertile eggs due to absence of males, creating a critical reproductive bottleneck.
Relevance
GS III (Environment)
Species conservation and innovative techniques.
GS II (Governance)
Inter-state cooperation in biodiversity management.
Practice Question
Q. Discuss the role of innovative conservation strategies in preventing extinction of critically endangered species in India. (250 words)
Static Background
About Great Indian Bustard (GIB)
Scientific name: Ardeotis nigriceps; among the heaviest flying birds in the world, endemic to the Indian subcontinent.
Habitat:
Arid and semi-arid grasslands, especially Thar Desert ecosystems
Distribution:
Primarily Rajasthan (~90% population), with remnant populations in Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh
Conservation Status
IUCN Status: Critically Endangered
Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I species (highest protection)
CMS (Convention on Migratory Species): Appendix I species
Estimated population: <150 individuals globally, indicating extreme extinction risk
Project GIB
Launched in 2016, envisioned earlier in 2011
Objective:
Habitat protection
Predator control
Captive breeding and reintroduction
Key centres:
Sam and Ramdevra (Rajasthan)
Current captive population: ~73 birds, serving as a genetic “insurance population”
“Jumpstart Approach” – Technical Explanation
Conceptual Basis
A foster-parenting conservation strategy, used when wild populations are too small to reproduce naturally.
Designed to overcome reproductive isolation and absence of males in fragmented populations.
Operational Steps
Identification Stage:
Monitoring of the remaining female GIBs in Kutch to identify those biologically capable of incubation.
Egg Replacement Strategy:
A naturally laid infertile egg was replaced with a fertile, captive-bred egg from Rajasthan, ensuring continuity of maternal behaviour.
Logistics and Precision Handling:
Egg transported over 770 km in ~19 hours using a portable incubator, maintaining precise temperature (~37.5°C) and humidity conditions.
Successful Hatching and Rewilding:
Chick hatched on March 26, 2026, and is being raised by a wild foster mother, ensuring natural behavioural imprinting.
Significance of the Development
Ecological Significance
Addresses local extinction risk in Gujarat, effectively restarting the reproductive cycle of the population.
Enables in-situ conservation with natural behavioural learning, unlike purely captive breeding approaches.
Scientific and Conservation Innovation
Demonstrates application of assisted reproduction and behavioural ecology integration in wildlife conservation.
Establishes a replicable model for other critically endangered species with fragmented populations.
Inter-State Cooperative Federalism
First example of inter-state biological resource transfer for species recovery, showcasing coordination between Rajasthan and Gujarat.
Strengthens cooperative federalism in biodiversity conservation governance.
Rewilding and Genetic Conservation
Ensures that captive-bred individuals contribute to wild population recovery, preventing genetic stagnation.
Bridges gap between ex-situ conservation (breeding centres) and in-situ conservation (natural habitats).
Strategic Conservation Value
Creates a “biological bridge” between isolated populations, enabling future repopulation of former habitats in other states.
Reinforces India’s commitment to species recovery under global biodiversity frameworks.
Data and Evidence
Total GIB population: <150 individuals globally
Rajasthan captive breeding centres: ~73 birds
Gujarat population prior to event: only 3 females, no breeding males
Egg transfer distance: 770 km (one of the longest embryo transfers in India)
Incubation conditions: ~37.5°C constant temperature requirement
Legal and Policy Context
Supreme Court has actively intervened in GIB conservation, especially in:
Mandating undergrounding of power lines in GIB habitats, which are the leading cause of mortality.
GIB conservation linked to:
National Biodiversity Action Plan
India’s commitments under CMS and CBD
Reflects increasing role of judiciary in species-specific conservation governance
Challenges Ahead
Habitat Degradation
Grasslands often misclassified as “wastelands”, leading to diversion for agriculture, infrastructure, and renewable energy projects.
Power Line Mortality
Overhead high-tension wires cause frequent collisions, which is the leading cause of adult GIB deaths.
Predation and Survival Risks
Ground-nesting behaviour exposes chicks to feral dogs, foxes, and other predators, reducing survival rates.
Genetic Bottleneck
Extremely small population leads to:
Low genetic diversity
Increased inbreeding risks
Institutional and Implementation Gaps
Delays in implementing Supreme Court directives on power line mitigation
Coordination challenges across multiple states and agencies
Way Forward
Scale up the jumpstart approach to other GIB habitats such as Maharashtra and Karnataka for population revival.
Ensure time-bound undergrounding or bird diverters on power lines in all critical habitats.
Legally recognise grasslands as ecologically sensitive ecosystems, preventing their diversion.
Strengthen community-based conservation models, involving local pastoral communities as stakeholders.
Enhance funding and research for genetic diversity management and assisted reproductive technologies.
Integrate GIB conservation into renewable energy planning, ensuring biodiversity-sensitive infrastructure development.
Prelims Pointers
Great Indian Bustard:
Scientific name: Ardeotis nigriceps
Status: Critically Endangered (IUCN)
Schedule I (Wildlife Protection Act)
Project GIB launched in 2016
Major threat: Collision with power lines
Habitat: Arid grasslands (Thar Desert)
Jumpstart approach: Foster incubation using captive-bred eggs in wild nests
Lights off at India Gate for a cause
Why in News?
Earth Hour 2026 marked 20 years (2007–2026) of the global environmental movement initiated by World Wide Fund for Nature, highlighting its evolution from symbolic participation to measurable climate action frameworks.
In India, major landmarks including India Gate switched off lights, reflecting strong institutional and citizen engagement in climate awareness activities.
Introduction of the “Hour Bank” concept signifies a transition towards quantifying citizen-led environmental actions, making climate participation measurable and policy-relevant.
Relevance
GS III (Environment)
Demand-side energy efficiency and climate action.
GS IV (Ethics)
Behavioural change and environmental responsibility.
Practice Question
Q. Behavioural change is critical for achieving climate goals. Evaluate the role of citizen-led initiatives in environmental governance. (250 words)
Static Background
Origin and Evolution of Earth Hour
Earth Hour began in Sydney in 2007 as a symbolic “lights-off” event to raise awareness about climate change and unsustainable consumption patterns.
Over time, it has expanded into a global grassroots movement spanning over 190 countries, making it one of the largest environmental participation initiatives globally.
The movement has evolved from awareness generation to behavioural transformation and policy influence, aligning with global sustainability and climate action frameworks.
Conceptual Basis and Philosophy
Earth Hour is rooted in the principle that collective small-scale individual actions can generate significant macro-level environmental impact over time.
It reflects behavioural economics insights, where nudging citizens towards sustainable habits can complement regulatory and technological climate interventions.
Closely aligned with India’s Lifestyle for Environment (LiFE) initiative, which promotes sustainable consumption and responsible living practices globally.
Key Features of Earth Hour 2026
1. Energy Savings and Grid-Level Impact
Delhi recorded an approximate 216 MW reduction in electricity demand during the one-hour switch-off period, demonstrating tangible outcomes of collective citizen action.
Within the BSES distribution network, nearly 174 MW of electricity savings were observed, indicating significant participation at the urban consumer level.
Historical trend analysis shows increasing engagement, with ~206 MW savings in 2024 and ~269 MW in 2025, reflecting growing awareness and responsiveness.
Such reductions highlight the role of Earth Hour in peak load management and demand-side energy efficiency strategies, reducing stress on electricity grids.
2. “Hour Bank” – Quantification of Climate Action
The 2026 edition introduced the “Hour Bank” framework, encouraging individuals to dedicate at least one hour to environmentally beneficial activities beyond switching off lights.
Globally, over 2.9 million hours of pro-environment actions were recorded across 118 countries, marking a shift toward measurable behavioural contributions.
India logged approximately 359,652 hours of activities, including urban gardening, sustainable cooking, and community awareness initiatives.
The Philippines led globally with over 1.37 million hours, demonstrating the scalability and competitiveness of citizen-driven climate engagement.
This approach transforms Earth Hour into a data-driven participatory platform, enabling better tracking of grassroots environmental actions.
3. Heritage and Institutional Participation
For the first time, 100% of monuments under the Archaeological Survey of India participated, indicating unprecedented institutional coordination and commitment.
Major heritage sites such as Qutub Minar, Red Fort, and Gateway of India switched off illumination simultaneously.
Electricity distribution companies such as BSES, BRPL, and BYPL actively encouraged consumer participation, integrating Earth Hour with urban energy governance.
This widespread participation reflects the growing institutionalisation of climate awareness across government agencies and public infrastructure systems.
4. Policy and Sustainability Linkages
Earth Hour aligns with India’s international commitments such as Panchamrit targets announced at COP26 and the Net Zero 2070 goal, reinforcing climate diplomacy efforts.
The initiative complements renewable energy expansion by promoting energy conservation and efficiency on the demand side, reducing reliance on fossil fuel-based generation.
Utilities leveraged the event to promote Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) and rooftop solar adoption, aiming for a 50% green energy portfolio by FY 2026–27.
Demonstrates how behavioural initiatives can complement structural energy transitions and policy reforms in the power sector.
5. Biodiversity and Global Environmental Context
Earth Hour 2026 aligns with WWF’s Living Planet Report, which indicates a 73% decline in monitored wildlife populations globally, highlighting ecological urgency.
Supports global conservation targets such as the 30×30 goal (protecting 30% of land and oceans by 2030) under international biodiversity frameworks.
Expands the scope of Earth Hour from climate awareness to integrated biodiversity conservation and ecosystem restoration efforts.
Significance for India
Governance Perspective
Encourages participatory climate governance, where citizens become active stakeholders rather than passive recipients of environmental policies.
Provides valuable behavioural data that can inform urban planning, energy efficiency policies, and sustainability programmes at local and national levels.
Economic Perspective
Demonstrates that energy savings through behavioural change can complement infrastructure investments, reducing the need for costly peak power generation capacity.
Supports long-term reduction in electricity subsidies and fossil fuel dependence, contributing to fiscal sustainability in the energy sector.
Social and Ethical Perspective
Promotes environmental ethics by fostering a sense of collective responsibility and intergenerational equity in resource use and conservation practices.
Encourages community-level engagement, strengthening social capital around sustainability initiatives and ecological awareness campaigns.
Environmental Perspective
Contributes to reduction in carbon emissions and ecological footprint, especially when behavioural changes are sustained beyond the symbolic one-hour period.
Reinforces sustainable consumption patterns, supporting global commitments under SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption) and SDG 13 (Climate Action).
Challenges and Limitations
The initiative remains largely symbolic for many participants, with limited evidence of sustained behavioural change beyond the event duration.
Participation tends to be urban-centric, with relatively lower awareness and engagement in rural and peri-urban regions.
The Hour Bank data lacks robust verification mechanisms, raising concerns regarding accuracy and standardisation of reported environmental actions.
There is limited integration of Earth Hour outcomes with formal climate policy frameworks and institutional decision-making processes.
Risk of “performative environmentalism,” where participation is driven by visibility rather than genuine commitment to sustainable practices.
Way Forward
Integrate Earth Hour metrics into national climate monitoring systems, enabling data-driven policy formulation and evaluation of citizen engagement.
Expand the “Hour Bank” into a continuous year-long platform for tracking environmental actions, rather than limiting it to a single annual event.
Introduce incentive mechanisms such as green credits, carbon points, or tax rebates to encourage sustained behavioural change among citizens.
Strengthen rural outreach through Panchayati Raj Institutions, self-help groups, and local governance structures, ensuring inclusive participation.
Leverage digital technologies and AI to verify and aggregate citizen actions, improving credibility and usability of environmental data.
Prelims Pointers
Earth Hour was launched in 2007 in Sydney by WWF as a climate awareness campaign involving voluntary switching off of lights.
Observed annually on the last Saturday of March, with participation from over 190 countries worldwide.
The 2026 edition introduced the “Hour Bank” concept, focusing on measurable environmental actions beyond symbolic participation.
It is a non-governmental global initiative led by WWF, not a UN-mandated programme.
“Bhavasagara” India’s First National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna
Why in News?
On 30 March 2026, the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change formally designated the “Bhavasagara” Referral Centre (Kochi), operated by Centre for Marine Living Resources and Ecology under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, as a National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna.
The designation has been granted under provisions of the Biological Diversity Act, 2002, giving it statutory recognition.
This development reflects India’s attempt to institutionalise deep-sea biodiversity governance amid expanding ambitions in the blue economy and deep ocean exploration.
Relevance
GS III (Environment / Science & Tech)
Deep-sea biodiversity and blue economy.
GS II (Governance)
Biodiversity conservation under Biological Diversity Act, 2002.
Practice Question
Q. Examine the importance of deep-sea biodiversity governance in the context of expanding blue economy initiatives. (250 words)
Static Background
Deep-Sea Ecosystems: Nature and Importance
Deep sea refers to oceanic zones beyond 200 meters depth, constituting nearly 65% of Earth’s surface, making it the largest biome on the planet.
Characterised by:
Absence of sunlight (aphotic zone)
High pressure and low temperature
Unique adaptive features such as bioluminescence and extremophilic metabolism
Ecological functions:
Acts as a major carbon sink, contributing to global climate regulation
Supports nutrient cycling and marine food webs
Houses genetically unique species with high evolutionary value
India’s Maritime Jurisdiction and Resources
India’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) spans about 2.37 million sq. km, providing sovereign rights over marine living and non-living resources.
Key deep-sea resource zones:
Central Indian Ocean Basin (CIOB) – rich in polymetallic nodules (nickel, cobalt, manganese)
Growing focus on deep-sea mining, biodiversity exploration, and ocean services
Legal and Institutional Framework
Biological Diversity Act, 2002:
Ensures conservation, sustainable use, and equitable sharing of biological resources
Mandates establishment of designated repositories for biological specimens
National Biodiversity Authority (NBA):
Regulates access to biological resources and associated knowledge
CMLRE (MoES):
Nodal scientific institution for marine biodiversity assessment in India’s EEZ
Key Features of “Bhavasagara” Repository
The repository currently maintains over 3,500 taxonomically identified and geo-referenced specimens, collected over decades of deep-sea expeditions.
Biodiversity spectrum includes:
Invertebrates: cnidarians, annelids, molluscs, arthropods, echinoderms
Vertebrates: elasmobranchs (sharks and rays) and teleost fishes
Core functions:
Secure preservation of voucher specimens along with associated metadata (location, depth, DNA sequences)
Custodianship of Type Specimens (reference specimen for newly discovered species)
Development of taxonomic expertise and training capacity
Creation of a centralised, standardised biodiversity database
Strategic Importance
Scientific and Knowledge Leadership
Addresses the global “taxonomic deficit”, where scientific capacity to identify species lags behind discovery.
With nearly 90% of deep-sea species still undiscovered (UN estimates), the repository positions India as a future hub of marine taxonomy and systematics.
Enables long-term ecological research and biodiversity baselining.
Blue Economy and Resource Governance
Directly complements India’s Deep Ocean Mission (~₹4,000 crore).
Ensures that economic activities such as deep-sea mining are informed by:
Baseline biodiversity data
Environmental impact assessments
Supports sustainable utilisation rather than extractive exploitation.
Biodiversity Sovereignty and Legal Control
Mandatory deposition of specimens ensures:
National ownership of biological and genetic resources
Compliance with Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) principles
Reduces reliance on foreign institutions like Smithsonian or NHM London for species verification.
Strengthens India’s position against biopiracy and genetic resource exploitation.
Climate Change and Environmental Monitoring
Deep-sea organisms are highly sensitive to temperature and chemical changes, making them ideal indicators of climate change.
Repository acts as a historical baseline archive to track:
Ocean warming
Acidification
Biodiversity shifts in Indian Ocean
Biotechnology and Innovation Potential
Deep-sea organisms possess extreme adaptations (extremozymes).
Applications include:
Drug discovery (anti-cancer, anti-microbial compounds)
Industrial enzymes (high-pressure, low-temperature conditions)
Opens pathway for Blue Biotechnology sector growth in India.
Global Commitments and Diplomacy
Aligns with:
UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD)
SDG 14 (Life Below Water)
Enhances India’s profile as a responsible ocean power
Data, Facts and Value Addition
India’s EEZ: ~2.37 million sq km
Deep sea share of Earth: ~65%
Undiscovered species: ~90% (UNESCO estimates)
Bhavasagara collection: 3500+ specimens
Deep Ocean Mission: ₹4,000+ crore outlay
Deep-sea ecosystems contribute significantly to global carbon sequestration (~30% oceanic carbon storage)
Challenges and Limitations
Scientific and Human Resource Constraints
Acute shortage of trained taxonomists (“taxonomic crisis”)
Limited interdisciplinary expertise combining biology, oceanography, and genetics
Technological and Financial Constraints
Deep-sea exploration requires:
High-cost submersibles
Remote Operated Vehicles (ROVs)
Continued reliance on foreign technology increases strategic vulnerability
Governance and Coordination Issues
Institutional fragmentation across:
MoES, MoEFCC, Fisheries Ministry
Weak integration of scientific data into policymaking
Environmental Risks
Deep-sea mining can cause:
Irreversible biodiversity loss
Habitat destruction with long recovery cycles
Lack of globally standardised deep-sea EIA frameworks
Data Accessibility and Sharing
Limited integration with global biodiversity platforms like OBIS, GBIF
Need for open-access, interoperable databases
Way Forward
Launch a National Mission on Taxonomy and Marine Biodiversity to bridge human resource gaps
Develop indigenous deep-sea technologies (e.g., Matsya-6000 submersible)
Establish a Unified Ocean Governance Authority for better coordination
Adopt a precautionary approach to deep-sea mining with strong EIAs
Build AI-enabled biodiversity databases for real-time species identification
Strengthen international partnerships with International Seabed Authority (ISA)
Promote blue biotechnology startups through policy incentives
Prelims Pointers
“Bhavasagara” → National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna (Kochi)
Hosted by → CMLRE under Ministry of Earth Sciences
Legal basis → Biological Diversity Act, 2002
Key roles → Voucher specimens, Type specimens, DNA data storage
Linked initiative → Deep Ocean Mission