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Jun 17, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Analysis - 17 June 2026 Contents01 Iconic Bridges — Pillars of India’s Infrastructure Transformation Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH) · 12-Year Review GS 3GS 1 02 Parliamentary Standing Committee’s 381st Report — Higher Education Department of Higher Education · Ministry of Education · ATR on 364th Report GS 2GS 3GS 1 Article 01 Article 01 Iconic Bridges — Pillars of India’s Infrastructure Transformation Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH) · 12-Year Infrastructure Review (2014–2026) Relevance: GS 3 (Infrastructure, Science & Technology) · GS 1 (Geography — rivers, physical features, strategic connectivity). GS 3GS 1 Key Data at a Glance 9.15 kmDhola–Sadiya (Bhupen Hazarika Setu) — India’s longest river bridge at time of opening 1.8 kmGanga Bridge, Bihar (Aunta–Simaria, NH-31) — India’s widest extradosed bridge; 34-m deck 60 tonnesMilitary load capacity of Dhola–Sadiya (Arjun MBT + T-72 tanks) 300 mPier-free cable-suspended stretch at Chambal Bridge, Kota — protects wildlife sanctuary 1,46,570+ kmTotal National Highway network; 16,788 km in hill states Aug 2025Inauguration of new 6-lane Ganga Bridge (Aunta–Simaria) by Prime Minister Issue in Brief MoRTH has delivered a series of landmark bridge projects (2014–2026) connecting remote and strategically important regions across India. These bridges represent a shift from reactive maintenance of colonial-era infrastructure to proactive, design-led engineering using extradosed, cable-stayed and beam technologies. Core policy rationale: infrastructure-led development as the engine of regional integration, economic growth and national security. Static Background India has one of the world’s largest river systems — the Ganga, Brahmaputra, Narmada, Chambal, Lohit and their tributaries form natural barriers that historically isolated communities and slowed logistics. MoRTH manages India’s National Highway network (1,46,570+ km); bridges are a critical node, especially in hilly, riverine and border-adjacent terrain. Three key bridge types in use: Extradosed bridges (hybrid of cable-stayed and prestressed box-girder; ideal for medium-to-long spans); Cable-stayed bridges (stay cables from towers; efficient for wide single-span crossings); Beam bridges (horizontal beams; used for very long crossings like Dhola–Sadiya). Strategic context: border infrastructure has been a long-standing weakness; the Dhola–Sadiya Bridge directly addresses the historical disconnect between Assam and Arunachal Pradesh, relevant to India’s posture vis-à-vis China. Key Dimensions — Five Iconic Bridges New Saraighat Bridge, Guwahati (Brahmaputra): 1.49 km; runs parallel to the historic Old Saraighat Bridge; eases congestion on one of Northeast India’s busiest corridors; strengthens the East–West Corridor on NH-27, a strategic lifeline for all eight northeastern states. Chambal Bridge, Kota (Rajasthan): 1.4 km; India’s first 6-lane single plane cable-stayed bridge; inaugurated August 2017; a 300-metre cable-suspended, pier-free stretch protects the National Chambal Gharial Wildlife Sanctuary — home to the endangered gharial, red-crowned roof turtle and Ganges River dolphin. Narmada Bridge, Bharuch (Gujarat): 1.34 km; extradosed design with one of India’s longest spans; opened March 2017 (completed in 34 months); part of the Ahmedabad–Mumbai section of NH-8. Ganga Bridge, Bihar (Aunta–Simaria, NH-31): 1.8 km; India’s widest extradosed bridge — 34-metre deck; span range 57 m to 115 m with 70-m cantilever arms; built parallel to the Rajendra Setu (70-year-old rail-cum-road bridge inadequate for heavy vehicles); inaugurated August 2025; provides direct North–South Bihar link. Dhola–Sadiya Bridge (Lohit River, Assam–Arunachal): 9.15 km; also known as Bhupen Hazarika Setu; first permanent road link between northern Assam and eastern Arunachal Pradesh; beam bridge design; carries 60-tonne military load (Arjun MBT + T-72) — significant dual-use strategic value for the Eastern Command. Critical Analysis — Strengths The wildlife-sensitive design at Chambal sets a replicable precedent for biodiversity-conscious engineering — aligns with India’s obligations under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 and Environment Protection Act, 1986. Dhola–Sadiya’s military-load capacity reflects integration of civilian and defence infrastructure planning — critical given LAC dynamics in Arunachal Pradesh. Extradosed technology at Bharuch and Bihar reduces span cost per metre while maintaining quality — cost-effective modernisation of bridge design. Replacement of the Rajendra Setu corridor resolves a bottleneck that persisted for seven decades, directly improving freight logistics in the BIMARU region. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The PIB source is a government self-assessment — independent lifecycle evaluations (maintenance quality, actual post-inauguration traffic data) are absent. Northeast connectivity still has significant gaps beyond flagship projects; focus on iconic structures can obscure the need for lower-tier road and bridge upgrades in the sub-trunk network. Environmental impact assessments for riverine infrastructure are rarely published in full; the Chambal example is commendable but not yet the institutional norm for all NH bridge projects. No mention of rehabilitation of displaced communities — large bridge projects in riverine zones often affect riparian populations. Way Forward Institutionalise wildlife and ecological corridor impact assessments as a mandatory pre-condition for all riverine NH projects, not just high-profile ones. Extend dual-use (civil + military) load standards to all bridge projects in border states — Arunachal, Sikkim, Ladakh, J&K, Uttarakhand — as a standard specification rather than exception. Develop a National Bridge Inventory and Health Monitoring System using IoT-based structural health sensors, especially for ageing bridges like the Old Saraighat and Rajendra Setu (still in operation). Bridge projects in the Northeast must integrate with multimodal connectivity (rail, IWT on Brahmaputra) under the PM Gati Shakti framework for full logistics efficiency. Prelims Pointers Bhupen Hazarika Setu: = Dhola–Sadiya Bridge; over Lohit River (Brahmaputra tributary); 9.15 km; connects Assam and Arunachal Pradesh; 60-tonne military load capacity. National Chambal Gharial Wildlife Sanctuary: home to gharial, red-crowned roof turtle, Ganges River dolphin — three endangered/vulnerable species. Extradosed bridge: hybrid of cable-stayed and prestressed girder; used at Bharuch (Narmada) and Aunta–Simaria (Ganga). NH-27: East–West Corridor; New Saraighat Bridge (1.49 km) strengthens this route connecting North and South Guwahati. Rajendra Setu: ~70-year-old rail-cum-road bridge over Ganga, Bihar; now supplemented by a 6-lane extradosed bridge (inaugurated Aug 2025). MoRTH NH network: >1,46,570 km total; 16,788 km in hill states. Chambal Bridge (Kota): India’s first 6-lane cable-stayed bridge in Rajasthan; August 2017. Practice Mains Question “India’s bridge-building programme over the last decade reflects not just engineering ambition but also strategic and ecological intent.” Critically examine this statement with reference to specific bridge projects. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements about the Dhola–Sadiya Bridge: (1) It spans the Brahmaputra River directly. (2) It is designed to carry military tanks weighing up to 60 tonnes. (3) It is also known as Bhupen Hazarika Setu. Which of the above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The 300-metre cable-suspended (pier-free) stretch of the Chambal Bridge, Kota, was specifically designed to protect: A) The Ranthambore Tiger ReserveB) The National Chambal Gharial Wildlife SanctuaryC) The Chambal Ravine Biosphere ReserveD) The Ken–Betwa River Interlinking Project zone Q3. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): The new six-lane Ganga bridge at Aunta–Simaria was built parallel to the Rajendra Setu rather than replacing it. Reason (R): The Rajendra Setu is a rail-cum-road bridge that is structurally inadequate for heavy vehicles due to age and extensive repairs. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true Article 02 Article 02 Parliamentary Standing Committee’s 381st Report — Higher Education Department of Higher Education · Ministry of Education · ATR on 364th Report (Demands for Grants 2025–26) · 16 June 2026 Relevance: GS 2 (Governance, Parliamentary oversight, education policy, social justice, institutions) · GS 3 (Economy — education financing) · GS 1 (Social issues — equity in education). GS 2GS 3GS 1 Key Data at a Glance 18Recommendations “not accepted” (Chapter III) — government replies deemed evasive; most exam-relevant category ₹55,727 crDoHE allocation FY 2026–27 (11.28% increase); NEP 6% of GDP target still unmet at 4.12% 12 of 20Institutions of Eminence notified — 8 pending even after 8 years of the scheme ₹7.5 lakhCGFSEL guarantee cover frozen since 2015; Committee demands ₹20 lakh 78%Average share of HEFA-borrowing institute revenue sourced from student fees (NIPFP finding) ₹128 crIIIT (PPP) capital cost frozen at 2010 levels — never inflation-indexed over 15 years Issue in Brief The 381st Report of the Department-related Parliamentary Standing Committee on Education, Women, Children, Youth and Sports (chaired by Digvijaya Singh, MP, Rajya Sabha) is an Action Taken Report (ATR) reviewing the government’s response to the 364th Report on Demands for Grants 2025–26 of the Department of Higher Education (DoHE). Of 102 recommendations — 61 accepted, 23 not pursued, 18 not accepted (Chapter III), 0 awaited. Chapter III flags live, unresolved policy gaps where the Committee formally rejected government replies as evasive or boilerplate. The Committee’s overarching concern: the Ministry of Finance’s dominance over DoHE allocations and the executive’s recurring use of procedural boilerplate in place of substantive replies — undermining parliamentary oversight. Static Background Parliamentary Standing Committees are permanent committees attached to ministries; they scrutinise budgets, legislation and policy, and present ATRs on whether governments have acted on recommendations — a core instrument of legislative oversight over the executive. ATR categories: Accepted (government agreed); Not pursued (Committee satisfied); Not accepted (Committee dissatisfied, reiterated); Awaited. “Not accepted” is the most policy-sensitive category. National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 targets 50% GER in higher education by 2035 and 6% of GDP on education; India is at 4.12% of GDP (2021–22), up from 3.84% (2013–14). Constitutional basis: Education is on the Concurrent List (Entry 25, List III, Seventh Schedule) — both Parliament and State Legislatures can legislate; Article 15(5) enables reservation in private unaided educational institutions (93rd Constitutional Amendment, 2005). Key Dimensions — Budget & Financing DoHE allocation: BE 2025–26 = ₹50,077.95 crore (revised to ₹51,381.67 crore at RE); FY 2026–27 = ₹55,727.22 crore (11.28% increase). DoHE’s own projection was ₹56,993.56 crore — a ~12% haircut by MoF, illustrating DoHE’s position as a price-taker in the Union budget process. NEP 2020 target of 6% of GDP remains unmet; India at 4.12% (2021–22); comparisons cited by Committee: Bhutan 7.47%, Maldives 4.67%. GFR Rule 56(3): caps Q4 expenditure at 33% and March at 15% to prevent rush of expenditure; DoHE faced scrutiny over lagging mid-year spend. Key Dimensions — Education Loan Architecture (Chapter III — Not Accepted) PM-Vidyalaxmi (launched November 2024): collateral-free, guarantor-free loans up to ₹10 lakh; 3% interest subvention for family income up to ₹8 lakh — but only for students in Quality HEIs (QHEIs). Students in non-QHEIs are excluded — an equity paradox penalising students who cannot access elite institutions. PM-USP CSIS (Credit Interest Subsidy Scheme): income ceiling stuck at ₹4.5 lakh — Committee calls this inadequate and reiterates a uniform ₹8 lakh ceiling across all schemes, all institutions, without QHEI conditionality. Priority Sector Lending (PSL) limit: RBI raised from ₹20 lakh to ₹25 lakh; Committee demands ₹50 lakh — gap reflects escalating cost of professional and technical education. CGFSEL (Credit Guarantee Fund Scheme for Education Loans): guarantee cover frozen at ₹7.5 lakh since 2015 despite a decade of inflation; Committee demands ₹20 lakh; government’s vague “revisit at renewal” assurance explicitly rejected as “not convincing.” Key Dimensions — Institutional Governance Institutions of Eminence (IoE): only 12 of 20 notified — eight years after the scheme’s launch; Committee’s unaddressed ask: include institutions excelling in social sciences and humanities (specifically citing JNU); demands a time-bound roadmap for notifying the remaining 8. HEFA (Higher Education Financing Agency): Section-8 NBFC; fell far short of its ₹1 lakh crore target (~21.5% met); NIPFP-commissioned review found 78% of internal revenue of HEFA-borrowing institutes comes from student fees — DoHE reportedly asked institutions to raise fees to repay HEFA loans, effectively privatising public education costs onto students. NTA and Exam Integrity: post the 2024 paper-leak crisis (NEET/UGC-NET cancellations), two bodies were set up — HLCE (High-Level Committee of Experts, reported 21.10.2024) and the Dr. K. Radhakrishnan High-Powered Steering Committee to monitor HLCE implementation; Committee’s finding: paper irregularities continue despite these interventions; demands a time-bound implementation roadmap. NAAC: bribery scandal under CBI investigation; reforms include online/hybrid visits, recording proceedings; long-term pathway: Binary Accreditation → Maturity-Based Graded Levels (MBGLs) per a separate Dr. K. Radhakrishnan High-Level Committee. Key Dimensions — Data, Research & Finance AISHE (Annual Survey of Higher Education): reports for 2022–23, 2023–24 and 2024–25 all unpublished — to be released together, defeating the purpose of an annual survey; still collects institution-level data; Committee demands shift to student-level data (as in school-sector UDISE+) for de-duplication and accurate SC/ST/OBC/EWS tracking. 7th Pay Commission in ICSSR institutes: recommendations still pending implementation; flagged in the 364th and 371st Reports previously; affecting ability to attract and retain quality researchers. IIITs (PPP Mode): funding ratio Centre:State:Industry = 50:35:15 (57.5:35:7.5 in Northeast); ₹128 crore approved capital cost frozen at 2010 levels — never inflation-indexed; 14 of 20 IIITs (PPP) lack full state/industry funding; students ineligible for PMRF/JRF; Committee demands one-time grant-based capital infusion. ONOS (One Nation One Subscription): 30 publishers signed; per-institution journal cost reduced from ₹37 lakh to ₹29 lakh; active user uptake at ~5,600 of 6,300–7,008 targeted institutions. Key Dimensions — Equity, Language & Social Justice Reservation in private HEIs: Committee demands legislation under Article 15(5); government deflects to states — central buck-passing on a concurrent-list subject; several state Acts exist (Maharashtra, Karnataka, UP, Bihar, Arunachal). Santhali/Ol Chiki: entered 8th Schedule in 2003; Committee wants UPSC/UGC-NET papers in Ol Chiki script and a National Council for Santhali; tangible step — CIIL, Mysuru produced the Constitution in Ol Chiki, released by the President in 2025. Student mental health: Supreme Court-constituted National Task Force under Justice (Retd.) S. Ravindra Bhat (24.03.2025) on student suicides — linked to Criminal Appeal No. 1425/2025 (Amit Kumar & Ors vs Union of India); supported by Manodarpan and Tele-MANAS. Northeast: IIM Amendment Act 2025 approved IIM Guwahati as India’s 22nd IIM; ₹555 crore for IIM Assam infrastructure; PM-USHA (successor to RUSA) — FY25–26 allocation only ₹1,815 crore against a 50% GER by 2035 target. Critical Analysis — Strengths A proactive Committee with rigorous oversight — explicit rejection of 18 boilerplate replies demonstrates that parliamentary scrutiny can still hold the executive accountable. Budget increments are real (11.28% increase FY 2026–27), and PM-Vidyalaxmi represents a structural improvement over earlier collateral-heavy loan models. NTA and NAAC reform processes show institutional responsiveness to crisis, even if incomplete. ONOS demonstrates cost-effective procurement — per-institution journal cost reduced from ₹37 lakh to ₹29 lakh. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The QHEI conditionality in PM-Vidyalaxmi creates a structural equity trap: poorer students in weaker institutions — who most need financial support — are excluded, while students in elite institutions qualify. This inverts redistributive intent. HEFA’s design flaw — debt-financed infrastructure repaid through student fees — reveals a fundamental tension between infrastructure investment and access equity in public higher education. The frozen ₹4.5 lakh income ceiling (PM-USP CSIS) and the ₹7.5 lakh CGFSEL cap (unchanged since 2015) reflect a failure to index policy parameters to inflation — a recurring structural problem across Indian social sector schemes. IoE scheme’s underperformance (12/20 after 8 years) reflects weak inter-ministerial coordination and an overly narrow definition of “eminence” skewed toward STEM institutions. AISHE’s three-year data gap undermines evidence-based policymaking, particularly for SC/ST/OBC/EWS enrolment tracking. Way Forward Delink financial assistance from institutional quality rankings — income should be the sole criterion for loan subvention and guarantee cover; remove the QHEI conditionality. Raise CGFSEL cover to ₹20 lakh and PSL limit to ₹50 lakh through coordinated DoHE–MoF–RBI engagement, with inflation-indexed review every three years. Establish a fixed statutory timeline for AISHE publication and transition to student-level data collection on the UDISE+ model. IoE scheme: notify remaining 8 institutions on a defined schedule; expand criteria to include social science and humanities institutions. Implement 7th Pay Commission arrears for ICSSR institutes without further delay — loss of research talent is a compounding cost. HEFA: restructure as a grant-making body for public-good institutions, or cap fee-recovery obligations, ensuring public institutions are not forced to cost-shift onto students. Prelims Pointers 381st Report: ATR on 364th Report (Demands for Grants 2025–26, DoHE); Committee chaired by Digvijaya Singh (RS MP); 18 “not accepted” (Chapter III). PM-Vidyalaxmi (Nov 2024): collateral/guarantor-free; 3% subvention up to ₹8 lakh income; only for Quality HEIs (QHEIs); loans up to ₹10 lakh. PM-USP components: CSIS (interest subsidy, ≤₹4.5 lakh income), CGFSEL (credit guarantee, ≤₹7.5 lakh loan), CSSS (scholarships), SSSJKL (J&K/Ladakh). CGFSEL: guarantee cover ₹7.5 lakh frozen since 2015; Committee demands ₹20 lakh. PSL limit: RBI revised ₹20→₹25 lakh; Committee wants ₹50 lakh. IoE: 12 of 20 notified after 8 years. HEFA: Section-8 NBFC; 78% of HEFA-institute revenue from student fees (NIPFP finding). NEP 2020: 6% of GDP target; India at 4.12% (2021–22). AISHE: 3 years (2022–25) unreleased; institution-level data only. NAAC: bribery scandal; CBI probe; reform pathway → Binary Accreditation → MBGLs. NTA: HLCE + Dr. K. Radhakrishnan Steering Committee post 2024 paper-leak crisis. ONOS: One Nation One Subscription; 30 publishers; per-institution cost ₹37→₹29 lakh. ICSSR 7th Pay Commission: pending; flagged in 364th, 371st, 381st Reports. CIIL, Mysuru: produced Constitution in Ol Chiki script (released by President, 2025). IIITs (PPP): capital cost frozen at ₹128 crore since 2010; funding ratio 50:35:15. GFR Rule 56(3): caps last-quarter spend at 33%, March at 15%. National Task Force on student mental health: chaired by Justice (Retd.) S. Ravindra Bhat (March 2025). IIM Amendment Act 2025: IIM Guwahati approved as India’s 22nd IIM; ₹555 crore for IIM Assam infrastructure. Article 15(5): enables reservation in private HEIs (93rd Constitutional Amendment, 2005). Education — Concurrent List, Entry 25, List III. Practice Mains Question “Parliamentary Standing Committees serve as the most effective instrument of legislative oversight over higher education policy in India.” Critically examine this claim in the light of the 381st Report on Higher Education. GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements about PM-Vidyalaxmi: (1) It provides collateral-free and guarantor-free education loans. (2) The 3% interest subvention is available to all students regardless of the type of institution they attend. (3) It was launched in November 2024. Which are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. Match List I (Scheme/Body) with List II (Key Feature): A. CGFSEL · B. HEFA · C. ONOS · D. AISHE // 1. Guarantee cover frozen at ₹7.5 lakh since 2015 · 2. Section-8 NBFC; ~78% revenue from student fees (NIPFP finding) · 3. Per-institution journal cost reduced from ₹37 to ₹29 lakh · 4. Three annual reports unreleased; institution-level data only. Choose the correct match: A) A-1, B-2, C-3, D-4B) A-2, B-1, C-4, D-3C) A-1, B-3, C-2, D-4D) A-3, B-2, C-1, D-4 Q3. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Education marked 18 recommendations as “not accepted” in its 381st Report. Reason (R): The government’s replies to these recommendations were comprehensive and addressed all specific concerns raised by the Committee. A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true

Jun 17, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Editorial Analysis - 17 June 2026 Contents01 SC's Message: Campus Distress Has Social Causes Kaushik Das Gupta, Senior Associate Editor · Indian Express · Student suicides, campus exclusion, NTF interim report GS 1 — SocietyGS 2 — Social Justice & GovernanceEssay 02 India at Évian: Shaping the G7's Global Agenda Kaushik Das Gupta, Senior Associate Editor · Indian Express · G7 Summit, Critical Minerals, AI Governance, CBAM, Global South GS 2 — International RelationsGS 3 — Economy & EnergyEssay Data-sourcing note: NTF constitution, survey figures, SC orders, G7 summit details (dates, venue, members, India's BRICS presidency), Baku COP29 climate finance pledge, and UGC Equity Regulations 2026 are search-verified. India's 100% import dependence on lithium, cobalt, and nickel is IEEFA-sourced and search-verified. Statements on CBAM's distributional impact, fiscal multiplier comparisons, and specific bilateral Modi–Trump trade discussions at Évian are editorially sourced and carried as the author's analytical claims. Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 SC's Message: Campus Distress Has Social Causes Kaushik Das Gupta — Senior Associate Editor, Indian Express Relevance: GS 2 (Social Justice, Education, Governance, Welfare of Vulnerable Sections), GS 1 (Society, Social Issues) and Essay (Dignity, Equality, Democratic Fabric) — the editorial uses the SC-appointed NTF's interim report on student suicides to argue that campus distress is rooted in structural social exclusion, not individual mental health failure. GS 1 — Society & Social IssuesGS 2 — Social Justice & GovernanceEssay — Dignity & Democratic Fabric 1 — Issue in Brief A Supreme Court-appointed National Task Force (NTF) chaired by Justice S. Ravindra Bhat submitted an interim report on student mental health, finding that 56 of 2,119 surveyed higher education institutions reported one or more student suicides between April 2020 and March 2025. The editorial uses this as a lens to argue campus distress is fundamentally a social and structural problem, not merely a mental health issue. Institutions overwhelmingly frame student suicides as individual failures — personal inability to handle pressure or academic stress. The author's central argument: this framing is a deflection that protects institutional reputation while overlooking cultures of exclusion, caste hierarchies, and socio-economic barriers embedded in campuses. A "social mismatch" between students (majority from SC, ST, OBC backgrounds, first-generation learners) and faculty (predominantly non-SC/ST/OBC) creates a structurally hostile environment that a mental health–centred approach alone cannot address. The reframing proposed: move from paternalistic mental health facilities to genuine institutional inclusion — where every student can flourish without having to navigate social and economic impediments. 2 — Static Background The Supreme Court constituted the NTF on 24 March 2025 via a bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and R. Mahadevan, while hearing a plea by parents of two Dalit students at IIT Delhi who died by suicide in 2023 amid allegations of caste-based discrimination. The NTF is a 12-member body headed by Justice S. Ravindra Bhat. Student suicides have surpassed farmer suicides in absolute numbers, with a 4% rise in 2024 alone. The SC identified causal factors including academic pressure, caste-based discrimination, financial stress, and sexual harassment — with IITs and NITs reporting high rates linked to exam failures. Post-Independence context: reservations, scholarships, and new institutions opened doors to historically disadvantaged communities. Yet the editorial argues admission does not ipso facto guarantee dignity or equal opportunity — subtle prejudices, language barriers, and financial insecurity persist alongside formal access. The NTF surveyed over 2.43 lakh students across 2,119 HEIs; SC, ST, and OBC students comprised 67% of the student sample. About 39% of students worried at least sometimes whether their academic choices would lead to stable or meaningful employment. The NTF found that only 35% of institutions provided access to mental health service providers; 73% (1,573 institutions) had no full-time mental health professional. Mandatory committees and support cells existed largely on paper — ineffective, non-transparent, and student-unfriendly. 3 — Key Dimensions The "social mismatch" problem: The editorial identifies that more than 65% of faculty in IITs, NITs, and private institutions are from non-SC/ST/OBC communities — meaning most students from marginalised backgrounds navigate unfamiliar environments without relatable mentors or cultural safety. Faculty diversity directly shapes whether vulnerability is met with support or stigma. First-generation learner disadvantage: Students from historically disadvantaged social groups enter campuses without cultural capital — informal networks, norms, and codes — that their more privileged peers inherit. This invisible disadvantage compounds academic pressure and heightens the risk of social alienation. Institutional complaint systems as gatekeepers: The NTF found mandatory anti-discrimination committees were frequently inaccessible, reputation-protecting, and student-unfriendly — creating an environment where reporting discrimination or distress felt futile or even risky for the complainant. SC/ST faculty vacancies as structural failure: SC/ST faculty vacancies in IITs reportedly stand at 30–40%, undermining the potential for diverse mentorship — the most sustained preventive against campus discrimination and the sense of alienation that drives distress. Scholarship delays as an acute trigger: Delayed disbursement of scholarships creates financial precarity for first-generation learners who have no family safety net, compounding academic pressure and making dropout — or worse — more likely. High dropout rates as a symptom: Elevated dropout rates among SC, ST, and OBC communities signal that admission is the beginning, not the end, of the equity challenge — structural support for retention is systematically absent across India's premier institutions. 4 — Critical Analysis In Favour — Situates the crisis correctly: The editorial's social-structural framing aligns with what the SC itself observed — that these are not individual acts of despair but symptoms of deeper institutional and structural deficits. A purely mental-health response treats the symptom while the structural disease persists, leaving the root cause unaddressed. In Favour — Faculty diversity as structural intervention: Recommending faculty diversity as a core fix moves beyond palliative counselling toward root-cause intervention. Who teaches shapes campus culture just as much as what is taught — a diverse faculty signals belonging and provides mentorship pathways that cannot be replicated by a counselling cell. In Favour — Accountability in complaint systems: Flagging inaccessible and reputation-protecting complaint mechanisms identifies a concrete institutional failure — not a student's inability to cope. Shifting moral responsibility to institutions where it belongs is analytically sound and constitutionally grounded. In Favour — Democratic stakes: The editorial's argument that marginalised students facing humiliation or exclusion weakens the country's democratic fabric elevates this from a welfare concern to a governance and constitutional imperative — connecting campus inclusion to Articles 14, 15, and 21. Against — Mental health is not irrelevant: The social-structural argument, while valid, risks understating the legitimate role of mental health care. Both dimensions are necessary and complementary; the editorial occasionally sets them in opposition rather than recognising their co-dependence in addressing student distress. Against — Counselling-bashing may deter help-seeking: Framing counselling as "paternalistic protection" may inadvertently signal that seeking mental health support is an inferior response, potentially deterring students in acute distress from accessing even the limited services that currently exist on campuses. Against — No clear implementation roadmap: The editorial diagnoses with clarity but prescribes vaguely — "fill faculty vacancies" and "reshape inclusion" are correct directions but lack specificity on timelines, enforcement mechanisms, incentive structures, or accountability frameworks. Against — Causal attribution is legally complex: While structural discrimination is documented, individual suicides involve multiple simultaneous stressors. Singular structural attribution risks oversimplification and can complicate institutional accountability determinations in legal proceedings. 5 — Way Forward Fill SC/ST/OBC faculty vacancies through Special Recruitment Drives (SRDs) mandated across IITs and premier institutions — with measurable targets and time-bound compliance requirements. Diverse faculty is the most sustained structural preventive against campus discrimination and alienation. Reform institutional complaint mechanisms to be independently monitored, student-friendly, and time-bound — with protection from retaliation and mandatory third-party audits. The pattern of committees that protect institutional reputation over student welfare must end through enforceable accountability. Institute real-time DBT-linked scholarship disbursement — the SC has mandated clearance of pending dues within four months — eliminating financial precarity that compounds academic stress for BPL and first-generation learners with no family safety net. Faithfully implement the UGC Equity Regulations 2026, which convert inclusion from aspiration to obligation with legally enforceable penalties for caste-based discrimination — strengthening the 2012 advisory framework's toothless predecessor. Integrate diversity and inclusion metrics into NAAC and NBA accreditation criteria — faculty diversity ratios, SC/ST dropout rates, complaint resolution timelines, and student satisfaction surveys — aligning institutional incentives with equity outcomes. Implement the NTF final report through a dedicated Supreme Court–monitored framework rather than allowing it to be archived. The interim report (October 2025) and final report (drawing on surveys of nearly 16 lakh students) represent an unparalleled evidence base that must translate into binding institutional reform. 6 — Data & Key Facts 24 Mar 2025SC constituted the NTF; chaired by Justice S. Ravindra Bhat (former SC judge); 12-member body 2.43 lakh+Students surveyed by NTF across 2,119 higher education institutions; 67% SC/ST/OBC 56 / 2,119HEIs that reported at least one student suicide between April 2020 and March 2025 73%HEIs (1,573 of 2,119) with no full-time mental health professional; only 35% had access to any provider 30–40%Reported SC/ST faculty vacancy in IITs — structural gap in diverse mentorship (reported figure) 39%Students who worried at least sometimes whether education would lead to stable or meaningful employment Tele MANAS: Government of India's 24×7 mental health helpline; 1,54,046 college students aged 18–25 contacted it between October 2022 and October 2025 — quantifying the scale of unmet campus mental health need. UGC Equity Regulations 2026: Legally enforceable regulations against caste-based discrimination in HEIs (covering SC, ST, and OBC); replace the 2012 advisory framework which had no enforcement powers or penal provisions. Student suicides vs farmer suicides: Student suicides have now exceeded farmer suicides in absolute numbers (4% rise in 2024) — a demographic and governance alarm the SC itself cited in constituting the NTF. 7 — Prelims Pointers NTF — constituted 24 Mar 2025 per SC order in Amit Kumar & Ors v Union of India; chaired by Justice S. Ravindra Bhat (retired SC judge); 12 members; mandate: study causes, review regulations, recommend preventive measures for student suicides in HEIs Tele MANAS — Government of India 24×7 mental health helpline; 1,54,046 college students (18–25 yrs) contacted it Oct 2022–Oct 2025; scalable digital mental health access point UGC Equity Regulations 2026 — legally enforceable; covers SC, ST, OBC; penal provisions for caste-based discrimination; replaces toothless 2012 advisory framework; notified after SC permitted UGC to finalise draft Cultural Capital — sociological concept (Bourdieu); informal networks, codes, and dispositions inherited by privileged students but absent in first-generation learners; central to understanding campus inequality NAAC / NBA — National Assessment & Accreditation Council / National Board of Accreditation; bodies that accredit HEIs; equity metrics could be integrated into their assessment criteria Articles 15 & 16 — prohibit discrimination and mandate equality of opportunity; Articles 16(4) and 16(4A) constitute the constitutional basis for SC/ST reservation in faculty appointments Exam note: The NTF is a Supreme Court-appointed body, not a UGC or MHRD/MoE committee — its independence and court-oversight are constitutionally significant. Also recall: student suicides have surpassed farmer suicides in absolute numbers (2024 data) — a counterintuitive fact likely to appear in data-based MCQs or essay contexts. Justice Ravindra Bhat is a retired (former) SC judge, not a sitting one. 8 — Practice Mains Question "Admission into higher education is a necessary but not sufficient condition for equal opportunity in India." Critically examine this statement in light of the structural barriers faced by students from marginalised communities on Indian campuses.GS 1 / GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Society + Social Justice + Governance Intro: Post-Independence access expansion vs persistence of invisible hierarchies on campus; link to SC NTF findings — student suicides as symptoms of structural deficit, not individual failure. Body 1 — Structural barriers: Social mismatch (faculty diversity gap, 65%+ non-SC/ST/OBC faculty); cultural capital deficit; scholarship disbursement delays; inaccessible complaint systems; elevated SC/ST/OBC dropout rates — each rooted in institutional design, not student inadequacy. Body 2 — Institutional responses and limits: Counselling-centric model vs social-structural intervention; UGC Equity Regulations 2026; mandatory anti-discrimination committees that remain largely dormant; the SC-mandated NTF as a corrective mechanism. Conclusion: True equal opportunity requires converting constitutional intent (Articles 14, 15, 16, 21) into campus-level institutional design — diverse faculty, accessible redress, reliable scholarships, and equity-linked accreditation. When marginalised students face exclusion, the democratic fabric itself is weakened. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the Supreme Court's National Task Force (NTF) on student suicides in higher educational institutions: 1. It is chaired by Justice S. Ravindra Bhat, a sitting judge of the Supreme Court. 2. It was constituted pursuant to a Supreme Court order in March 2025 in the case of Amit Kumar & Ors v Union of India. 3. The NTF's interim survey found that a majority of surveyed higher educational institutions lacked a full-time mental health professional. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 India at Évian: Shaping the G7's Global Agenda Kaushik Das Gupta — Senior Associate Editor, Indian Express Relevance: GS 2 (India's Foreign Policy, International Relations, Bilateral Diplomacy), GS 3 (Energy Transition, Critical Minerals, AI Governance, Climate Finance, Economic Security) and Essay (Multilateralism, Global South, Viksit Bharat) — the editorial uses PM Modi's participation in the 52nd G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains to map India's strategic interests and its unique role as a bridge between the G7 and the Global South. GS 2 — International RelationsGS 3 — Economy, Energy & TechnologyEssay — Multilateralism & Global South Current Status Update (search-verified) The 52nd G7 Summit is being held on 15–17 June 2026 at Évian-les-Bains, Haute-Savoie, France — under France's G7 Presidency. This is Évian's second time hosting a G7/G8 Summit, the first being the 29th G8 Summit in 2003. G7 members are Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK, USA, and the EU. India has been invited as an outreach partner, along with Brazil, Kenya, South Korea, and Syria. This is PM Modi's 8th consecutive G7 Summit. India simultaneously holds the BRICS Presidency in 2026 — the same year France holds the G7 chair — placing India at the intersection of both Western and non-Western multilateral frameworks. The summit's core agenda covers global economic imbalances (China overproduces, US over-consumes, Europe underinvests), the future of AI governance, the war in Ukraine, the West Asia situation post-Iran deal, and coordination on critical minerals supply chains. 1 — Issue in Brief The editorial argues India should approach Évian not as a passive invitee but as a "participant helping shape outcomes" — carrying the voice of the Global South while pursuing its own strategic interests in critical minerals, AI governance, energy security, and global economic architecture reform. The G7 is no longer the dominant body it was in the mid-1970s — the rise of emerging economies and the 2008 financial crisis changed that. Yet it remains influential in setting standards, shaping financial flows, and coordinating on trade, climate, and technology — making its agenda directly consequential for India. Key tensions at Évian that directly intersect India's interests: the CBAM trade barrier masquerading as climate policy; the fragmentation of global supply chains through economic coercion; inadequate climate finance from developed countries; and the risk of AI governance being shaped exclusively by the US–China binary. India's guiding approach, the editorial argues, should be strategic engagement without exclusive alignment — its democratic credentials, market size, and non-alignment tradition uniquely position it to shape debates before the rules harden into binding global frameworks. 2 — Static Background G7 — origin and structure: Founded following the 1973 OPEC oil embargo as a forum for the world's richest nations to discuss economic crises. Combined GDP exceeds $50 trillion — nearly half the world economy. It is an informal body with no permanent secretariat or legal status; its influence is normative and agenda-setting rather than binding. India's G7 engagement: India has attended G7 Outreach sessions with growing regularity; Évian is Modi's 8th consecutive summit. France invited India (among others) given India's importance as a stable democracy, growing economy, and — crucially — as the 2026 BRICS Presidency holder, making India a critical interlocutor between the G7 and non-Western blocs. Baku COP29 climate finance commitment: Developed countries agreed at COP29 (Baku, Nov 2024) to mobilise at least $300 billion annually by 2035 for climate finance — falling well short of what developing nations sought, and arriving largely as loans rather than grants. The CBAM operates against this backdrop of unfulfilled climate finance obligations. CBAM (Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism): EU instrument taxing imports of steel, aluminium, cement, and fertiliser based on embedded carbon emissions. Falls disproportionately on developing-country producers — including India — whose industries remain coal-dependent because finance and cleaner technologies for a faster transition are unavailable. India's critical mineral import dependence: India is 100% import-dependent for lithium, cobalt, and nickel (IEEFA). Demand for critical minerals is expected to more than double by 2030, with domestic mines taking over a decade to begin operations — making international supply-chain partnerships a strategic necessity. G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan (2025): Formulated to diversify supply chains for strategic minerals including lithium, cobalt, graphite, copper, and rare earths — explicitly aimed at reducing dependence on China. India's interests align directly with this plan. 3 — Key Dimensions Critical minerals — genuine convergence: Securing lithium, cobalt, nickel, and rare earth supplies is central to the energy transition and advanced manufacturing. India's efforts to diversify sourcing (reducing dependence on China for synthetic graphite, pursuing partnerships with Mozambique, Madagascar, Tanzania) complement G7 objectives — creating a rare space of mutual benefit rather than transactional bargaining. AI governance — India's credibility: AI raises questions of governance, standards, safety, and technological leadership. Data centres and advanced computing are becoming major energy consumers. India's democratic governance record, digital infrastructure scale (Aadhaar, UPI), and experience as a GPAI founding member give it credibility to advocate for inclusive, multilateral AI standards rather than a US–China binary. Energy duality — speaking from experience: India has expanded renewable deployment guided by affordability and supply security, yet hydrocarbons still underpin growth. As a major energy consumer that has expanded renewables without geopolitical coercion, India can speak about the energy transition from lived experience — neither abandoning coal recklessly nor resisting transition ideologically. Economic security vs fragmentation: The editorial argues India's interest lies in resilience that broadens options, not narrows them. Security pursued through sanctions, coercion, and forced trade produces the very fragmentation it seeks to prevent — the growing gap between free-trade principles and market-distorting practices is a theme India can credibly highlight. CBAM — climate policy as trade barrier: The CBAM taxes countries that cannot afford to decarbonise rapidly. The editorial notes it is perverse for the developed world — which committed to funding the green transition — to then tax countries that cannot afford it. India can invoke CBDR (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities) to demand technology transfer and concessional finance rather than trade penalties. Multilateral Development Bank reform: Much of the Global South faces rising debt obligations and widening financing gaps. India can champion MDB reform — expanding lending capacity and shifting from risk-averse to development-oriented financing — addressing a structural constraint that limits climate action across the developing world. 4 — Critical Analysis In Favour — India as a structural bridge-builder: India's simultaneous presence in BRICS (as 2026 President) and the G7 Outreach table is a strategic advantage no other major economy occupies with the same natural legitimacy. It can articulate Global South concerns to the G7 while keeping non-Western blocs engaged with the global rules-based order. In Favour — Critical minerals as win-win: The alignment between India's supply-chain diversification needs and the G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan creates a rare space of genuine mutual benefit — India secures supply security; G7 gains a reliable democratic partner to reduce Chinese mineral monopoly. This is substantive, not merely symbolic. In Favour — AI from a democratic base: India's large-scale digital infrastructure, democratic governance, and GPAI membership give it credibility to push for inclusive, standards-based AI governance — a principled counterweight to the US–China domination of the global AI regulatory debate. In Favour — CBAM challenge as principled diplomacy: India's objection to CBAM is not protectionism — it is a legitimate invocation of CBDR under the UNFCCC and Paris Agreement. Évian is a platform to restate this principle and push for technology transfer and concessional finance as the correct climate mechanism for developing countries. Against — Structural outsider status: India remains an invited guest, not a G7 member. It can influence the agenda at the margins but cannot determine outcomes, veto decisions, or set the terms of engagement. Over-reading Évian's significance risks confusing diplomatic presence with structural power. Against — India–US trade tensions: Trade and tariffs are a key bilateral topic at Évian between Trump and Modi — ongoing tensions over India's tariff structures and trade surplus complicate India's ability to project a unified voice on global trade governance and economic openness. Against — BRICS–G7 tightrope: India's BRICS Presidency in 2026 makes de-dollarisation debates and alternatives to Western financial architecture live issues within BRICS. Balancing BRICS commitments with G7 alignment without being perceived as duplicitous or strategically ambiguous requires careful, sustained calibration. Against — Climate finance credibility gap: The $300 billion Baku commitment was already criticised as inadequate (developing nations demanded $1.3 trillion/year) and structured as loans rather than grants. India's advocacy for the Global South at Évian will be assessed against the sincerity and pace of follow-through on these existing commitments by G7 members. 5 — Way Forward Push for operationalisation of the G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan (2025) into binding supply-chain agreements — converting diplomatic goodwill into actual diversification away from Chinese mineral dependency for India and G7 partners alike, with concrete timelines and joint investment mechanisms. Champion reform of Multilateral Development Banks at Évian — shifting from risk-averse to development-oriented financing, addressing the rising debt burden of the Global South, and expanding concessional lending capacity to enable the green transition in developing economies. Maintain a principled CBDR-based objection to CBAM — calling for technology transfer and concessional finance to enable decarbonisation rather than trade penalties that punish the pace of transition. This is a position rooted in international law, not special pleading. Push for inclusive, multilateral AI standards-setting through the UN, ITU, and GPAI rather than allowing AI governance architecture to be determined bilaterally by the US and China. India's democratic credentials and digital scale make it a credible champion of this approach. Pursue strategic engagement without exclusive alignment — India's BRICS Presidency, G7 Outreach participation, and non-alignment tradition collectively enable it to shape global standards before they harden. As the editorial notes: "In a world where today's discussions become tomorrow's rules, it is far better to help write them than to inherit them." 6 — Data & Key Facts 52nd G7Summit; 15–17 June 2026; Évian-les-Bains, France; France's G7 Presidency; second time Évian hosts $50 trillion+G7 combined GDP — approximately half of the world economy 8thConsecutive G7 Summit for PM Modi; India invited as outreach partner along with Brazil, Kenya, South Korea $300 billionAnnual climate finance pledged by developed countries at Baku COP29 (Nov 2024) by 2035 — largely as loans 100%India's import dependence for lithium, cobalt, and nickel — making mineral partnerships a strategic necessity (IEEFA) BRICS 2026India holds BRICS Presidency in 2026, concurrent with France's G7 Chair — unique dual positioning G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan (2025): Formulated to secure supply chains for lithium, cobalt, graphite, copper, and rare earths; explicitly aimed at reducing China's dominance in critical mineral processing and supply. CBAM (EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism): Taxes imports of steel, aluminium, cement, fertiliser based on embedded carbon; disproportionately burdens developing-country exporters like India; contested under CBDR (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities) principle of UNFCCC/Paris Agreement. GPAI (Global Partnership on AI): Multilateral AI governance initiative; India is a founding member — a key credential for India's advocacy of inclusive, standards-based AI governance at G7 and UN forums. 7 — Prelims Pointers G7 — Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, UK, USA + EU; informal grouping; no permanent secretariat or legal status; combined GDP ~$50 trillion; founded post-1973 OPEC oil embargo; 52nd summit at Évian 2026 CBAM — EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism; taxes steel, aluminium, cement, fertiliser imports by embedded carbon; in full force from 2026; contested by India and developing countries as violating CBDR under UNFCCC CBDR — Common But Differentiated Responsibilities; UNFCCC principle (Rio 1992, Article 3); developed countries bear historically greater responsibility; must provide finance and technology to help developing countries transition G7 Critical Minerals Action Plan (2025) — diversify lithium, cobalt, graphite, copper, rare earth supply chains; reduce dependence on China; India participates in associated ministerial meetings GPAI — Global Partnership on AI; India is a founding member; multilateral forum for AI governance standards; relevant to India's push for inclusive AI architecture at G7 and UN levels Baku COP29 — Nov 2024; developed countries pledged $300 billion/year by 2035 for climate finance; widely criticised as insufficient (developing nations sought $1.3 trillion/year); largely structured as loans not grants Exam note: The G7 is an informal body with no legal status or permanent secretariat — distinguish from formal international organisations (UN, WTO, IMF). India is a G7 invitee/outreach partner, not a member. CBAM is an EU regulation, not a G7 or UN instrument. Also note: Évian hosted the G8 Summit in 2003 — 2026 is its second time hosting, making statement "first time" factually wrong in any MCQ. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's repeated invitation to the G7 reflects its growing global profile, but participation without membership limits the depth of India's influence in shaping the global economic order." Critically examine.GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · India's Foreign Policy + International Relations Intro: India's 8th consecutive G7 Summit at Évian; rising engagement as a marker of soft power, democratic credibility, and strategic importance as both a G7 Outreach partner and BRICS 2026 President. Body 1 — What India gains: Critical minerals alignment (G7 Action Plan convergence); AI governance voice (GPAI founding membership); CBAM challenge grounded in CBDR; MDB reform advocacy for Global South; bilateral opportunities (Modi–Trump trade normalisation). Body 2 — Structural limits: Invitee vs member status — cannot veto or determine outcomes; India–US tariff tensions; BRICS–G7 tightrope and risk of perceived ambiguity; $300 billion Baku pledge credibility gap limiting India's moral leverage. Conclusion: India's interest is not G7 membership but shaping the rules before they harden — in AI, minerals, climate finance, and MDB reform. Évian is an opportunity to engage as a co-author of global norms, not merely their inheritor. Strategic autonomy and multilateral engagement remain India's most sustainable diplomatic instruments. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains (June 2026): 1. It is the first time Évian-les-Bains has hosted a G7 or G8 Summit. 2. India holds the BRICS Presidency in 2026, the same year France chairs the G7. 3. India is a full member of the G7 grouping. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3

Jun 17, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 17 June 2026 India-France Innovation Roadmap 2030GS2 CSIR Smart Village — AI Crocodile Alert System in OdishaGS3 Kishau Multi-Purpose Dam Project: Six States Sign MoUGS2 Centre Blocks Telegram for NEET (UG) Re-ExaminationGS2 Tenth Schedule: What the Constitution Says on Party MergersGS2 Indian Air Force to Participate in Exercise Pitch Black 2026GS2 IORA Examining Canada’s Request to be Dialogue PartnerGS2 Winning the War on Poverty to Save India’s ForestsGS3 Godzilla El Niño 2026: ENSO, Monsoons, and Planetary RiskGS1 Article 01 India-France Innovation Roadmap 2030 GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Technology Diplomacy | Bilateral Cooperation Why in News Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron held high-level bilateral talks in Nice, France on June 14, 2026 — their first official summit since the elevation of the India-France relationship to a Special Global Strategic Partnership in February 2026. The two leaders adopted the India-France Innovation Roadmap 2030 and launched a first-of-its-kind Economic Security Dialogue covering supply chain resilience in critical minerals, semiconductors, energy, and cybersecurity. Key Highlights of the Nice Visit Innovation Roadmap 2030: A comprehensive blueprint for co-development in critical and emerging technologies, deepening academic mobility, and strengthening trusted technology ecosystems. Economic Security Dialogue: A high-level annual mechanism targeting doubling bilateral trade within five years and securing supply chains in semiconductors, critical minerals, and green energy. Trusted AI Alliance: Joint India-France AI Working Group for safe, ethical, and risk-based AI governance; child safety online designated as a priority sub-pillar. UPI Expansion: Globalisation of India’s Unified Payments Interface across major French hubs, including Charles de Gaulle airport and Nice. Kanpur Aeronautics Centre: France and India to establish an aeronautical training campus at the National Skill Training Institute in Kanpur under Ministry of Skill Development & Entrepreneurship. Station F & Student Mobility: France to incubate 10 additional Indian startups at Station F (Paris); target of welcoming 30,000 Indian students by 2030. Bharat Innovates 2026: Union Ministry of Education organised a three-day showcase of 120 Indian deep-tech startups across 13 technology pillars for global investors. Four Pillars of the Innovation Roadmap 2030 Pillar Key Elements Trusted AI Joint AI Working Group; risk-based governance; privacy-preserving age assurance; child safety online as priority; cooperation between DEPA and France’s Health Data Hub Academic & People Mobility Expanded Mutual Recognition of Qualifications (MRQ) framework; dual-degree programmes; doctoral co-supervision; 30,000 Indian students by 2030 Technological Sovereignty Enhanced CEFIPRA mandate; India-France Innovation Network (IFIN); InnoXchange Bridge startup corridor; Franco-Indian Campus in Life Sciences (FIC-LSH) AI for Global Health Challenges ICMR – France Health Data Hub pilot; consent-based data sharing architectures; scalable to Global South partners Key Pillars of the India-France Strategic Partnership Historical & Political Foundations Diplomatic relations established 1947; Strategic Partnership launched 1998 — India’s first strategic partnership with a Western nation. Three traditional pillars: non-interference in internal affairs, strict commitment to strategic autonomy, and avoiding involvement in each other’s military alliances. In February 2026, during President Macron’s visit to India for the AI Impact Summit 2026, bilateral ties were elevated to a Special Global Strategic Partnership. Long-term cooperation guided by the Horizon 2047 Roadmap, marking 25 years of deep strategic trust. Defence & Security France is India’s second-largest arms supplier after Russia. Major procurement: contract finalised for 26 Rafale-Marine fighter jets; Scorpène-class (Kalvari-class) submarines built under Naval Group licence. H125 Helicopter Final Assembly Line operationalised in Tumakuru, Karnataka — joint venture between TATA Advanced Systems and Airbus Helicopters; India’s first private sector helicopter facility. Annual tri-service exercises: Shakti (Army), Varuna (Navy), Garuda (Air Force). Civil Nuclear & Space Building on the 2008 civil nuclear pact; partnering on Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) and Advanced Modular Reactors under a 2025 Declaration of Intent. France welcomed India’s 100 GW nuclear target by 2047 and the passage of the SHANTI Act, 2025, which permits private investment in the nuclear value chain. TRISHNA Mission (Thermal Infrared Imaging Satellite for High-resolution Natural Resource Assessment): joint ISRO-CNES Earth observation satellite. ISRO-CNES Letter of Intent on microgravity research and human space exploration; India-France space events co-hosted in Bengaluru and Paris in September 2026. Trade & Investment France is India’s 3rd largest trading partner in the EU (after Netherlands and Germany); bilateral trade reached €13.59 billion in 2025–26. France is the 11th largest foreign investor in India; top equity inflows concentrated in services (17.65%), cement, and air transport. Both nations are co-chairs of the International Solar Alliance (ISA) and the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI) for 2024–26. Challenges in India-France Relations Jaitapur Nuclear Power Project (JNPP): The 9,900 MW project has been stalled for over 15 years due to techno-commercial disputes over European Pressurized Reactor (EPR) tariffs and India’s Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage (CLND) Act, 2010. Digital Governance Divergence: India’s open DEPA architecture clashes with the EU’s GDPR and the newly enforced EU AI Act, creating regulatory friction in deep-tech cooperation. Geostrategic Asymmetries: France is preoccupied with continental Europe (Ukraine) and Francophone Africa; India’s focus remains the Himalayas and the Indian Ocean Region. India’s sustained Russia engagement tests EU sensitivities. Trade-Strategic Dissonance: Bilateral trade remains modest relative to geopolitical depth; India-EU FTA negotiations concluded politically but not yet implemented. Way Forward Resolve JNPP Impasse: Accelerate SMR cooperation under the 2025 Declaration of Intent rather than waiting on the EPR deadlock. Bilateral AI Governance Framework: Use the Joint AI Working Group to develop a democratic, innovation-friendly model bridging DEPA and GDPR approaches. Co-Development over Transfer: Advance co-development of jet engines, UCAVs, and space-based defence with shared IP and co-ownership. Deepen Maritime Cooperation: Leverage French Indian Ocean bases for joint patrols and Indo-Pacific maritime domain awareness. The India-France Innovation Roadmap 2030 signals a partnership maturing from buyer-seller defence ties to genuine technology co-sovereignty. Its success will depend on the ability of both democracies to align regulatory architectures and translate strategic intent into industrial outcomes — particularly in AI, semiconductors, and clean energy — faster than geopolitical headwinds. Prelims Pointers India-France Strategic Partnership (1998) — India’s first strategic partnership with a Western nation; elevated to Special Global Strategic Partnership in February 2026. Horizon 2047 Roadmap — Long-term bilateral framework marking 25 years of strategic trust; Innovation Roadmap 2030 operationalises its technology pillar. CEFIPRA = Centre for the Promotion of Advanced Research — flagship India-France bilateral scientific cooperation body; established 1987. TRISHNA Mission = Thermal Infrared Imaging Satellite for High-resolution Natural Resource Assessment — joint ISRO-CNES Earth observation satellite. DEPA = Data Empowerment and Protection Architecture — India’s consent-based data sharing framework; complements France’s Health Data Hub for health AI. InnoXchange Bridge — Bilateral startup and innovation exchange corridor providing reciprocal access to R&D labs, technology clusters, and investor ecosystems. IFIN = India-France Innovation Network — key outcome of the India-France Year of Innovation 2026; connects both innovation ecosystems. MRQ = Mutual Recognition of Qualifications — France was the first country to sign an MRQ agreement with India (2018); expanded framework being negotiated. SHANTI Act, 2025 — Indian legislation permitting private sector investment in the nuclear value chain; enables acceleration of civil nuclear projects. ISA & CDRI — India and France are co-chairs of the International Solar Alliance and the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (2024–26 cycle). CLND Act, 2010 — Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act; India’s supplier liability provisions create friction with EPR project negotiations. H125 FAL, Tumakuru — TATA-Airbus Helicopters Final Assembly Line in Karnataka; India’s first private sector helicopter assembly facility. Practice Mains Question “The India-France Innovation Roadmap 2030 elevates the bilateral partnership from strategic convergence to technological co-sovereignty. Critically examine the key pillars of this roadmap, the structural challenges it must overcome, and India’s strategic interests in deepening ties with France.” GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Match List I with List II and select the correct answer using the codes given below: List I (Initiative) A. CEFIPRA B. TRISHNA Mission C. InnoXchange Bridge D. DEPA List II (Description) 1. Joint ISRO-CNES thermal infrared imaging satellite for land surface temperature mapping 2. Bilateral India-France startup and innovation exchange corridor with reciprocal lab and ecosystem access 3. India’s consent-based personal data sharing and protection architecture 4. Flagship India-France bilateral scientific cooperation body established in 1987 (a)A-4, B-2, C-1, D-3 (b)A-3, B-1, C-4, D-2 (c)A-4, B-1, C-2, D-3 (d)A-2, B-4, C-3, D-1 Correct Answer: (c) CEFIPRA (A) is the flagship bilateral scientific cooperation body established in 1987 (→4). TRISHNA (B) is the joint ISRO-CNES thermal infrared satellite (→1). InnoXchange Bridge (C) is the bilateral startup and innovation exchange corridor (→2). DEPA (D) is India’s consent-based data architecture (→3). Hence A-4, B-1, C-2, D-3. Article 02 CSIR Smart Village — AI Crocodile Alert System in Odisha GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Environment & Ecology | GS Paper 2 — Government Schemes Why in News The Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) is accelerating the deployment of technologies in Kusunpur village, Kendrapara district, Odisha, under its Smart Village initiative. Among the planned interventions is an AI-enabled wild animal detection and alert system to mitigate the chronic human-crocodile conflict that has claimed over 20 lives in the district over the past four years. About the CSIR Smart Village Initiative Implementing Agency: CSIR under its lab-to-land principle — bringing technologies developed in national laboratories directly to rural communities. Scale: Over the next three years, scientists from 17 CSIR laboratories will visit Kusunpur to ensure deployment of technologies for the village’s overall development. Objective: Transform Kusunpur into a model of integrated rural development — combining safety infrastructure, green livelihoods, and modern processing technologies. Alignment: Consistent with the government’s broader rural technology mission and CSIR’s mandate under the Ministry of Science & Technology. The Human-Crocodile Conflict Context Kendrapara district is one of India’s worst zones for human-wildlife conflict involving crocodiles. Kusunpur sits near the river and canal systems surrounding Bhitarkanika National Park — India’s second-largest mangrove reserve and home to the country’s largest population of the estuarine (saltwater) crocodile (Crocodylus porosus). Fishing communities living along river channels face repeated encounters with this apex predator, which can grow to over 6 metres in length. The AI detection system is planned at two key entry points to the village, issuing real-time alerts whenever a crocodile approaches human settlements. Key Technologies Being Deployed Domain Technology Purpose Wildlife Safety AI-enabled animal detection & alert system Real-time alert when crocodiles approach settlement entry points Infrastructure Cold mix road technology; waste plastic road technology; cement grouted bituminous mix Durable, eco-friendly roads using ambient-temperature and plastic-integrated bitumen Food & Nutrition Freeze-drying for crispy fruits; parboiled rice processing Value-added products with preserved nutrition; combat malnutrition Green Livelihoods Dry flower processing; biodegradable tableware; herbal floor-cleaning liquids; beeswax candles Sustainable micro-enterprise opportunities for local entrepreneurs Village Infrastructure Underground drainage, water gate renovation, community building, brick & block-making machines Modernised sanitation and construction capacity About CSIR and CSIR-CBRI CSIR = Council of Scientific & Industrial Research: Autonomous body under the Department of Scientific & Industrial Research (DSIR), Ministry of Science & Technology; operates 37 national laboratories across India. CSIR-CBRI = Central Building Research Institute: Headquartered in Roorkee, Uttarakhand; specialises in construction technologies, building materials, and infrastructure innovations; the nodal CSIR lab for this Smart Village project. CSIR’s lab-to-land model bridges the gap between laboratory-scale research and real-world community deployment. Significance Human-Wildlife Conflict Mitigation: AI-based early warning systems represent a scalable, non-lethal intervention that can be replicated across other conflict zones in India. Rural Transformation: Integrates safety, livelihood, and infrastructure in a single mission-mode framework — demonstrating applied science for social impact. Green Jobs: Technologies like dry flower processing, biodegradable tableware, and beeswax products create sustainable micro-enterprises without ecological pressure. CSIR’s Strategic Role: Demonstrates the institutional capacity of national laboratories to address village-level challenges, reinforcing the relevance of public science institutions. Prelims Pointers CSIR = Council of Scientific & Industrial Research — under DSIR, Ministry of Science & Technology; has 37 national laboratories. CSIR-CBRI = Central Building Research Institute — headquartered in Roorkee, Uttarakhand (not New Delhi). Estuarine (Saltwater) Crocodile = Crocodylus porosus — world’s largest living reptile; protected under Schedule I, Wildlife Protection Act, 1972; IUCN: Least Concern. Bhitarkanika National Park, Kendrapara — India’s second-largest mangrove reserve; hosts India’s largest population of estuarine crocodiles; also a Ramsar Wetland. Freeze-drying (lyophilisation) = Removes moisture at low temperature under vacuum; preserves nutritional value & extends shelf life. Cold mix road technology = Bituminous road construction at ambient temperature; avoids heating; suitable for remote/hilly areas. Waste plastic road technology = Shredded plastic blended with bitumen; MoRTH mandates use within 50 km of cities >500,000 population. Lab-to-Land principle = CSIR’s core mandate of translating laboratory R&D into direct community-level applications. Practice Mains Question “Human-wildlife conflict in India is increasingly a technology governance challenge as much as an ecological one. Using the CSIR Smart Village initiative as a case study, examine how AI-enabled solutions can be integrated with rural development to address wildlife conflict sustainably.” GS Paper 3  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following statements about the CSIR Smart Village initiative in Kusunpur, Odisha, is NOT correct? (a)CSIR-CBRI, which is leading the initiative, is headquartered in New Delhi. (b)Bhitarkanika National Park in Kendrapara hosts India’s largest population of estuarine crocodiles. (c)The AI-enabled wild animal detection system is planned at two key entry points to Kusunpur village. (d)CSIR operates under the Department of Scientific & Industrial Research, Ministry of Science & Technology. Correct Answer: (a) Statement (a) is incorrect: CSIR-CBRI (Central Building Research Institute) is headquartered in Roorkee, Uttarakhand, not New Delhi. All other statements are correct: Bhitarkanika hosts the largest estuarine crocodile population in India; the AI system is planned at two entry points; and CSIR operates under DSIR, Ministry of Science & Technology. Article 03 Kishau Multi-Purpose Dam Project: Six States Agree to Sign MoU GS Paper 2 — Inter-State Water Disputes | Federalism | GS Paper 3 — Water Resources | Infrastructure Why in News Home Minister Amit Shah chaired a crucial meeting in New Delhi at which consensus was reached among six Yamuna basin states on the long-pending Kishau Multi-Purpose Dam Project. Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, and Rajasthan agreed to sign a Memorandum of Understanding, after which the project will be placed before the Union Cabinet for approval. About the Kishau Dam Project The Kishau Dam is a proposed multi-purpose storage and hydropower project located on the Tons River (Tamsa) at the Himachal Pradesh–Uttarakhand border. The Tons River is Yamuna’s largest tributary by volume, joining the main Yamuna stream near Kalsi in Dehradun district — at their confluence, the Tons actually carries more water than the Yamuna itself. Water stored by the Kishau Dam will augment Yamuna flows downstream, directly benefiting all six basin states. Key Features Feature Detail River Tons River (Tamsa) — largest tributary of the Yamuna by volume Location HP-Uttarakhand border Purpose Hydropower generation + water storage for drinking water and irrigation Stakeholder States HP (upper riparian), Uttarakhand, Delhi, UP, Haryana, Rajasthan Central Funding (Water) 90% Central assistance for water component; 10% shared by six states Power Component HP’s water allocation to be supplied to Delhi & Rajasthan in lieu of their power cost contribution Significance Yamuna Rejuvenation: Increased clean water flow from the Tons into the Yamuna will improve river health downstream, including through Delhi — where the Yamuna’s pollution crisis is acute. Multi-State Cooperation: The six-state MoU represents a breakthrough in inter-state water-sharing negotiations that have stalled for decades — a model for cooperative federalism on river resources. Water Security: Provides a reliable drinking water and irrigation source for multiple states, reducing dependence on groundwater extraction. Hydropower: Adds renewable electricity to the northern grid, supporting India’s clean energy transition. Flood Moderation: Storage capacity on the Tons will moderate flash-flood risk downstream during high monsoon discharge. Way Forward Fast-track the Union Cabinet approval and detailed project report finalization after MoU signing. Establish a robust inter-state project implementation committee with technical and legal representation from all six states. Integrate environmental clearance with rehabilitation planning for project-affected communities in the Tons valley. Prelims Pointers Kishau Dam — proposed on the Tons River (Tamsa) at the HP-Uttarakhand border; not directly on the Yamuna. Tons River (Tamsa) — Yamuna’s largest tributary by volume; originates in Uttarkashi (Uttarakhand); joins Yamuna near Kalsi, Dehradun district. Six Yamuna Basin States — HP (upper riparian), Uttarakhand, Delhi, UP, Haryana, Rajasthan. Central Funding Pattern — 90% Central assistance for the water component; 10% shared by states. Yamuna River — longest tributary of the Ganga; originates at Yamunotri glacier (Uttarkashi); joins Ganga at Prayagraj (Triveni Sangam). Inter-State Water Disputes Act, 1956 — provides the legal framework for resolving disputes between states over river waters; applies to inter-state rivers. Cooperative Federalism — model where Centre and States collaborate on shared resources; multi-state river projects exemplify this. Practice Mains Question “The Kishau Dam MoU exemplifies both the promise and the complexity of cooperative federalism on inter-state water resources. Examine the significance of the project for Yamuna basin states and discuss the institutional mechanisms needed to govern large multi-state water infrastructure.” GS Paper 2  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about the Kishau Multi-Purpose Dam Project: 1. The Kishau Dam is located on the Tons River, a major tributary of the Yamuna, at the Himachal Pradesh–Uttarakhand border. 2. Under the agreed funding pattern, the Central Government will provide 75% of the cost of the water component of the project. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a)1 only (b)2 only (c)Both 1 and 2 (d)Neither 1 nor 2 Correct Answer: (a) Statement 1 is correct: the Kishau Dam is on the Tons River (Tamsa), not directly on the Yamuna. Statement 2 is incorrect: the Central Government will provide 90% (not 75%) of the water component cost; the remaining 10% is shared by the six states. Article 04 Centre Blocks Telegram for NEET (UG) Re-Examination GS Paper 2 — Governance | Fundamental Rights | Digital Regulation | GS Paper 3 — Internal Security Why in News The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) issued a blocking order against the messaging platform Telegram under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000, at the request of the National Testing Agency (NTA). The order was in response to the organised use of Telegram channels by cheating rackets to defraud candidates appearing for the NEET (UG) 2026 re-examination scheduled on June 21, 2026. The government also directed Telegram to disable its message-editing feature until June 30, 2026, preventing administrators from substituting attached documents (such as PDFs) after posting while retaining the original timestamp. What is Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000? Section 69A empowers the Central Government to issue written directions to block public access to any information generated, transmitted, received, or stored in a computer resource. Such a direction may be issued when the government is satisfied that it is necessary or expedient to do so in the interest of: Sovereignty and integrity of India Defence of India Security of the State Friendly relations with foreign States Public order Preventing incitement to the commission of any cognizable offence relating to the above Reasons must be recorded in writing. Blocking orders are subject to review by an inter-ministerial Review Committee constituted under Rule 7 of the IT (Procedure and Safeguards for Blocking of Access of Information by Public) Rules, 2009. In Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015), the Supreme Court struck down Section 66A of the IT Act as unconstitutional but upheld Section 69A as constitutionally valid, noting its procedural safeguards. About Telegram Founded in 2013 by Pavel Durov and his brother Nikolai Durov; currently headquartered in Dubai. Features: supergroups supporting up to 2 lakh (200,000) members for interactive messaging; broadcast channels with unlimited subscribers; multi-device sync. Has over 1 billion active users worldwide and over 150 million users in India, ranking second only to WhatsApp. In August 2024, French authorities arrested Pavel Durov at Le Bourget airport over Telegram’s alleged failure to moderate illegal content — a landmark platform-liability case. Concerns and Analysis In Favour of the Block Telegram channels openly demanded amounts ranging from a few thousand to several lakh rupees in exchange for purported access to the re-examination paper — a direct threat to examination integrity. The message-editing feature was being used to substitute PDFs after posting, evading detection by posting legitimate content initially and replacing it with exam material later. NTA argued this fell within the “public order” and “preventing incitement to cognizable offences” grounds under Section 69A. Concerns Raised Disproportionality: Telegram’s founder noted the block punished over 150 million ordinary Indian users rather than the specific bad actors; cheating rackets reportedly migrated to other platforms immediately. Free Speech Implications: Platform-level bans raise Article 19(1)(a) concerns; blocking an entire service for misuse by a subset of users may not satisfy proportionality standards. Precedent Risk: Selective blocking of communication platforms based on misuse by fringe actors could be invoked broadly in future situations. Way Forward Targeted Takedowns: Rather than blanket platform blocks, authorities should issue channel-specific takedown orders as a proportionate remedy. Platform Accountability: Platforms should be required to implement real-time flagging mechanisms for examination-fraud-related keywords, coordinated with NTA’s cyber cell. Examination Integrity Architecture: Invest in a secure digital examination delivery system that eliminates the paper-leak vector entirely. Legislative Clarity: Enact clearer procedural standards for platform blocking under Section 69A, incorporating sunset clauses and mandatory proportionality tests. Prelims Pointers Section 69A, IT Act 2000 — empowers Central Government to block public access to digital content on specified national security and public order grounds; reasons must be recorded in writing. IT Blocking Rules, 2009 — Rule 7 establishes an inter-ministerial Review Committee to periodically review blocking orders. Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015) — SC struck down Section 66A as unconstitutional (violation of Art 19); upheld Section 69A as valid with procedural safeguards. NTA = National Testing Agency — established 2017 under the Ministry of Education; conducts NEET, JEE Main, CUET, UGC-NET. Telegram supergroups — allow up to 2 lakh (200,000) interactive members; broadcast channels have unlimited subscribers. Pavel & Nikolai Durov — founded Telegram in 2013; HQ in Dubai; Russia-origin founders. Article 19(1)(a) — Right to freedom of speech and expression; subject to reasonable restrictions under Art 19(2). NEET (UG) — National Eligibility cum Entrance Test for undergraduate medical admissions; conducted by NTA; governed by MCC (Medical Counselling Committee) for admission allocation. Practice Mains Question “Platform-level blocking under Section 69A of the IT Act raises fundamental tensions between examination integrity, proportionality, and the constitutional right to free speech. Critically evaluate the Centre’s decision to block Telegram and suggest a more calibrated regulatory framework for platform accountability.” GS Paper 2  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following correctly states a ground on which the Central Government may issue a blocking direction under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000? (a)Prevention of monopolistic behaviour by digital platforms in the Indian market (b)Prevention of incitement to the commission of any cognizable offence relating to the sovereignty and integrity of India, defence, security, friendly relations with foreign states, or public order (c)Protecting copyrighted content owned by Indian government entities from unauthorised reproduction (d)Any ground deemed fit by the executive, without the need to record reasons in writing Correct Answer: (b) Section 69A grounds are expressly limited to: sovereignty and integrity of India, defence, security of State, friendly relations with foreign States, public order, and prevention of incitement to cognizable offences relating to these. Reasons must always be recorded in writing, making option (d) incorrect. Options (a) and (c) describe grounds not covered by Section 69A. The Supreme Court in Shreya Singhal (2015) upheld Section 69A precisely because of its specifically enumerated grounds and written reasons requirement. Article 05 Tenth Schedule: What the Constitution Says on Party Mergers GS Paper 2 — Indian Constitution | Parliament | Political Parties | Anti-Defection Law Why in News Twenty rebel Trinamool Congress (TMC) Lok Sabha MPs submitted a notice to the Lok Sabha Speaker announcing their decision to merge with the Nationalist Citizens Party of India (NCPI), claiming they constitute two-thirds of the TMC’s Lok Sabha legislature party and are therefore entitled to merge without attracting disqualification under the Tenth Schedule of the Constitution. The move has reignited debate over the scope and interpretation of the anti-defection law’s merger provisions. Origin and Structure of the Tenth Schedule Frequent defections of legislators during the 1960s and 1970s created political instability across States, prompting the 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985, which inserted the Tenth Schedule — the anti-defection law. A member of Parliament or a State legislature is liable for disqualification if they voluntarily give up membership of their political party or vote against their party’s direction. The “political party” is the entire organisation; the “legislature party” is all its members in a specific House. The Schedule originally had two exceptions: Paragraph 3 (split — immunity for 1/3 of legislature party forming a separate group) and Paragraph 4 (merger — immunity when 2/3 of legislature party approves merger of the political party). Paragraph 3 was deleted by the 91st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2003. Key Provisions at a Glance Paragraph Provision Current Status Para 2 Grounds for disqualification: voluntary resignation from party; voting against party whip Active Para 3 Split immunity: at least 1/3 of legislature party forming a separate group Deleted by 91st Amendment, 2003 Para 4 Merger immunity: 2/3 of legislature party must approve merger of the political party with another Active — subject to interpretation Para 6 Disqualification decided by Speaker/Chairman of the House Active — subject to judicial review Key Judicial Pronouncements Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu and Others (1992): The Supreme Court upheld the constitutional validity of the Tenth Schedule. It also held that the Speaker’s decisions on disqualification are subject to judicial review, though courts cannot intervene before the Speaker decides. Keisham Meghachandra Singh v. The Speaker, Manipur Legislative Assembly (2020): The SC held that Speakers must decide disqualification petitions within a reasonable time; courts can intervene if there is inordinate delay. Subhash Desai v. Principal Secretary, Governor of Maharashtra (2023): Arising from the Shiv Sena split, the SC criticised the Speaker’s delay and noted that the Speaker should decide disqualification petitions promptly; also noted the need for an independent tribunal. Recent Instances of Mergers BSP Rajasthan (Sept 2019): All 6 BSP MLAs merged with the Congress, claiming Para 4 protection. Goa Congress-BJP (Sept 2022): 8 of 11 Congress MLAs merged with BJP; Bombay High Court upheld the merger (appeal pending in SC). Shiv Sena Split (June 2022): Eknath Shinde faction — a case of 2/3 members effectively defecting while claiming to be the original political party. NCP Split (July 2023): Ajit Pawar faction used a similar approach. AAP Rajya Sabha MPs (April 2026): 7 of 10 AAP Rajya Sabha MPs merged with the BJP under Para 4. The Present Case in Bengal — Legal Analysis A plain reading of Para 4 authorises a merger of the political party (the entire organisation) with another party, provided that at least two-thirds of the legislature party approves. It does not authorise two-thirds of a legislature party in one House to unilaterally merge themselves with another political party. The distinction is critical: the merger provision was designed for when an entire political party as an organisation joins another — not for 2/3 of only one chamber’s elected members declaring a “merger.” An additional interpretive question is whether the “original political party” can only merge with a party that already has members in the legislative house. The Speaker must decide on these questions, with courts available for review thereafter. Way Forward Independent Tribunal: The Supreme Court, most recently in Keisham Meghachandra Singh (2020), recommended that Parliament amend the Constitution to vest anti-defection adjudication in an independent tribunal headed by former judges, removing the inherent conflict of a Speaker from the ruling party deciding disqualification cases. Delete Para 4: The Law Commission’s 170th Report (1999) recommended deleting Para 4 entirely — making all defections, including mergers, grounds for disqualification and compelling fresh elections as the only legitimate route to changing political allegiance. Authoritative SC Judgement: A constitution bench ruling specifically on the scope of Para 4 — particularly whether 2/3 of only one chamber’s legislature party can constitute a valid “merger” — would reduce ambiguity. The Tenth Schedule has proven to be a living constitutional instrument, with each new political manoeuvre testing its boundaries. The deletion of Para 3 in 2003 was meant to strengthen anti-defection norms, yet the Para 4 merger loophole continues to be innovatively exploited. The fundamental democratic principle that elected representatives owe their mandate to the electorate — not to factional leaders — demands a tighter, independently adjudicated framework. Prelims Pointers 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985 — inserted the Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law) into the Constitution. 91st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2003 — deleted Para 3 (split exemption); also capped Council of Ministers size at 15% of the strength of the House. Paragraph 3 = split exemption (1/3 of legislature party) — deleted in 2003. Paragraph 4 = merger exemption — requires 2/3 of the legislature party to approve merger of the political party with another; still in force. Disqualification authority = Speaker (Lok Sabha / State Assemblies); Chairman (Rajya Sabha / State Councils). Subject to judicial review. Kihoto Hollohan v. Zachillhu (1992) — Tenth Schedule upheld as constitutional; Speaker’s decisions subject to judicial review. Keisham Meghachandra Singh v. Speaker, Manipur (2020) — Speaker must decide disqualification within reasonable time; courts can intervene for inordinate delay. Law Commission’s 170th Report (1999) — recommended deletion of Para 4 (merger exemption) to remove the defection-as-merger loophole. Legislature Party = all members of a political party elected to a specific House. Political Party = the entire organisational entity. Practice Mains Question “Despite the 91st Constitutional Amendment’s strengthening of anti-defection provisions, the merger exemption under Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule continues to facilitate political instability. Critically examine the constitutional design of the anti-defection law, its judicial interpretation, and the reforms needed to close the merger loophole.” GS Paper 2  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ In the question below, an Assertion (A) and a Reason (R) are given. Select the correct answer using the codes given below. Assertion (A): The 91st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2003 deleted Paragraph 3 of the Tenth Schedule, which had provided immunity from disqualification to members who joined a group formed by a split of at least one-third of the legislature party. Reason (R): The deletion was intended to prevent the politically motivated engineering of splits to circumvent the anti-defection law, while retaining the merger exemption under Paragraph 4 for genuine amalgamations of political parties. (a)Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A (b)Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A (c)A is true, but R is false (d)A is false, but R is true Correct Answer: (a) Both the Assertion and the Reason are factually correct. The 91st Amendment did delete Para 3. The legislative intent was precisely to close the “split” loophole that had been exploited to engineer defections while preserving Para 4 for authentic whole-party mergers. R correctly and completely explains why A was enacted. Article 06 Indian Air Force to Participate in Exercise Pitch Black 2026 GS Paper 2 — International Relations | India-Australia Relations | Defence Diplomacy Why in News The Indian Air Force (IAF) will participate in Exercise Pitch Black 2026, the Royal Australian Air Force’s (RAAF) premier multinational air combat exercise. The exercise is scheduled to be held in Australia’s Northern Territory (primarily at RAAF Base Darwin and RAAF Base Tindal) from July 20, 2026. The announcement, made by Australia’s High Commissioner to India, cited the exercise as an opportunity to strengthen regional interoperability across the Indo-Pacific. The exercise will bring together more than 100 aircraft and personnel from 19 allied and partner nations. About Exercise Pitch Black Conducted by: Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) — largest international exercise in the RAAF’s annual calendar. Frequency: Biennial (held every two years). Location: Northern Territory, Australia — RAAF Base Darwin and RAAF Base Tindal provide vast, low-traffic airspace for large-scale air combat training. Objective: Enhance operational interoperability, strengthen multilateral military cooperation, and refine air combat tactics among allied and partner air forces. Scale (2026): 100+ aircraft; 19 nations; includes advanced air combat simulation across multiple threat environments. India’s previous participation: IAF has participated in earlier editions of Pitch Black, deepening aviation interoperability with RAAF and other partners. India-Australia Defence & Strategic Relations Comprehensive Strategic Partnership: Signed in June 2020 during the PM Modi–PM Morrison virtual summit — the highest level of bilateral engagement. Quad membership: Both India and Australia are members of the Quad (Quadrilateral Security Dialogue) alongside the United States and Japan — the central framework for Indo-Pacific security cooperation. ECTA (Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement): Signed April 2022; entered into force December 2022 — India’s first FTA with a major developed economy in over a decade. Bilateral defence exercises: AustraHind (Army); AUSINDEX (Navy); Pitch Black (Air Force — multilateral). Critical minerals partnership: Australia is a key supplier of lithium, cobalt, and rare earths critical to India’s clean energy and EV transition. Significance for India Indo-Pacific Interoperability: Participation in large multinational exercises enhances IAF’s ability to operate seamlessly within coalition frameworks — critical as India deepens its Indo-Pacific security commitments. Tactical Learning: Exposure to diverse air combat tactics, advanced threat simulation, and electronic warfare scenarios from 19 partner air forces. Strategic Signalling: IAF participation in the RAAF’s flagship exercise signals India’s growing comfort with multilateral defence engagement beyond bilateral ties. Prelims Pointers Exercise Pitch Black — RAAF’s largest international air combat exercise; held biennially; Northern Territory, Australia. RAAF = Royal Australian Air Force; bases: Darwin and Tindal (Northern Territory) for Pitch Black. India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership — signed June 2020; highest tier of bilateral engagement. ECTA = Economic Cooperation and Trade Agreement (India-Australia) — signed April 2022, in force December 2022. Quad = Quadrilateral Security Dialogue: India, USA, Australia, Japan — key Indo-Pacific multilateral grouping. AustraHind = India-Australia Army exercise. AUSINDEX = India-Australia Naval exercise. Malabar Exercise = India, USA, Japan (Australia joined in 2020); naval trilateral complementing the Quad. Practice Mains Question “India’s participation in multinational air combat exercises like Exercise Pitch Black reflects a maturing Indo-Pacific defence posture. Examine the significance of India-Australia defence cooperation and the role of multilateral military exercises in operationalising India’s Act East Policy.” GS Paper 2  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statements about Exercise Pitch Black and India-Australia relations: 1. Exercise Pitch Black is the Royal Australian Air Force’s largest international air combat exercise, conducted biennially in Australia’s Northern Territory. 2. The India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership was established in 2020. 3. India, Australia, Japan, and the United States are the four members of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (Quad). Which of the statements given above are correct? (a)1 and 2 only (b)2 and 3 only (c)1 and 3 only (d)1, 2, and 3 Correct Answer: (d) All three statements are correct. Exercise Pitch Black is indeed the RAAF’s largest biennial multinational exercise held in the Northern Territory. The India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership was signed in June 2020. The Quad comprises exactly four members: India, Australia, USA, and Japan. Article 07 IORA Examining Canada’s Request to be Dialogue Partner GS Paper 2 — International Relations | Indian Ocean | Regional Organisations Why in News At the 28th meeting of IORA’s Committee of Senior Officials (CSOM), held in New Delhi, Canada’s application to become a dialogue partner of the Indian Ocean Rim Association is being examined by member states. The Secretary-General noted Canada’s considerable expertise in maritime safety, security, and connectivity as strong grounds for inclusion. The meeting also took note of developments in the Strait of Hormuz, where an Iran-US agreement could end months of maritime hostilities, underscoring the Indian Ocean region’s continuing strategic sensitivity. About IORA Feature Detail Full Name Indian Ocean Rim Association Established 1997 (charter signed in Mauritius) Secretariat Port Louis, Mauritius (established 2011) Member States 23 (India is a founding member) Dialogue Partners 9, including US, UK, China, France, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Egypt, EU Six Priority Areas Maritime Safety & Security; Trade & Investment Facilitation; Fisheries Management; Disaster Risk Management; Academic-Scientific-Technical Cooperation; Tourism & Cultural Exchange Canada’s Case for Dialogue Partner Status Canada has extensive coastal zones on three oceans — Pacific, Atlantic, and Arctic — making it one of the world’s largest maritime powers by coastline. Expertise in maritime safety, Search and Rescue (SAR), Arctic navigation, and ocean connectivity infrastructure that would benefit IORA member states, particularly smaller island economies. Significant diaspora connections with key IORA members, particularly India; growing Indo-Pacific strategic engagement. Potential contribution to IORA’s disaster risk management agenda given Canada’s experience in climate-linked coastal resilience. IORA’s Significance for India India is a founding member and one of IORA’s most consequential voices, given its position at the heart of the Indian Ocean and its extensive maritime interests. IORA provides a multilateral framework for India to advance its SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) vision and the Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative (IPOI). Aligns with India’s blue economy priorities: fisheries, maritime connectivity, and sustainable ocean resource management. Climate action: The Indian Ocean faces disproportionate climate impacts; IORA’s disaster response agenda is central to India’s neighbourhood diplomacy. As the Indian Ocean emerges as the geopolitical fulcrum of the 21st century — with rising maritime traffic, climate stress, and strategic competition — IORA’s evolution into a more inclusive and functional multilateral body, potentially including Canada, will test the organisation’s capacity to balance consensus-building with strategic agility. Prelims Pointers IORA = Indian Ocean Rim Association — established 1997; Secretariat in Port Louis, Mauritius (est. 2011); 23 member states. India is a founding member of IORA and plays a leading role in its maritime safety and disaster response agenda. IORA Dialogue Partners = currently 9: US, UK, China, France, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Egypt, EU. Canada is applying for this status. IORA Six Priority Areas: Maritime Safety & Security; Trade & Investment; Fisheries Management; Disaster Risk Management; Academic-Scientific-Technical Cooperation; Tourism & Cultural Exchange. SAGAR = Security and Growth for All in the Region — India’s Indian Ocean vision articulated by PM Modi in 2015; aligns with IORA mandate. IPOI = Indo-Pacific Oceans Initiative — India’s framework for maritime cooperation in the Indo-Pacific; complements IORA engagement. Strait of Hormuz — strategically critical waterway between Oman and Iran; ~20% of global oil trade transits through it; IORA has an interest in its security. CSOM = Committee of Senior Officials — IORA’s inter-sessional decision-making body meeting between Council of Ministers sessions. Practice Mains Question “The Indian Ocean Rim Association has the potential to be the primary multilateral institution for Indian Ocean governance, yet it has underperformed relative to its mandate. Examine the significance of IORA for India’s maritime strategy and the reforms needed to make it a more effective institution.” GS Paper 2  |  150 words  |  10 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Which of the following statements about the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) is correct? (a)IORA was established in 2001 and is headquartered in New Delhi, India. (b)IORA was established in 1997 and its Secretariat is located in Port Louis, Mauritius. (c)India is an observer member of IORA, not a founding member. (d)IORA’s primary mandate is limited exclusively to maritime security cooperation among member states. Correct Answer: (b) IORA was established in 1997 with its Secretariat in Port Louis, Mauritius (the Secretariat was formally established in 2011). Option (a) gives wrong year and location. Option (c) is incorrect — India is a founding member. Option (d) is incorrect — IORA has six priority areas, only one of which is maritime safety and security; others include trade, fisheries, disaster risk management, and academic cooperation. Article 08 Winning the War on Poverty to Save India’s Forests GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Biodiversity | Conservation | GS Paper 2 — Welfare of Vulnerable Sections Why in News A major international study published in the journal Nature Sustainability has found a significant link between household poverty, fuelwood dependence, and lower tree species diversity in community-managed tropical forests. The research — covering 322 community-managed forests in 15 countries from 1993 to 2017 using data from the International Forestry Resources and Institutions (IFRI) network — concludes that poverty is not the cause of biodiversity loss, but limited livelihood options drive resource pressure that produces the same outcome. The findings have direct implications for India’s conservation strategy. Key Findings of the Study Forests with more poor households and higher fuelwood dependence had lower tree species diversity. Forests where communities had access to alternative livelihoods (such as farming) showed greater tree species richness. Similar patterns were found in densely populated areas with higher poverty levels. Greater dependence on forest resources was consistently associated with lower biodiversity — but the causal mechanism is resource pressure from limited options, not poverty per se. Key insight: The way out is to improve economic opportunities, not to restrict forest access without providing alternatives — the latter increases deprivation without reducing pressure. The Fortress Model and Its Limitations Most forests in India are managed by State Forest Departments under the fortress model — where protected areas are managed by minimising human activity and restricting access to forest resources. While this model has helped recover iconic species and strengthen wildlife protection, it has significant limitations: Protected areas are increasingly becoming isolated islands surrounded by human-dominated landscapes, cutting off wildlife corridors. Forests in human-dominated landscapes are smaller and bear a heavy burden of extraction from approximately 275 million people who depend on them for livelihoods. The fortress model generates conflict rather than conservation partnership with local communities, undermining long-term biodiversity outcomes. Community-Based Conservation: India’s Success Stories Programme / Organisation Location Model Snow Leopard Conservancy Ladakh Community-run homestays and livestock insurance; converts herders from adversaries to conservation partners Nature Conservation Foundation (NCF) — Hornbill Nest Adoption Arunachal Pradesh Nyishi tribe members — former hornbill hunters — trained as nest protectors and forest patrollers; income via nest adoption fees Mangrove Co-Management Committees Sindhudurg, Maharashtra Village-based committees protect mangroves while supporting fisheries, ecotourism, and sustainable aquaculture Forest Rights Act, 2006 (FRA) Pan-India Legal recognition of community forest rights (CFRs) and individual tenure rights for Scheduled Tribes and traditional forest dwellers Policy Implications for India LPG and Clean Cooking: State Forest Departments have distributed subsidised LPG connections and efficient cooking stoves near tiger reserves — reducing fuelwood pressure. The study supports scaling this up along wildlife corridors. Wildlife Corridor Prioritisation: The study’s findings on species richness can be applied by prioritising conservation in corridor forests — the patches linking isolated protected areas used by large mammals for dispersal. Joint Forest Management (JFM): India’s JFM programme since 1990 provides a framework for community participation in forest protection with benefit-sharing. Expanding it with robust governance is critical. Wildlife Tourism Revenue Sharing: Wildlife tourism is a multi-million-dollar industry, yet only a small fraction reaches communities adjacent to forests. Greater revenue-sharing would create stronger conservation incentives. The noted ecologist and biodiversity champion Madhav Gadgil was a strong advocate for inclusive conservation, arguing that communities who have lived alongside forests for generations possess irreplaceable traditional ecological knowledge that must complement scientific approaches. About IFRI The International Forestry Resources and Institutions (IFRI) research network was founded by the late Nobel laureate Elinor Ostrom at the University of Michigan. Ostrom received the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2009 (the first woman to do so) for her work demonstrating that communities can sustainably manage shared natural resources — a finding that directly underpins the community forestry model. The IFRI dataset covers community-managed forests across 15 countries since the early 1990s. The study’s central insight is not that forests need to be protected from people, but that people need to be economically empowered so that forests are not the last resort. Conservation and poverty alleviation are not binary choices — they are interdependent objectives whose simultaneous pursuit produces better outcomes for both biodiversity and human wellbeing. Prelims Pointers IFRI = International Forestry Resources and Institutions — research network at University of Michigan; founded on the commons-governance work of Nobel laureate Elinor Ostrom. Elinor Ostrom — received the Nobel Prize in Economics (2009); first woman to win; demonstrated communities can sustainably manage common-pool resources. Tree species diversity = number of tree species in a forest; greater diversity = more wildlife support, greater ecological stability and resilience. Fortress model = managing protected areas by restricting human access; contrast with community-based conservation models. Joint Forest Management (JFM) — India’s programme (since 1990) for community participation in forest protection with benefit-sharing; implemented by State Forest Departments. Forest Rights Act, 2006 (FRA) = Scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act; provides community and individual forest rights. Nature Conservation Foundation (NCF) — Bengaluru-based conservation NGO; works on hornbill nest adoption with Nyishi tribe in Arunachal Pradesh. Nyishi tribe — Arunachal Pradesh; historically hunted hornbills for headgear feathers; now participate in nest adoption conservation programmes. Snow Leopard Conservancy — Ladakh; community-based conservation using livestock insurance and homestay programmes. Wildlife corridor — patch of habitat linking isolated protected areas; allows dispersal of large mammals; biodiversity improvement in corridors directly supports conservation. Practice Mains Question “Conservation and poverty alleviation are not binary choices — they are mutually reinforcing imperatives. In light of recent research on the links between livelihood poverty and forest biodiversity loss, critically examine India’s community-based conservation models and suggest a policy framework that integrates ecological and socioeconomic goals.” GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Match List I with List II and select the correct answer using the codes given below: List I (Organisation / Programme) A. Snow Leopard Conservancy B. Nature Conservation Foundation (NCF) C. International Forestry Resources and Institutions (IFRI) D. Mangrove Co-Management Committees List II (Location / Association) 1. University of Michigan; tracks community-managed forests globally across 15 countries 2. Maharashtra’s Sindhudurg district; protects mangroves while supporting fisheries and ecotourism 3. Ladakh; community-based snow leopard conservation with livestock insurance and homestay programmes 4. Arunachal Pradesh; hornbill nest adoption programme with Nyishi tribe members (a)A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2 (b)A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1 (c)A-3, B-1, C-4, D-2 (d)A-1, B-4, C-3, D-2 Correct Answer: (a) Snow Leopard Conservancy (A) operates in Ladakh with community-run conservation (→3). NCF (B) runs the hornbill nest adoption programme with the Nyishi tribe in Arunachal Pradesh (→4). IFRI (C) is the University of Michigan network tracking 322 community forests across 15 countries (→1). Mangrove Co-Management Committees (D) operate in Sindhudurg, Maharashtra (→2). Hence A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2. Article 09 Godzilla El Niño 2026: ENSO, Monsoons, and Planetary Risk GS Paper 1 — Physical Geography | Climatology | GS Paper 3 — Environment | Disaster Management Why in News The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has forecast that an El Niño event may develop by July 2026 and persist through winter, significantly increasing the risk of coastal flooding, disrupted rainfall patterns, and agricultural stress across multiple continents. Climate scientists warn that when El Niño conditions coincide with long-term sea-level rise, coastal communities face a “double whammy” of compound flood risk. Unusually intense events are informally called “Godzilla El Niño” in public discourse — a term that originated during the exceptionally strong 2015–16 episode. What is El Niño? El Niño is the warm phase of the ENSO (El Niño-Southern Oscillation) cycle — a natural, recurring climate pattern in the tropical Pacific Ocean that alternates between warm, cool, and neutral conditions and influences weather systems worldwide. ENSO Terminology Term Phase Key Characteristic El Niño Warm phase Trade winds weaken; warm water accumulates in central/eastern Pacific; sea surface temperatures rise La Niña Cool phase Trade winds strengthen; warm water pushes westward; cooler-than-normal SSTs in central/eastern Pacific ENSO-Neutral Neutral Neither warm nor cool anomaly; typical trade wind and SST conditions Southern Oscillation Atmospheric Pressure seesaw between Darwin (Australia) and Tahiti; measured by the Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) Measurement NOAA’s primary El Niño/La Niña index; threshold: ≥+0.5°C anomaly (3-month average) in the Niño 3.4 region El Niño Mechanism Normal conditions: Trade winds blow westward along the equatorial Pacific, pushing warm surface water toward Australia and Asia, allowing cooler deep water to upwell along South America’s coast. El Niño onset: Trade winds weaken → warm water pools in the central and eastern Pacific → sea surface temperatures rise → the Walker Circulation (equatorial atmospheric loop driven by temperature contrast) weakens. Global impact: The weakened Walker Circulation redistributes convective rainfall — bringing floods to some regions (South America, southern US) while suppressing rainfall in others (Australia, South Asia). Sea level effect: Warm water expands thermally; El Niño raises sea levels in the eastern Pacific, amplifying coastal flooding when combined with storm surges. India-Specific Impacts El Niño is typically associated with a weaker Southwest Monsoon (SWM) over India, as the shift in Pacific convection suppresses the low-pressure systems that drive Indian monsoon onset. This correlation is strong but not absolute: a positive Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) — warmer sea surface temperatures in the western Indian Ocean relative to the eastern Indian Ocean — can partially offset El Niño’s suppressive effect on SWM. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) incorporates ENSO state and IOD phase into its annual Long Range Forecast (LRF) for the Southwest Monsoon, released each April. Agriculture: weak monsoon → reduced kharif output → food inflation pressure; groundwater depletion accelerates as irrigation demand rises. India’s peak electricity demand (above 250 GW in recent years) climbs further in hotter-than-average El Niño summers, straining grid infrastructure. Historical Strong El Niño Events 1877–78: One of history’s most severe El Niño events; contributed to catastrophic global famines, particularly in South and East Asia, and in South America and Africa — documented in climate literature as a defining episode of 19th-century climate-driven social disruption. 1982–83: Major El Niño causing severe droughts in Australia and floods in South America. 1997–98: One of the strongest on modern record; widespread droughts, wildfires in Southeast Asia, disrupted fisheries globally. 2015–16: Tied with 1997–98 as the strongest recorded; officially nicknamed “Godzilla El Niño” by US media; contributed to record global surface temperatures. Way Forward Early Warning Systems: Integrate ENSO forecasts into IMD’s district-level weather alerts to enable pre-emptive agricultural advisories and flood preparation. Crop Diversification: Promote drought-resilient crops in El Niño-vulnerable districts; expand the Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana’s weather-indexed coverage. Coastal Flood Infrastructure: Invest in sea walls, mangrove restoration, and early-warning networks in coastal states vulnerable to the El Niño – sea-level-rise compound effect. Grid Resilience: Accelerate grid strengthening and demand-side management in preparation for peak demand spikes during hot El Niño years. El Niño events are natural oscillations that humanity has always navigated — but on a warming planet, their baseline intensifies. The 2026 forecast is a reminder that climate preparedness must be institutionalised, not reactive: from monsoon contingency planning by state governments to investment in climate-resilient infrastructure by the Centre. Every El Niño year is both a warning and a rehearsal for the more intense climate variability that a warmer world will routinely deliver. Prelims Pointers ENSO = El Niño-Southern Oscillation — natural Pacific climate cycle with three phases: El Niño (warm), La Niña (cool), ENSO-neutral. El Niño mechanism: Trade winds weaken → warm water pools in central/eastern Pacific → Walker Circulation weakens → global rainfall redistribution. Walker Circulation — equatorial atmospheric circulation loop driven by SST contrast between eastern (cool) and western (warm) Pacific; weakens during El Niño. Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) — measures atmospheric pressure difference between Darwin (Australia) and Tahiti; negative SOI = El Niño conditions. Oceanic Niño Index (ONI) — NOAA’s primary ENSO metric; based on 3-month average SST anomaly in the Niño 3.4 region (central equatorial Pacific); ≥+0.5°C = El Niño. Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) — SST gradient between western and eastern Indian Ocean; positive IOD can partially offset El Niño’s weakening effect on Indian monsoon. El Niño & Indian Monsoon — El Niño typically suppresses Southwest Monsoon rainfall; La Niña is associated with stronger monsoon. IMD Long Range Forecast (LRF) — India Meteorological Department’s annual SWM forecast (released April); incorporates ENSO state and IOD phase. NOAA = National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (USA) — primary global authority on ENSO monitoring and seasonal climate forecasting. “Godzilla El Niño” — informal term for an exceptionally intense El Niño episode; popularised during the 2015–16 event, one of the two strongest on modern record. Practice Mains Question “El Niño is not merely a meteorological event but a socioeconomic challenge with consequences for food security, energy demand, and coastal resilience. Explain the ENSO cycle and examine the specific risks that a strong El Niño poses to India’s agriculture, monsoon, and infrastructure, along with adaptive measures.” GS Paper 1 / GS Paper 3  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ In the question below, an Assertion (A) and a Reason (R) are given. Select the correct answer using the codes given below. Assertion (A): El Niño conditions are typically associated with below-normal Southwest Monsoon rainfall over India. Reason (R): During El Niño, trade winds weaken and warm water pools in the central and eastern Pacific Ocean, weakening the Walker Circulation and suppressing the convective systems that drive monsoon moisture transport over the Indian subcontinent. (a)Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A (b)Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A (c)A is true, but R is false (d)A is false, but R is true Correct Answer: (a) Both A and R are factually correct. El Niño does typically suppress India’s SWM (A). The mechanism described in R — weakened trade winds → warm water pooling in central/eastern Pacific → weakened Walker Circulation → suppressed convective systems over the subcontinent — is the scientifically established explanation. Note: the correlation is strong but not absolute; a concurrent positive Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) can partially counteract El Niño’s suppressive effect, which is why IMD considers both ENSO and IOD in its Long Range Forecast.