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Jul 13, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 Weaving Sustainability: India's Textile Sector and the Circular Economy Pathway Ministry of Textiles · Circular Economy, Sustainable Manufacturing GS 3GS 2 02 India's Clean Sweep at IPhO 2026: All Five Win Gold, Joint World No. 1 Department of Atomic Energy / HBCSE-TIFR · Science Olympiad, Education GS 2GS 3 Article 01 Article 01 Weaving Sustainability: India’s Textile Sector and the Circular Economy Pathway Ministry of Textiles · PIB Factsheet & Report: “Mapping of Textile Waste Value Chain in India” (2026) Relevance: GS 3 (Indian Economy — industry, infrastructure, inclusive growth; environment — conservation) · GS 2 (Governance — welfare schemes, social justice for marginalised communities). GS 3GS 2 Image: Circular textile value chain — from fibre input to post-consumer waste recovery and reuse. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance ~2%of India’s GDP from the textile and apparel sector (NAS 2025) ~11%share of manufacturing GVA from textiles and apparel 45 million+direct employment in the sector, including women and rural workers 7.8 MTtextile waste managed annually; >70% recovered into recycling / reuse ~95%pre-consumer (factory scrap) textile waste recovery rate 40–45 lakhlivelihoods supported by the textile waste recovery ecosystem Issue in Brief India’s textile sector — the “spinning wheel” of industrial growth — is the world’s sixth-largest textile and apparel exporter (~4% global export share), contributing ~2% of GDP and ~11% of manufacturing GVA (National Account Statistics 2025). The government released a factsheet and the report “Mapping of Textile Waste Value Chain in India” (2026), showcasing how circular economy principles are being embedded across the textile value chain — from raw material input to post-consumer waste management. Global markets are shifting towards environmentally responsible production; the EU’s Digital Product Passport (DPP) compliance cliff (2027) adds regulatory urgency for Indian textile exporters. Static Background Circular Economy (CE): a regenerative model contrasted with the linear “take-make-dispose” approach. Core actions — Reuse (return without change), Upcycling (convert to higher value), Downcycling (convert to lower value, e.g., cotton rags → industrial wipes), and Recycling (break down to raw material). India has a centuries-old tradition of textile reuse, repair and resource-conscious production — from dhobis and darzis to Panipat (Haryana), globally known as the “Cast-off Capital”, which mechanically reprocesses second-hand textiles into blankets, yarn and shoddy fibre. Key legislative anchors: Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 (parent law); Environment Protection Rules, 1986 (effluent discharge standards for textile units); Stockholm Convention (ratified by India in 2006) targeting Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs), including certain textile chemicals. Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026: came into force 1 April 2026 under the Environment (Protection) Act; incorporate Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) principles and mandate gradual use of Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) by industrial units — rising from 5% to 15% over six years. MSMEs account for over 80% of India’s textile and apparel production capacity (Economic Survey 2023-24) — making MSME-targeted sustainability interventions structurally critical. Key Dimensions — Input Stage: Organic Fibres & Cleaner Raw Materials National Programme for Organic Production (NPOP): Certifies organic fibres including organic cotton; standards recognised by the European Commission and Switzerland for unprocessed plant products; covers accreditation of certification bodies and promotion of organic products. Jute-ICARE (Improved Cultivation and Advanced Retting Exercise, launched 2015): Promotes scientific jute cultivation through high-yielding certified seeds and retting accelerators; expanded from 130 blocks in 7 states → 289 blocks in 10 states; coverage grew from ~1.11 lakh ha → 2.15 lakh ha (2024-25). New Age Fibre Mission (MM-III): Mini-mission under the Mission for Cotton Productivity; promotes allied natural fibres as eco-friendly synthetic alternatives; focuses on climate-smart cultivation, mechanisation and innovation. National Fibre Scheme: Strengthens self-reliance across natural, man-made and new-age fibres; reduces import dependence; encourages innovation in advanced textile materials. Hazardous chemical restrictions: Benzidine-based dyes restricted; 70 azo dyes prohibited; Stockholm Convention (2006) restricts POPs including harmful textile chemicals from the supply chain. Pilot — “Eliminating Hazardous Chemicals from the Textile Fashion Supply Chain in India”: Covers 400 factories across 8 clusters and 4 fashion houses; targets reduction of 10,530 tonnes of harmful chemicals and mitigation of 1,47,000 tCO₂eq. Key Dimensions — Production Stage: Sustainable Manufacturing PM MITRA Parks (Mega Integrated Textile Region and Apparel): 7 parks approved with an outlay of ₹4,445 crore (up to 2027-28) at Virudhunagar (TN), Warangal (Telangana), Navsari (Gujarat), Kalaburagi (Karnataka), Dhar (MP), Lucknow (UP) and Amravati (Maharashtra); built around the ‘5F’ vision — Farm → Fibre → Factory → Fashion → Foreign; sustainability integrated via CETPs, wastewater recycling and waste management; MoUs for investments >₹27,434 crore signed as of December 2025. RAMP Programme — MSE-GIFT: Supports green technology adoption in MSMEs; provides 2% annual interest subvention on term loans up to ₹2 crore and 75% credit guarantee coverage. RAMP Programme — MSE-SPICE (Scheme for Promotion and Investment in Circular Economy): Helps micro and small enterprises adopt circular and resource-efficient practices; provides 25% capital subsidy for eligible plant and machinery; promotes nationwide awareness. Textile Sector under the Indian Carbon Market (ICM): Greenhouse Gas Emission Intensity (GEI) targets notified under the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS); textile units must disclose Scope-1 (direct emissions) and Scope-2 (indirect — purchased electricity, heat) emissions; outperformers earn tradeable Carbon Credit Certificates. Tex Eco Initiative: Promotes globally competitive and environmentally sustainable textile manufacturing; aligns India’s textile industry with international sustainability standards and green market opportunities. Key Dimensions — Post-Production Stage: Waste Management & Recovery Of the ~7.8 million tonnes of textile waste managed annually, over 90% is sourced from domestic pre-consumer (factory scrap) and post-consumer waste; >70% is recovered into recycling, upcycling, downcycling or reuse. Pre-consumer recovery (factory scrap): ~95% collected and reintegrated; the spinning sector demonstrates near-closed-loop circularity with almost all spinning waste reprocessed within production. Post-consumer recovery (discarded textiles): ~55% diverted from landfills through collection and sorting networks — a significant but improvable rate reflecting weak household-level collection infrastructure. The waste ecosystem supports 40–45 lakh livelihoods, with women from marginalised communities playing a major role in collection, sorting and redistribution. National Technical Textiles Mission (NTTM): R&D projects sanctioned to convert textile waste, biomass and bio-residues into carbon fibres and functional textiles. Report “Mapping of Textile Waste Value Chain in India” (2026): Data-driven blueprint for turning textile waste into an economic resource; highlights Panipat as the leading mechanical recycling hub; notes emerging chemical recycling technologies for fibre recovery at molecular level. India’s first Municipal Textile Recovery Facility in Belapur, Navi Mumbai: integrates collection, sorting, upcycling and livelihoods; collected 30 MT of post-consumer textile waste; reached 1.14 lakh families. Key Dimensions — Promotion Stage: Standards, Markets & Awareness Eco-Mark Scheme, 2024: Textiles identified as an eligible category; 13 Indian Standard titles notified; Eco-Mark granted to products meeting criteria on resource use, climate impact, biodiversity, energy use, waste and hazardous substances. Kasturi Cotton and Silk Mark: Traceability and quality branding initiatives for premium Indian cotton and silk — build global identity and support responsible sourcing and supply chain transparency. MoU (2024) between Textiles Committee, GeM (Government e-Marketplace) and SCOPE (Standing Conference of Public Enterprises): institutionalises public procurement of upcycled textile products, creating demand-side pull for circularity. SURE (Sustainable Resolution): Led by CMAI, Reliance Brands Limited (RBL), UN India and the Ministry of Textiles — one of India’s largest voluntary sustainability commitments; drives industry transition towards cleaner, more responsible fashion. Circle Back Campaign: Raises awareness among students about textile recycling; exhibitions such as Vastra Katha at Bharat Tex 2024 and 2025 showcased sustainable textile practices. ESG Task Force: Constituted to guide sustainable production, certification and exports; enables platforms like Circular Samvaad and the Cluster Exchange Mechanism. Bharat Tex (India’s flagship global textile event — editions 2024, 2025, 2026): showcases circular textiles, technical textiles, MSME innovations and policy dialogue on a single integrated platform. Critical Analysis — Strengths Recovery of >70% of textile waste nationally — with the pre-consumer loop at ~95% — is a strong baseline, largely driven by industry-embedded networks rather than mandates alone. A multi-layered policy architecture: PM MITRA (production infrastructure), RAMP (MSME green finance), ICM (carbon market discipline) and Eco-Mark (demand-side standards) operate across the value chain simultaneously. GeM-linked upcycled product procurement creates institutional demand-side pull — a rare and effective market-creation mechanism for circular outputs. The Belapur Municipal Textile Recovery Facility offers a replicable model combining collection, upcycling, technology and livelihoods in a single circular ecosystem. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions India lacks a dedicated legislative framework for textile circularity; unlike the EU or China, there are no strict textile recycling mandates; EPR for textiles remains unformulated — the SWM Rules 2026 are a step but are not sector-specific. Post-consumer recovery remains at ~55% vs ~95% pre-consumer, revealing the weakness of household-level collection infrastructure — a structural gap that policy has yet to close. Chemical (molecular-level) recycling — critical for true textile-to-textile circularity — is nascent and capital-intensive; Panipat dominates mechanical recycling but cluster-level facilities are needed at other textile hubs (Surat, Tiruppur, Ludhiana). The 2027 EU Digital Product Passport (DPP) compliance cliff poses traceability and data-infrastructure challenges across India’s fragmented MSME textile clusters. Over 90% of textile waste workers are informal, with limited social protection or formalisation — circular economy growth must address this structural inequality to be truly inclusive. Way Forward Enact a dedicated Textile EPR framework under the Environment (Protection) Act, mandating producers to manage end-of-life garments — similar to the existing plastic EPR rules. Scale chemical recycling infrastructure through NTTM R&D support and public-private partnerships; mechanical recycling alone cannot achieve true textile-to-textile fibre circularity. Expand Municipal Textile Recovery Facilities beyond Navi Mumbai to major textile clusters (Surat, Tiruppur, Ludhiana) to bridge the post-consumer recovery gap. Formalise waste worker livelihoods — link sorters and collectors to social security, MSME registration and skill certification under the SURE framework. Accelerate DPP readiness for export clusters: incentivise digital traceability adoption before the 2027 EU compliance deadline. Prelims Pointers PM MITRA Parks: 7 locations; ₹4,445 cr outlay (2027-28); ‘5F’ vision — Farm → Fibre → Factory → Fashion → Foreign; include CETPs and wastewater recycling. MSE-SPICE: 25% capital subsidy for circular economy machinery in micro and small enterprises (under RAMP programme). MSE-GIFT: 2% interest subvention + 75% credit guarantee for green technology adoption in MSEs (RAMP). NPOP: Certifies organic cotton and other organic products; recognised by EU and Switzerland. Jute-ICARE: Launched 2015; now covers 289 blocks in 10 states; ~2.15 lakh ha in 2024-25. Eco-Mark Scheme, 2024: 13 Indian Standard titles notified for textiles; covers climate impact, hazardous substances, resource use. SWM Rules, 2026: In force 1 April 2026; incorporate EPR; RDF mandate rising from 5% to 15% over six years. Stockholm Convention (2006): Targets Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) — relevant to benzidine-based dyes and azo dye restrictions in textiles. Kasturi Cotton: Traceability and branding initiative for Indian cotton; quality and identity in global markets. ICM / CCTS: Textile sector is an obligated sector; Scope-1 and Scope-2 emission disclosures required; outperformers earn tradeable Carbon Credit Certificates. SURE: Voluntary sustainability commitment — led by CMAI + Reliance Brands + UN India + Ministry of Textiles. Panipat (Haryana): ‘Cast-off Capital’ — India’s leading hub for mechanical textile recycling; shoddy fibre, blankets, yarn. Practice Mains Question India’s textile sector has made progress in adopting circular economy practices, yet structural gaps persist across the value chain. Critically examine the policy framework for circular textiles in India and suggest measures for a more inclusive and legally binding transition. GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding India’s textile circular economy: (1) India’s pre-consumer textile waste recovery rate is nearly 95%. (2) MSE-SPICE provides 2% interest subvention on term loans for circular economy machinery. (3) The Solid Waste Management Rules, 2026 incorporate Extended Producer Responsibility principles. Which of the above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. The ‘5F’ vision associated with PM MITRA Parks refers to: A) Farm → Fabric → Factory → Fashion → ForeignB) Farm → Fibre → Factory → Fashion → ForeignC) Fibre → Fabric → Finishing → Fashion → ForeignD) Farm → Fibre → Fabric → Fashion → Finance Q3. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): India’s post-consumer textile waste recovery rate (~55%) is significantly lower than its pre-consumer rate (~95%). Reason (R): Household collection infrastructure for discarded garments is weak, unlike established factory-level scrap networks. 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 India’s Clean Sweep at IPhO 2026: All Five Win Gold, Joint World No. 1 Department of Atomic Energy / HBCSE–TIFR · 56th International Physics Olympiad, Bucaramanga, Colombia Relevance: GS 2 (Education — science and technology institutions, role of government) · GS 3 (Science & Technology — indigenisation, innovation ecosystem, STEM capacity building). GS 2GS 3 Image: Indian contingent at the 56th International Physics Olympiad 2026, Bucaramanga, Colombia — all five members with Gold Medals. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance 5 / 5Gold Medals won by India at IPhO 2026 — a clean sweep Joint No. 1World rank, shared with China, Kazakhstan, Russia, South Korea, Taiwan 381students from 87 countries competed at IPhO 2026 56thedition of IPhO; held in Bucaramanga, Colombia (first time in Colombia) 10 yrsevery Indian IPhO participant has secured a podium finish over the last decade 5-stageNational Olympiad Programme selection process run by HBCSE-TIFR Issue in Brief All five members of India’s team won Gold Medals at the 56th International Physics Olympiad (IPhO) 2026 in Bucaramanga, Colombia, securing a joint World No. 1 rank alongside China, Kazakhstan, Russia, South Korea and Taiwan, among 381 students from 87 countries. The achievement is attributed to the National Olympiad Programme run by HBCSE-TIFR under the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) — a multi-stage talent identification and mentoring system sustained over decades. India’s gold medalists: Kanishk Jain (Pune, Maharashtra), Riddhesh Anant Bendale (Indore, MP), Rishit Garg (Dwarka, New Delhi), Shresth Suraiya (Mumbai, Maharashtra), Svarit Joshi (Ahmedabad, Gujarat). Static Background International Physics Olympiad (IPhO): Annual international competition for pre-university (school-level) students; participants tested on theoretical and experimental physics far beyond standard curricula. First held in Warsaw, Poland, in 1967 with 3 countries; now spans 87+ countries. Each country can send up to 5 students. HBCSE (Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education): A National Centre of TIFR (Tata Institute of Fundamental Research); functions as an aided institution under DAE; is India’s nodal agency for all international Science and Mathematics Olympiads (Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Astronomy, Mathematics). National Olympiad Programme — 5-stage selection process: NSE (National Standard Examination) — Stage 1, conducted by IAPT (Indian Association of Physics Teachers). INPhO (Indian National Physics Olympiad) — HBCSE. OCSC (Orientation-cum-Selection Camp) — intensive residential camp; final 5 selected. Pre-departure training — advanced theory + lab experiments. International Olympiad participation. Department of Atomic Energy (DAE): Oversees India’s nuclear and atomic energy programmes including BARC, TIFR, NPCIL and AERB; provides long-term institutional funding for HBCSE’s Olympiad programme as a science capacity investment. Constitutional anchor — Article 51A(h): Fundamental Duty — “to develop the scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reform” — the constitutional foundation for STEM Olympiad culture. India at IPhO 2025 (Paris): Won 3 Gold + 2 Silver medals — strong but not a clean sweep; the 2026 5/5 Gold is India’s finest IPhO performance to date. Key Dimensions Team leadership and mentoring: Led by Prof. Anwesh Mazumdar (HBCSE-TIFR) and Dr. Leena Joshi (St. Xavier’s College, Mumbai); scientific observers Prof. Ananda Dasgupta (IISER Kolkata) and Ms. Nisha Kelkar (Gogate-Joglekar College, Ratnagiri). HBCSE training methodology: Residential orientation camps; advanced problem-solving; laboratory experiments beyond standard curriculum; mentoring by TIFR and IISER faculty — connecting school-level talent to frontier research culture. Geographic diversity of winners (Pune, Indore, Delhi, Mumbai, Ahmedabad) suggests the Olympiad talent pool is not purely metro-centric, signalling breadth in India’s STEM ecosystem. India’s joint No. 1 alongside China, Russia and Kazakhstan — countries with highly structured, state-sponsored STEM pipelines — underlines India’s competitiveness despite relatively lower per-student state investment in school science. Complementary national programmes: NEP 2020 emphasises critical thinking and scientific temper; Atal Tinkering Labs (ATL) under the Atal Innovation Mission (NITI Aayog) promote STEM culture in schools; PM SHRI Schools under NEP serve as preparatory ecosystems. Critical Analysis — Strengths Institutional continuity: HBCSE’s decades-long patient investment — identifying, training and mentoring over years, not months — is the structural differentiator over commercially driven coaching models. DAE’s sustained funding model demonstrates that long-term, non-commercial science investment yields compounding dividends in national scientific prestige and the talent pipeline. Multi-state winner geography suggests that India’s talent pool is widening beyond the top-tier metros, reflecting the expanded reach of the NSE (Stage 1) feeder programme. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions IPhO success represents a very narrow talent peak — the system excels at identifying the top 0.001%, but broad school-level science quality in rural and semi-urban India remains weak. The 5-stage process is largely English-medium and urban-accessible in practice; language and geographic barriers exclude many talented students from vernacular-medium and semi-urban schools. No guaranteed pathway from Olympiad excellence to India-based research careers; many IPhO medalists pursue higher education abroad — a brain drain concern for the national innovation ecosystem. China and South Korea maintain state-level structured STEM pipelines with dedicated curriculum tracks; India’s system relies more on individual initiative and the HBCSE programme, without equivalent national school-level integration. Way Forward Scale the Olympiad feeder programme to regional language mediums; partner with State Boards and Navodaya Vidyalayas to widen the talent funnel beyond English-medium urban students. Create a national alumni network of IPhO / IMO / IChO medalists to mentor the next generation; formalise the mentorship chain through HBCSE. Strengthen STEM infrastructure in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities via Atal Tinkering Labs and PM SHRI Schools as preparatory ecosystems for Olympiad culture. Link Olympiad excellence to Indian research fellowships (INSPIRE, JRF, BS-MS programmes at IISERs) to reduce post-IPhO brain drain. Institutionalise the Olympiad programme in NEP 2020 implementation frameworks — recognise Olympiad participation in school assessment and college admission. Prelims Pointers IPhO 2026: 56th edition; Bucaramanga, Colombia (first time in Colombia); India — 5 Gold, Joint World No. 1; 381 students from 87 countries. HBCSE: Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education — National Centre of TIFR; under Department of Atomic Energy (DAE); nodal agency for all international Science and Maths Olympiads in India. National Olympiad Programme: 5-stage — NSE (Stage 1, by IAPT) → INPhO → OCSC → Pre-departure training → International Olympiad. IAPT: Indian Association of Physics Teachers — conducts Stage 1 (NSE) of the Physics Olympiad. IPhO started: 1967, Warsaw, Poland; 3 founding countries (Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania). India at IPhO 2025: 3 Gold + 2 Silver (Paris, France); 2026 is India’s first-ever clean sweep (5/5 Gold). DAE bodies: BARC, TIFR, NPCIL, AERB, HBCSE — India’s apex atomic energy and science capacity institutions. Article 51A(h): Fundamental Duty — “to develop the scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reform”. Atal Tinkering Labs (ATL): Under Atal Innovation Mission, NITI Aayog — promote STEM innovation culture in schools. INSPIRE Fellowship (DST): Supports early science career development — relevant retention mechanism for Olympiad talent. Practice Mains Question India’s success at International Science Olympiads reflects institutional strength, but does not yet translate into a broad-based scientific culture. Critically examine this statement with reference to the role of HBCSE and the National Olympiad Programme in building India’s scientific talent pipeline. GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the International Physics Olympiad (IPhO) 2026: (1) It was held in Bogotá, Colombia. (2) India secured the joint World No. 1 rank alongside five other countries. (3) HBCSE-TIFR functions under the Department of Science and Technology (DST). Which of the above are correct? A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3 Q2. (Match the Following) Match List I (Olympiad stage) with List II (Conducting body): A. NSE (Stage 1) · B. OCSC (Orientation-cum-Selection Camp) · C. INPhO // 1. HBCSE-TIFR (residential camp) · 2. IAPT · 3. HBCSE-TIFR. Choose the correct match: A) A-2, B-1, C-3B) A-1, B-2, C-3C) A-2, B-3, C-1D) A-3, B-1, C-2 Q3. Which Fundamental Duty under the Indian Constitution is most directly linked to promoting a culture of science Olympiads and STEM education? A) Article 51A(e) — Promote harmony and the spirit of common brotherhoodB) Article 51A(h) — Develop the scientific temper, humanism and the spirit of inquiry and reformC) Article 51A(j) — Strive towards excellence in all spheres of individual and collective activityD) Article 51A(b) — Cherish and follow the noble ideals of the freedom struggle

Jul 13, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 Five Crore Indians Wait When the Courts Take a Break The Hindu · Judicial Reform, Access to Justice, Undertrial Crisis GS 2 — Judiciary & GovernanceGS 3 — Socio-Economic CostEssay 02 Insular Incentive: Ethanol-Blended Fuel Should Not Be Forced on Consumers Irrationally The Hindu · Ethanol Policy, Food-Fuel Nexus, Energy Security, Agriculture GS 3 — Energy & AgricultureGS 2 — Consumer RightsEssay Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 Five Crore Indians Wait When the Courts Take a Break The Hindu · Judicial Reform & Access to Justice Relevance: GS 2 (judicial reforms, separation of powers, fundamental rights, governance, access to justice), GS 3 (economic cost of delayed justice), Essay (justice delayed is justice denied; role of institutions in democracy) — centred on court vacation culture, the undertrial crisis, and systemic alternatives. GS 2 — Judiciary & GovernanceGS 3 — Socio-Economic CostEssay — Justice as Institution 1 — Issue in Brief India's higher courts observe collective summer and winter vacations — the Supreme Court sits for only ~193 working days a year, High Courts ~210 days, District Courts ~245 days — even as over 5.39 crore cases clog the system (as of December 2025). The editorial's core argument is not that judges rest, but that they all rest simultaneously, causing the institution to functionally shut down for over six weeks each summer — a practice rooted in colonial convenience, not constitutional necessity. The human face of this delay: ~3.71 lakh undertrial prisoners (2024, NCRB) — 72.6% of India's total prison population — remain behind bars unconvicted and presumed innocent, while the courts that hold their fate observe collective rest. The proposed fix is not abolition of rest but staggered leave — rotating judicial schedules like a hospital roster, so the institution never goes silent all at once. 2 — Static Background Colonial origin of court vacations: The vacation calendar was designed for British judges who found Indian summers unbearable — the summer break allowed European judges to retreat to cooler climes; the winter break mirrored Christmas holidays. Post-independence India retained both without substantive reform for decades. SC working rules: Governed by the Supreme Court Rules, 2013; the summer vacation duration was reduced from 10 weeks to 7 weeks by a 2014 amendment after pendency crossed 2 crore. The current summer break runs ~late May to mid-July. Sanctioned judicial strength (2025): Supreme Court — 34 sanctioned, 33 working, 1 vacancy (Feb 2026). High Courts — 1,122 sanctioned; 813 filled, 309 vacant (~27.5% vacancy). District & Subordinate Courts — 24,631 sanctioned; significant vacancies. India's judge-to-population ratio: ~21 judges per million population — against a Law Commission recommendation of 50 per million. The USA has ~150 judges per million. Case pendency (December 2025, Ministry of Law / NJDG): Supreme Court — 92,101 cases (11.4% jump in a single year); High Courts — 63.66 lakh; District Courts — 4.76 crore. Total: 5.39 crore cases. Over 1.8 lakh cases have been pending for more than 30 years. NITI Aayog 2018 estimate: At the then-prevailing disposal rate (pendency was 2.9 crore), it would take 324 years to clear the backlog. Pendency has nearly doubled since. Undertrial crisis (NCRB Prison Statistics India 2024): 3,71,440 undertrial prisoners = 72.6% of total prison population (5,11,542). Peaked at 77.1% during COVID-19 (2021). 73% of undertrials belong to SC/ST/OBC communities. ~8.1% (~30,000) have spent more than 3 years in custody; over 9,000 imprisoned for more than 5 years — without conviction. Highest undertrial shares: Delhi (88%), Bihar (87.2%), J&K (84.6%), Maharashtra (80.8%). Section 436A, CrPC (now mirrored in BNSS): mandates bail if an undertrial has served more than half the maximum sentence for the offence charged — widely underimplemented due to poor legal aid and awareness. Government as largest litigant: ~50% of all pending cases involve government agencies — often one department litigating against another; partially addressed by the National Litigation Policy (2010) with incomplete implementation. 3 — Key Dimensions The "partial court working days" rebrand (2024): The Supreme Court renamed "summer vacation" as "partial court working days" in 2024 — but the actual number of sitting days (~193) remained unchanged. A semantic fix cannot address a structural problem; litigants care whether their matter is heard, not what the recess is called. Why collective rest is the specific problem: Even where individual judges rest, if benches remain functional the institution continues. The editorial's argument is specifically against simultaneous absence — "the whole shop shutting at once." A hospital does not empty its wards when doctors take leave; it builds a roster. Vacancy + vacation = compounded delay: With High Courts at ~27.5% vacancy, adding six weeks of collective shutdown multiplies rather than adds delays. A half-strength bench thinned further for six weeks makes the backlog structurally intractable. Who bears the cost: The burden falls disproportionately on the poor, the undertrial, the bail-denied, and the rural litigant who cannot afford to maintain a case through adjournments. Wealthy litigants can access vacation benches and senior advocates. Court downtime is regressive in its impact. The legitimate use of the recess: Judges use the quiet to write reserved judgments — cognitively intensive work that cannot be done during busy cause-list sessions. The editorial concedes this; the argument is for staggering, not abolition. ADR — the deeper fix (data-verified): The 4th National Lok Adalat (December 14, 2024) settled 1.45 crore cases in a single day — 1.21 crore pre-litigation + 23.69 lakh pending — with total settlements of ~₹7,462 crore. The Mediation Act, 2023 mandates pre-litigation mediation before approaching courts; establishes the Mediation Council of India; makes mediated settlement agreements enforceable as court decrees; recognises online mediation. Retired judges — an untapped resource: India's judges retire at 62 (High Court) or 65 (Supreme Court), still in full command of jurisprudence. While many serve in quasi-judicial bodies, a focused mechanism for systematic case-disposal target-setting and monitoring by retired judges does not exist at scale. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Constitutional imperative: Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty) has been read by the Supreme Court to include access to speedy trial (Hussainara Khatoon vs State of Bihar, 1979; Sheela Barse, 1986). Prolonged vacation-driven delays directly impair this right for the most vulnerable litigants. In favour — Rule of law credibility: The World Justice Project Rule of Law Index 2025 ranks India low on civil justice access. A system where 72.6% of prisoners are unconvicted is structurally inconsistent with "innocent until proven guilty." In favour — Staggering is administratively feasible: The Supreme Court's own Constitution Bench sat during summer vacation in 2015 (NJAC case) and 2017 (triple talaq) — demonstrating that vacation-time judicial work is possible with will, not structural overhaul. In favour — Economic dividend: Case pendency costs India an estimated >2% of GDP (NITI Aayog / World Justice Project). Faster dispute resolution improves contract enforcement, FDI confidence, and ease of doing business. Against — Vacation is not the primary cause: The Supreme Court's Case Clearance Ratio (CCR) reached 106.6% between November 2024 and May 2025 — it disposed more cases than it received in that period. The backlog is fundamentally a vacancy + filing volume problem; staggering leave alone will not clear 5.39 crore cases. Against — Judicial independence: Mandating vacation schedules risks executive interference in judicial autonomy. Courts should self-reform; parliamentary pressure may transgress the separation of powers. Against — Judicial fatigue is real: India's judges are among the most overworked globally — individual High Court judges report 14–19-hour working days. Eliminating collective rest without filling vacancies risks burnout and declining judgment quality. Against — ADR has structural limits: Lok Adalat awards cannot be appealed — a due-process concern. Mediation is consensual and cannot be compelled. Criminal matters largely fall outside both mechanisms. 5 — Way Forward Roster-based staggered leave: Implement a rolling judicial calendar where individual judges/benches take leave at different times — as recommended by the Law Commission's 230th Report (2009) and Justice Malimath Committee (2000) — keeping courts at functional strength year-round. Fast-track expansion for undertrials: Strengthen the 774 Fast Track Special Courts (December 2025; 46.2% disposal rate for rape/POCSO) and extend their mandate to all offences where undertrial periods disproportionately exceed likely sentences. Section 436A enforcement: Systematically implement the BNSS equivalent through district undertrial review committees, as recommended by the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs (2023). Fill judicial vacancies urgently: 309 of 1,122 High Court seats are vacant — the largest structural constraint. Reforming the Collegium process for speed and transparency, and eliminating appointment delays of up to 4 years, is non-negotiable for any serious pendency reduction. Scale ADR as a genuine gateway: Make pre-litigation mediation under the Mediation Act, 2023 a real mandatory step — through trained mediators, court-annexed centres, and online dispute resolution for routine commercial and consumer disputes. Deploy retired judges systematically: Create a National Case Disposal Monitoring Corps of retired High Court and Supreme Court judges, tasked with identifying disposal bottlenecks, setting public targets, and publicly accounting for progress. Complete e-Courts Phase III: Full rollout of the ₹7,210 crore (2023–2026) e-Courts Phase III — AI-assisted listing, digital summons, electronic case management — to eliminate procedural delays driving the majority of adjournments. 6 — Data & Key Facts 5.39 CrTotal pending cases across all courts (December 2025, Ministry of Law / NJDG) 92,101Cases pending in Supreme Court (Dec 2025); 11.4% jump in a single year 193 daysSupreme Court judicial working days per year; High Courts ~210; District Courts ~245 3,71,440Undertrial prisoners (end 2024, NCRB) — 72.6% of India's prison population ~9,000+Undertrials imprisoned for more than 5 years without conviction 1.45 CrCases settled by the 4th National Lok Adalat (Dec 14, 2024) in a single day; ₹7,462 cr settlements Key committees on vacation reform: Justice Malimath Committee (2000) — reduce vacation by 21 days; SC to work 206 days, HCs 231 days. Law Commission 230th Report (2009) — curtail HC/SC vacations by 10–15 days; extend working hours by half an hour. Parliamentary Standing Committee (2023) — objected to courts going "en masse" on vacation; recommended rotation. Cost of pendency: Over 1.8 lakh cases pending for more than 30 years. 2018 NITI Aayog study calculated 324 years to clear the backlog at then-prevailing disposal rates (pendency was 2.9 crore then; it has nearly doubled since). Case pendency costs India an estimated >2% of GDP. 7 — Prelims Pointers SC vacation rules: Governed by SC Rules, 2013; summer vacation capped at 7 weeks (reduced from 10) by 2014 amendment; notified annually by CJI. SC works ~193 judicial days. Vacation Bench: Constituted by CJI under Rule 6, Order II of SC Rules, 2013 — hears urgent matters ONLY during vacation; cannot take up all case types. Justice Malimath Committee (2000): Criminal justice reforms; SC to work 206 days, HCs 231 days; reduce vacation by 21 days; among earliest formal recommendations on judicial calendar reform. Law Commission 230th Report (2009): Curtail HC/SC vacations by 10–15 days; extend daily working hours by half an hour. Law Commission 133rd Report termed judicial vacations a "colonial legacy." Section 436A, CrPC / BNSS equivalent: Mandatory bail if undertrial has served more than half the maximum possible sentence for the offence charged; widely underimplemented. Article 21 & speedy trial: Right to speedy trial read into Art. 21 in Hussainara Khatoon vs State of Bihar (1979) and Sheela Barse (1986). Government is India's largest litigant (~50% of cases). Exam note: Lok Adalat awards are final and NOT appealable (deemed civil court decrees under Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987) — do not confuse with ordinary court decrees. Also: Gram Nyayalayas are formal courts with judicial officers; Lok Adalats are alternative non-judicial fora. Vacation Bench can hear only urgent matters — it is NOT equivalent to a full regular bench. 8 — Practice Mains Question "The Indian judiciary's vacation culture is a colonial legacy ill-suited to a democracy grappling with five crore pending cases." Critically examine with reference to judicial independence, undertrial detention, and alternative dispute resolution mechanisms.GS 2 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Judiciary + Governance + Access to Justice Intro: Scale of pendency (5.39 crore) and its human cost (72.6% undertrial share; 324-year backlog projection) as the live context for the vacation debate. Body 1 — The case for reform: Colonial origins of the calendar; staggered leave vs. collective shutdown; Law Commission, Malimath Committee and Parliamentary committee recommendations; Article 21 implications for undertrial rights. Body 2 — The counter: Vacation is not the primary driver (vacancy and filing volume are larger); judicial fatigue argument; separation of powers concern with legislative pressure; CCR data showing SC cleared more than it received (Nov 2024–May 2025). Body 3 — Systemic fixes: ADR (Mediation Act 2023, Lok Adalats), e-Courts Phase III (₹7,210 crore), retired judge deployment, Section 436A enforcement, filling 309 HC vacancies. Conclusion: The immediate fix requires will, not legislation — staggering rest, not abolishing it. Deeper reform demands vacancies filled, ADR scaled, and technology deployed so that justice does not depend on which month a litigant's matter falls in. 9 — Practice MCQ Consider the following statements regarding judicial working days and vacation reform in India: 1. The Supreme Court of India works approximately 193 judicial days per year. 2. The summer vacation duration of the Supreme Court was reduced from ten weeks to seven weeks by a 2014 amendment to the Supreme Court Rules. 3. The Justice Malimath Committee recommended that the Supreme Court should work for at least 206 days per year. 4. Vacation Benches of the Supreme Court constituted during vacations can hear all types of cases as a regular bench would. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 1, 2 and 3 only(c) 2, 3 and 4 only(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 Insular Incentive: Ethanol-Blended Fuel Should Not Be Forced on Consumers Irrationally The Hindu · Energy Policy, Agriculture, Consumer Rights Relevance: GS 3 (energy security, agriculture policy, food-fuel nexus, environment, resource efficiency), GS 2 (consumer rights, welfare policy), Essay (sustainability; balancing developmental priorities) — centred on the E20 Ethanol Blending Programme, sugarcane dominance, 2G ethanol, and the consumer cost transfer. GS 3 — Energy, Agriculture & EnvironmentGS 2 — Consumer Rights & WelfareEssay — Sustainability vs. Policy 1 — Issue in Brief India achieved 20% ethanol blending in petrol (E20) in ESY 2025–26 — five years ahead of the original 2030 target under the National Policy on Biofuels, 2018 (amended 2022). As of April 2026, E20 is mandatory nationwide. The editorial critiques the government's policy of continuing E20 production at costs higher than pure petrol (when crude oil prices fall below ~$70/barrel) in order to "compensate farmers adequately" — arguing this imposes costs on consumers (including those poorer than sugarcane farmers) without a clear net economic justification. The core critique: the programme is sugarcane-centric, water-intensive, environmentally ambiguous, and insufficiently calibrated to resource efficiency, food security, and feedstock diversification. The deeper argument: ethanol policy must not be formulated in isolation from agricultural policy — and import substitution cannot justify making consumers pay more for a lower-mileage fuel than pure petrol. 2 — Static Background EBP Programme origin: Launched in January 2003 as a pilot 5% blending (E5) scheme in 9 states. Governed by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas as nodal agency. Expanded to a nationwide mandate (with exceptions for island territories like Andaman & Nicobar, Lakshadweep). Blending trajectory (verified): ESY 2013–14: <1.5% → ESY 2021–22: 10% (5 months early) → ESY 2022–23: 12.06% → ESY 2023–24: 14.6% → ESY 2024–25 (to Feb 2025): ~18% → ESY 2025–26: 20% achieved. National Policy on Biofuels, 2018 (amended 2022): Advanced E20 target from 2030 → ESY 2025–26; expanded permissible feedstocks to include maize, cassava, rotten potatoes, damaged grains, agricultural residues, used cooking oil; created the framework for second-generation (2G) ethanol. Administered Price Mechanism (APM): Government fixes ethanol procurement prices annually — feedstock-differentiated (higher for sugarcane juice / B-heavy molasses; lower for grain-based ethanol). Implemented through Long Term Offtake Agreements (LTOAs) with PSU Oil Marketing Companies (IOC, BPCL, HPCL). Feedstock categories: 1G ethanol — sugarcane (molasses, juice), maize, surplus/damaged rice, grains. 2G ethanol — agricultural residues (rice straw, wheat straw, maize stover, cotton stalk, corn cobs, bagasse, groundnut shells) using lignocellulosic biomass technology. 2G avoids competition with food crops and is more GHG-efficient but more expensive and technologically demanding. Production capacity expansion: From ~421 crore litres (2014) → ~2,000 crore litres (2026). Ethanol procurement in ESY 2025–26 projected to exceed 1,200 crore litres. Key schemes (verified): Ethanol Interest Subvention Scheme (EISS, 2018–22) — 6% interest subvention for new distilleries. PM JI-VAN Yojana (2019) — viability-gap funding and offtake support for 2G/lignocellulosic ethanol plants. Multi-feedstock plant conversion scheme (notified 06.03.2025) — dedicated subvention for cooperative sugar mills to convert into multi-feedstock units. GST on EBP ethanol reduced from 18% → 5%. India's crude oil import dependence: ~88.5% of crude oil is imported — the primary energy security rationale for the EBP programme alongside farm income support and emission reduction. Fuel efficiency impact of E20: Ethanol has a lower calorific value than petrol. For a vehicle giving 20 km/litre on pure petrol, E20 reduces mileage by ~0.6 km/litre (Maruti Suzuki service data, FY 2025–26, 2.84 crore vehicles). E20-compatible (post-April 2023 manufacture) vehicles see minimal engine impact. 3 — Key Dimensions The sugarcane dominance problem: Despite policy diversification, sugarcane remains dominant because the APM rewards any ethanol proportional to installed base — consolidating sugarcane-based distilleries through path dependency. In ESY 2025–26, sugar-based ethanol constitutes only ~28% of 1,050 crore litres — down from earlier years — but the price mechanism still structurally privileges incumbents. Water and environmental paradox: Sugarcane is among India's most water- and fertiliser-intensive crops, grown primarily in water-stressed Maharashtra and Karnataka — creating an environmental contradiction at the heart of a programme marketed partly on green credentials. The consumer cost transfer: When crude falls below ~$70/barrel, ethanol at administered prices costs more than petrol's energy equivalent. This differential is implicitly borne by consumers — including those poorer than sugarcane farmers — through higher pump prices. Combined with E20's ~0.6 km/litre lower mileage, consumers pay more per litre and get fewer kilometres per litre. The food-fuel tension: ~34% of India's maize production was diverted to ethanol in 2024, forcing corn imports. In 2023, the government temporarily banned sugarcane juice/syrup ethanol due to sugar shortages — a policy reversal exposing inherent vulnerability when one feedstock dominates both food and fuel supply. Income transmission inefficiency: Higher administered prices do not automatically reach farmers at the farm gate. The economic pipeline — consumer → OMC → distillery → farmer — involves multiple intermediaries. Core farm income problems (post-harvest losses, limited market access, mill payment delays) persist regardless of ethanol pricing. Why 2G ethanol is the right direction: Rice/wheat straw, maize stover, cotton stalk, and bagasse convert agricultural residues into fuel — simultaneously addressing stubble burning (a major cause of North India's air quality crises) and adding ethanol supply without competing with food crops or depleting groundwater. A NITI Aayog lifecycle study estimates sugarcane ethanol reduces GHG by ~65% vs. petrol; maize by ~50%; 2G residue-based ethanol would perform even better on a lifecycle basis. Alternative crops: Sweet sorghum — less water-intensive than sugarcane; shorter growing season; ethanol from both stalk and grain. Millets — drought-resistant but produce less fermentable starch per hectare. Maize — less thirsty than sugarcane but fertiliser-intensive and now competing with food/feed demand. All remain underexplored relative to sugarcane. Policy silo problem: Ethanol policy is set by the Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas in coordination with Agriculture, but water policy, agricultural income policy, and environmental policy remain siloed — the systemic externalities of sugarcane ethanol (groundwater depletion in drought-prone districts) are not captured in the programme's cost-benefit framework. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Energy security dividend (verified): India imports ~88.5% of crude oil. Since ESY 2014–15, the EBP has saved over ₹1.90 lakh crore in foreign exchange, substituted >310 lakh MT of crude oil, and reduced ~930 lakh MT of CO₂ emissions (PIB, 2026). In favour — Rural income creation: Farmers earned ~₹1.60 lakh crore cumulatively from ethanol procurement since ESY 2014–15. Over 200 distilleries provide rural industrial employment in UP, Maharashtra, Bihar, and Punjab, expanding the farmer identity from "Annadaata" to "Urja-daata." In favour — Global precedent: Brazil mandates E27 (being raised to ~35%); the USA has E10 nationally with E15 expanding. India's E20 is not an outlier in using biofuel blending as an energy transition tool. Vehicle testing by Maruti, Hero MotoCorp, and Toyota confirms no engine damage even in older vehicles on E20. In favour — Emission reduction: E20 blending has avoided an estimated 832 lakh MT of CO₂ (PIB, 2026). Ethanol is an oxygenated fuel enabling more complete combustion, reducing CO, hydrocarbons, and particulate matter at the tailpipe. Against — Regressive cost transfer: Consumers bear the cost of above-parity ethanol pricing with no say in the matter — those with lower incomes and smaller fuel tanks are hit proportionally harder. The policy treats consumer welfare as secondary to producer income support — a design flaw. Against — Sugarcane monoculture risk: Rewarding all ethanol regardless of feedstock consolidates sugarcane's dominance through path dependency — locking in a water-intensive, geographically concentrated crop as the backbone of an ostensibly environmental programme. Against — Food security vulnerability: The 2023 sugarcane juice ban and 2024 maize import data demonstrate real food security risks that cannot be addressed by diversification intentions alone — dynamic feedstock caps tied to buffer stock norms are absent from current policy design. Against — Mileage reduction is a real aggregate cost: A 0.6 km/litre reduction multiplied across 2+ crore vehicles for a full year represents a substantial aggregate economic loss — made worse when consumers simultaneously pay higher per-litre pump prices. 5 — Way Forward Differential pricing favouring 2G and alternative feedstocks: Offer a premium administered price for ethanol from agricultural residues (rice/wheat straw, maize stover) — making 2G commercially viable beyond viability-gap funding alone and incentivising the shift away from sugarcane. Scale 2G infrastructure: Fund collection, storage, and pre-treatment infrastructure for crop residues — the logistics gap is the primary bottleneck to 2G scale-up, not technology. Leverage MNREGA and SHG networks for gram-panchayat-level residue aggregation. Revenue-sharing agreements: Create tripartite offtake contracts between farmers/aggregators, distilleries, and OMCs — ensuring a larger share of the administered price actually reaches the farmer at the farm gate, reducing pipeline leakage. Water-stressed zone restrictions: Disallow new first-generation sugarcane distillery capacity in water-critical districts (as identified by the Central Ground Water Board); encourage sweet sorghum and millet-based distilleries as water-efficient substitutes. Consumer price transparency: Clearly label E20 at pump stations and ensure older, non-E20-compatible vehicle owners can access pure petrol in transition zones — respecting consumer rights under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019. Food security safeguard mechanism: Create a dynamic feedstock cap under NBCC tied to minimum buffer stock norms — so that a repeat of the 2023 sugar shortage does not force a disruptive policy reversal mid-year. Integrate ethanol with agricultural policy: The APM should be designed in coordination with MSP policy, irrigation investment, cold chain logistics, and post-harvest infrastructure — treating farmer income as a whole-of-agriculture problem, not an ethanol-only problem. 6 — Data & Key Facts 88.5%India's crude oil import dependence — primary rationale for the EBP Programme 20% (E20)Ethanol blending achieved in ESY 2025–26 — 5 years ahead of the original 2030 target ₹1.90 L CrForeign exchange saved since ESY 2014–15 through crude substitution (PIB, 2026) 930 L MTCO₂ emissions reduced since ESY 2014–15 (lakh metric tonnes, PIB 2026) ₹1.60 L CrCumulative farmer income from ethanol procurement since ESY 2014–15 ~34%Share of India's maize production diverted to ethanol in 2024 — forcing corn imports GHG lifecycle advantage (NITI Aayog lifecycle study): Sugarcane ethanol reduces GHG by ~65% vs. petrol; maize ethanol by ~50%. 2G residue-based ethanol would perform even better; E20 blending has avoided ~832 lakh MT CO₂ (PIB, 2026). Mileage loss with E20 (Maruti data, FY 2025–26, 2.84 crore vehicles): ~0.6 km/litre reduction for a 20 km/litre vehicle. No E20-related engine damage found even in older, non-E20-certified vehicles. Brazil mandates E27 (rising to ~35%); USA has E10 nationwide with E15 expanding. 7 — Prelims Pointers EBP Programme: Launched January 2003, Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas; pilot 5% in 9 states; now nationwide E20 (April 2026); ESY = December–November cycle. National Policy on Biofuels 2018 (amended 2022): Advanced E20 to ESY 2025–26 from 2030; expanded feedstocks; created 2G ethanol framework; NBCC oversees feedstock allocation. APM & LTOAs: Administered Price Mechanism — annual, feedstock-differentiated pricing (higher for cane juice/B-heavy molasses). Long Term Offtake Agreements signed by PSU OMCs (IOC, BPCL, HPCL) with producers. PM JI-VAN Yojana (2019): Viability-gap funding + offtake support for 2nd generation (lignocellulosic biomass) ethanol plants — key policy instrument to scale 2G ethanol. 1G vs. 2G ethanol: 1G = food/agricultural produce (sugarcane, maize, rice). 2G = agricultural residues (straw, stover, stalk) — avoids food-fuel competition; better carbon footprint; more expensive. EISS (2018–22) supported 1G distilleries. Food vs. Fuel debate: Diversion of food crops to ethanol risks food price inflation and import dependency; 2023 sugar shortage triggered a temporary ban on cane juice ethanol; 2024 saw corn imports due to maize diversion. Exam note: Do not confuse the National Policy on Biofuels 2018 with the earlier 2009 biofuel policy. The 2018 policy introduced 2G ethanol and expanded feedstocks; the 2022 amendment advanced the E20 deadline. Sweet sorghum (water-efficient sugarcane alternative) is frequently cited in policy documents — distinct from grain sorghum used as food. ESY runs December–November, not the financial year. APM sets feedstock-differentiated prices, NOT a uniform price — a common MCQ trap. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's ethanol blending programme has achieved an impressive quantitative milestone but risks becoming an insular subsidy that trades consumer welfare and food security for farmer income support." Critically evaluate with reference to feedstock policy, second-generation ethanol, and the food-fuel nexus.GS 3 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Energy + Agriculture + Environment Intro: EBP as a genuine energy security tool — E20 achieved 5 years early, ₹1.90 lakh crore forex saved — but the editorial questions whether the framework is optimal or merely expedient. Body 1 — Achievements and rationale: Import substitution, rural income (₹1.60 lakh crore), GHG reduction (930 lakh MT CO₂); global precedent (Brazil E27, USA E10-E15); NBCC, LTOAs, APM as institutional scaffolding. Body 2 — Structural critique: Sugarcane dominance and water stress; consumer cost transfer (higher price + lower mileage); food-fuel tension (2023 ban, 2024 maize imports); income transmission inefficiency; policy siloing from agricultural and water frameworks. Body 3 — Way forward: 2G ethanol (PM JI-VAN Yojana scaling), differential pricing for residue-based ethanol, revenue-sharing with farmers, water-stressed district restrictions, dynamic feedstock caps tied to food buffer stock norms. Conclusion: A successful programme must evolve from quantity-focus (20% target) to quality-focus (right feedstock, right beneficiary, right price) — import substitution is not a licence to impose regressive costs on consumers or deplete aquifers in drought-prone districts. 9 — Practice MCQ With reference to India's Ethanol Blended Petrol (EBP) Programme, consider the following statements: 1. India achieved the 20% ethanol blending target (E20) in ESY 2025–26, five years ahead of the original 2030 deadline set under the National Policy on Biofuels, 2018. 2. The Administered Price Mechanism (APM) under the EBP sets a uniform ethanol procurement price irrespective of the feedstock used. 3. Second-generation (2G) ethanol is produced from agricultural residues such as rice straw and maize stover, avoiding direct competition with food crops. 4. PM JI-VAN Yojana provides viability-gap funding to support second-generation ethanol plants using lignocellulosic biomass. Which of the statements given above are correct? (a) 1, 2 and 3 only(b) 2 and 4 only(c) 1, 3 and 4 only(d) 1, 2, 3 and 4

Jul 13, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents 13 July 2026 INS Mahendragiri — India’s Sixth Nilgiri-Class Stealth Frigate CommissionedGS3 Monsoon Raindrop Evaporation — First Observational Estimate from IITM PuneGS1 / GS3 AI in Indian Courts — CJI’s Caution and the Draft Regulations 2026GS2 Satlujand Section 69A — OTT Regulation and Free SpeechGS2 China’s Helium Export Ban — Geopolitics of a Critical GasGS3 Why Red Is the Colour of Danger — Science of Wavelength and PerceptionGS3 Kerala’s Fading Research Hubs — JNTBGRI and the Bioeconomy OpportunityGS3 Article 01 INS Mahendragiri — India’s Sixth Nilgiri-Class Stealth Frigate Commissioned GS Paper 3 — Internal Security & Defence | Indigenisation | Science & Technology Why in News On 11 July 2026, the Indian Navy commissioned INS Mahendragiri at the Naval Dockyard, Visakhapatnam, in the presence of Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh and Chief of Naval Staff Admiral Krishna Swaminathan. The ceremony was held at the Eastern Naval Command (ENC) headquarters. Mahendragiri is the sixth commissioned warship of the Nilgiri-class (Project 17A) and the seventh and final hull of the programme. Built by Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited (MDL), Mumbai and designed by the Indian Navy’s Warship Design Bureau (WDB), she is also the 100th ship designed and delivered by the WDB. Static Background — Project 17A and India’s Naval Indigenisation Project 17A: Genesis and Programme Scope Project 17A was approved by the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) in 2015 to build a next-generation class of stealth guided-missile frigates for the Indian Navy. The programme contracts were split between two public-sector shipyards: four hulls at MDL, Mumbai (Mazagon Dock) and three hulls at GRSE, Kolkata (Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers). The seven ships are collectively called the Nilgiri-class, named after the lead ship INS Nilgiri, which was commissioned in January 2025. Project 17A is the successor to Project 17 (Shivalik-class frigates), of which three ships were built between 2003 and 2010. Compared with the Shivalik class, the Nilgiri class features enhanced stealth characteristics, greater automation, upgraded weapon and sensor suites, and a significantly higher degree of indigenisation. Warship Design Bureau (WDB) The WDB is the in-house design organisation of the Indian Navy, responsible for the conceptual and detailed design of all indigenously built warships. Its work on the Nilgiri class places India among the handful of nations capable of independently designing, constructing, and commissioning large surface combatants. INS Mahendragiri is the WDB’s 100th designed-and-delivered warship, a major institutional milestone. Indigenisation Context INS Mahendragiri carries over 75% indigenous content, a sharp contrast with earlier Indian warships that relied heavily on imports, especially from Russia and Western Europe. The construction involved a wide network of Indian micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs), consistent with the Aatmanirbhar Bharat framework in defence. India has set a target of a 200-ship Navy by 2035, with all new ships to be built domestically. Key Specifications Parameter Detail Class Nilgiri-class (Project 17A) Hull position 7th and final hull; 6th commissioned Builder Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited (MDL), Mumbai Designer Warship Design Bureau (WDB), Indian Navy Displacement ~6,670 tonnes (full load) Top speed 28 knots Propulsion CODOG (Combined Diesel or Gas) Surface-to-surface missile BrahMos supersonic cruise missile Surface-to-air missile Barak-8 (medium-range) Management system Integrated Platform Management System (IPMS) + Integrated Combat Management System (ICMS) Indigenous content >75% Ship’s motto Sthitpragyah, Raneshu, Aprajitah (Steadfast, wise, and invincible in battle) Commanding Officer Captain Saikat Chatterjee Fleet assignment Eastern Fleet, Visakhapatnam Commissioning in Context — Nilgiri-Class Inductions Ship Commission Date Builder INS Nilgiri January 2025 MDL INS Udaygiri August 2025 MDL INS Himgiri August 2025 GRSE INS Taragiri 2025–26 MDL INS Vindhyagiri 2025–26 GRSE INS Mahendragiri 11 July 2026 MDL Strategic Significance Indian Ocean Region (IOR) Presence: India’s 7,500 km coastline and 2.4 million sq km Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) make blue-water capability essential. About 90% of India’s trade and oil/gas imports transits maritime routes. Anti-access counter: The P17A frigates are designed for the full spectrum of maritime operations — Anti-Air Warfare (AAW), Anti-Surface Warfare (ASuW), Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW), and Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) — giving India a credible multi-mission combatant. Defence manufacturing hub: Defence Minister Rajnath Singh highlighted that Andhra Pradesh is emerging as a hub for defence and aerospace manufacturing, with the ENC at Visakhapatnam serving as the operational base. Technological shift: Singh cautioned against over-reliance on emerging technologies, noting that while AI, cyber warfare, drones, and hypersonic weapons are transforming warfare, trained soldiers and national resolve remain the bedrock of security. CODOG propulsion: This allows the ship to use diesel engines for fuel-efficient cruising and switch to gas turbines for high-speed sprints — balancing endurance and performance without the cost of a full COGAG (all gas turbine) arrangement. INS Mahendragiri’s commissioning marks the near-completion of India’s most ambitious indigenous frigate programme. Beyond hardware, it represents the maturation of an institutional ecosystem — encompassing the WDB, MDL, GRSE, and hundreds of MSMEs — capable of delivering state-of-the-art surface combatants without foreign dependence. As India eyes a 200-ship navy by 2035, Project 17A’s successful execution provides the template. Prelims Pointers INS Mahendragiri = 6th commissioned Nilgiri-class (P17A) frigate; 7th and final hull of the programme; named after Mahendragiri peak in Eastern Ghats, Odisha. Project 17A = CCS approved 2015; 7 ships; 4 at MDL Mumbai + 3 at GRSE Kolkata; successor to Shivalik-class (P17). Warship Design Bureau (WDB) = Indian Navy’s in-house design body; Mahendragiri is its 100th designed-and-delivered ship. CODOG propulsion = Combined Diesel or Gas; uses diesel for cruise, gas turbines for sprint — distinct from COGAG (all gas) and CODAD (all diesel). BrahMos = Supersonic cruise missile; India-Russia JV; BRAHMOS Aerospace; range ~290 km (extended versions up to 450 km+); Mach 2.8. Barak-8 = Medium-range surface-to-air missile; India-Israel JV; developed by DRDO + Israel Aerospace Industries; range ~70 km. EEZ = Exclusive Economic Zone; 200 nautical miles from baseline; sovereign rights over resources under UNCLOS. Eastern Naval Command = Headquarters Visakhapatnam; operates Eastern Fleet; responsible for Bay of Bengal and beyond. Indigenisation content >75% = Highest level achieved so far in a major Indian surface combatant programme. Practice Mains Question “The commissioning of INS Mahendragiri is not merely a naval milestone but a marker of India’s evolving defence-industrial ecosystem. Analyse the significance of Project 17A in the context of India’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat defence goals, and examine the strategic imperatives driving naval expansion in the Indian Ocean Region.” GS Paper 3  |  Internal Security & Defence Indigenisation  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to INS Mahendragiri, which of the following statements is correct? AIt is the seventh commissioned warship of the Nilgiri-class and was built at Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers, Kolkata. BIt is powered by a COGAG (Combined Gas And Gas) propulsion system enabling long-range endurance operations. CIt is the sixth commissioned Nilgiri-class (Project 17A) frigate, built by Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited, and represents the 100th ship designed and delivered by the Warship Design Bureau. DIt carries the Akash surface-to-air missile system and is assigned to the Western Fleet at Mumbai. Answer: C INS Mahendragiri is the 6th commissioned (but 7th and final hull) of Project 17A, built by MDL Mumbai — not GRSE Kolkata. Its propulsion is CODOG (diesel or gas), not COGAG. It carries BrahMos (SSM) and Barak-8 (SAM), not Akash. It is assigned to the Eastern Fleet at Visakhapatnam. It is the 100th ship designed and delivered by the WDB, making Option C the only fully correct statement. Article 02 Monsoon Raindrop Evaporation — First Observational Estimate from IITM Pune GS Paper 1 — Geography: Important Geophysical Phenomena | GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology Why in News Researchers at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune, have published the first observational estimate of raindrop evaporation over the Western Ghats. The study, led by Saikat Sengupta and published in the peer-reviewed journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, found that on average, about 25% of rain mass evaporates in mid-air before reaching the ground during the southwest monsoon — though the rate can swing between 4% and 61% on any given day across the four monsoon months of June through September. Static Background — The Southwest Monsoon System How the Southwest Monsoon Works The Southwest (SW) Monsoon (June–September) is driven by a differential in air pressure between the heated Indian landmass and the cooler Indian Ocean. The Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) shifts northward in summer, drawing moisture-laden winds from the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal. Orographic lifting along the Western Ghats forces this moist air upward, causing condensation and heavy rainfall on the windward (western) slopes. The Ghats thus act as the principal rain-shadow boundary of the Indian peninsula. The SW monsoon contributes approximately 75–80% of India’s annual rainfall. It is fundamental to agriculture, groundwater recharge, river flow, and hydropower generation. Even small systematic errors in modelling monsoon rainfall can have large downstream consequences for water-resource planning. What Is Sub-Cloud Evaporation? When a raindrop forms inside a cloud and begins falling, it passes through unsaturated air below the cloud base — the sub-cloud layer. In this layer, the drop can partially or fully evaporate before reaching the ground. The rate of evaporation depends on: Drop size: Smaller drops have a higher surface-area-to-volume ratio and evaporate faster; large drops from intense rainfall survive better. Relative humidity of sub-cloud air: Drier air accelerates evaporation (hence higher rates over Rajasthan and lower over the coast). Temperature: Higher temperatures increase the vapour pressure deficit and drive evaporation. Fall distance (cloud-base height): Taller sub-cloud layers give drops more time to evaporate. Sub-cloud evaporation is not merely a water-loss measurement. When a drop evaporates, it absorbs latent heat from surrounding air, cooling the sub-cloud layer. This cooling drives downdrafts, which create cold pools at the surface — pockets of cool, dense air that act as “triggers” for the next burst of convective rainfall. Errors in modelling this process propagate into errors in simulating the monsoon’s self-organising behaviour. The Study — Methodology Isotope-Based Measurement Technique Most water (H2O) contains ordinary hydrogen and oxygen. A small natural fraction, however, carries heavier isotopes — either heavy oxygen (18O) or deuterium (2H, heavy hydrogen). These heavier molecules are slightly more sluggish. When a raindrop evaporates, the lighter molecules escape preferentially, leaving the surviving drop enriched in heavy isotopes. Conversely, rain that evaporated very little retains a lighter isotopic signature. By measuring the isotope ratio (using a laser spectrometer) of both rainwater collected at the surface and atmospheric vapour, and feeding the results into a one-dimensional Below Cloud Interaction Model (BCIM), the researchers back-calculated how much of the original rain mass had evaporated during the fall. Data Collection — 2019 Monsoon Rainwater and atmospheric vapour samples were collected at ground level in Pune during the 2019 southwest monsoon. Collecting vapour samples was technically challenging: each sample required 6–7 hours of trapping atmospheric moisture by freezing. IITM is now acquiring portable real-time vapour analysers that can read vapour isotope ratios continuously, enabling network-scale monitoring. IITM already operates a nine-site rainwater isotope network spanning from the Himalaya and the northeast to Port Blair in the Andaman & Nicobar Islands, where sampling has continued for a decade. Key Findings and Global Comparisons Location Evaporation Rate Key Driver Western Ghats, India (this study) ~25% (range 4–61%) Moist monsoon air; large drop sizes Tropics (satellite-based) ~20% High humidity reduces evaporation Zurich, Switzerland ~40% Drier sub-cloud air Barbados, Caribbean ~60% Small drop sizes; very dry sub-cloud layer The Western Ghats figure sits at the lower end of global estimates, reflecting the relatively humid, moisture-saturated sub-cloud environment during the monsoon. At Barbados, smaller drops and much drier air result in near-total evaporation of light-rain events, while intense downpours see little evaporation regardless of location. Significance — Why It Matters for Climate and Weather Models Model accuracy: Numerical Weather Prediction (NWP) and General Circulation Models (GCMs) currently represent sub-cloud evaporation with global parameterisations that do not account for India’s specific conditions. This study provides the first India-specific observational anchor for improving those parameters. Rainfall forecasting: Getting evaporation wrong skews predicted surface rainfall amounts and the spatial distribution of rain — particularly important for agriculture-dependent regions. Atmospheric cooling: Errors in sub-cloud evaporation translate into errors in modelling cold pools, downdrafts, and the triggering of subsequent convective events — a process sometimes called “cold pool convective organisation.” India-wide mapping: The technique can now be deployed across IITM’s nine-site isotope network and extended further. Sengupta expects evaporation rates to vary sharply from the rain-soaked coast to arid Rajasthan, and the portable analysers will enable that mapping. Climate projections: Better sub-cloud evaporation estimates will improve projections of how the monsoon may shift under climate change scenarios — critical for long-range water-resource and agricultural policy. By establishing the first ground-truth measurement of mid-air raindrop evaporation over India, IITM Pune has filled a key observational gap in monsoon science. The 25% average evaporation figure is not merely an academic curiosity — it is a calibration tool for every climate model that attempts to simulate South Asian rainfall, and its regional variation holds direct policy implications for water security planning across the subcontinent. Prelims Pointers IITM Pune = Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology; under the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES); premier institution for monsoon and tropical meteorology research. Sub-cloud evaporation = Evaporation of raindrops between the cloud base and the ground; averages ~25% of rain mass over the Western Ghats (4–61% daily range). Isotope technique = Heavy isotopes (18O, 2H) enriched in surviving drops due to preferential escape of light molecules during evaporation; ratio measured by laser spectrometer. BCIM = Below Cloud Interaction Model; one-dimensional model tracking a single drop from cloud base to ground; used to calculate evaporation from isotope ratios. Southwest Monsoon = June–September; contributes ~75–80% of India’s annual rainfall; driven by ITCZ northward shift and differential heating between land and ocean. Western Ghats = UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site; orographic barrier forcing moisture-laden winds upward; windward side receives very high rainfall (Cherrapunji record: 11,777 mm/year). Cold pools = Pockets of cool dense air at the surface formed by sub-cloud evaporative cooling; trigger subsequent convective rain bursts. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics = Peer-reviewed journal (Copernicus Publications / EGU) where the study was published. Practice Mains Question “Sub-cloud evaporation of raindrops is a phenomenon that connects atmospheric physics, monsoon dynamics, and climate modelling. Explain the process, its significance for weather forecasting in India, and what the IITM Pune study contributes to our understanding of the southwest monsoon.” GS Paper 1  |  Geophysical Phenomena & Climate  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Assertion (A): A raindrop that has undergone more sub-cloud evaporation will carry a heavier isotopic composition than one that has evaporated less. Reason (R): During evaporation, lighter water molecules (1H216O) escape preferentially, leaving the remaining drop enriched in molecules containing heavier isotopes such as 18O or 2H. ABoth A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. BBoth A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A. CA is true but R is false. DA is false but R is true. Answer: A Both the Assertion and Reason are correct, and R directly explains A. During evaporation, lighter water molecules escape first because they have slightly lower bond energies and higher vapour pressures, leaving the surviving drop enriched in heavy isotopes. This is the physical principle exploited by the IITM Pune study to quantify sub-cloud evaporation from isotope ratios measured by laser spectrometry. Article 03 AI in Indian Courts — CJI’s Caution and the Draft Regulations 2026 GS Paper 2 — Judiciary | Governance | Separation of Powers | GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology (AI Governance) Why in News Chief Justice of India Justice Surya Kant, addressing a summit organised by the Indian Institute of Arbitration and Mediation, stated that Artificial Intelligence may triage disputes, organise evidence, or draft translations, but the moment it begins to weigh one party’s equities against another’s, it has stopped assisting and started deciding — a role no algorithm has earned. His remarks came alongside the Supreme Court’s Draft Regulations for Use of Artificial Intelligence in Courts, 2026, issued on 3 June 2026, currently out for public comment until 15 July 2026. Separately, a bench led by Justice P.S. Narasimha (who chairs the SC’s AI Committee) found that a tribunal had relied on AI-hallucinated — entirely fabricated — verdicts to decide a real case, prompting a call for “zero-tolerance” to blind reliance on machine-generated legal content. Static Background — AI and the Indian Judiciary India’s Judicial Backlog India’s courts face a chronic pendency crisis: over 5 crore (50 million) cases pending across all levels of the judiciary as of recent estimates. The Supreme Court alone has a backlog running into tens of thousands of cases. This has driven interest in using technology — from simple case management systems to AI — to improve efficiency without compromising fairness. Existing Technology in Courts e-Courts Mission Mode Project (Phase I launched 2005): Digitised case records, created the Case Information System (CIS), National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG). Phase III is ongoing, with ₹53.57 crore earmarked for AI and blockchain components under the Union Minister for Law & Justice Arjun Ram Meghwal’s Lok Sabha reply (December 2025). SUVAS (Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvad Software): AI tool for translating Supreme Court judgments into regional languages. SUPACE (Supreme Court Portal for Assistance in Court’s Efficiency): AI tool for research assistance — aggregating and analysing case-relevant data for judges. NJDG (National Judicial Data Grid): Real-time database of cases pending and disposed across district and taluka courts; enables pendency monitoring. AI Hallucination Incidents An AI hallucination occurs when a generative AI system confidently produces false information — in legal contexts, typically fabricated case citations. Several incidents in India and globally have involved lawyers submitting petitions with non-existent precedents generated by tools like ChatGPT. The CJI had earlier in 2026 warned that some lawyers were using AI to draft petitions containing fake case citations, calling it “absolutely uncalled for.” The Punjab & Haryana High Court responded in April 2026 by issuing a circular banning judicial officers from using AI tools (including ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot) for legal research or writing judgments. The Draft AI Regulations 2026 — Key Provisions Institutional Architecture Body Composition / Role Apex Body (SC level) SC + HC judges; MeitY official; finance & cybersecurity experts. Sets minimum mandatory standards; approves AI systems; issues implementation guidelines. SC AI Committee Chaired by Justice P.S. Narasimha. Members: Justices Sanjeev Sachdeva, Raja Vijayraghavan V, Anoop Chitkara, Suraj Govindaraj. Approves AI tool deployment at SC level. HC AI Committees Each HC constitutes its own AI Committee, backed by an AI Secretariat; approves tools within its jurisdiction. CoRE-AI Centre of Research and Excellence on Artificial Intelligence; evaluates tools, tracks developments, supports the Apex Body. Permitted Uses of AI AI is explicitly permitted (with written approval and supervision) for: case management, transcription, translation, legal research, document summarisation, accessibility tools, and general court administration. Courts are required to “actively seek opportunities” to deploy AI systems that demonstrably improve access to justice, reduce delays, or enhance administrative efficiency. Absolute Prohibitions — Non-Derogable Using AI for risk scoring to assess flight risk of accused persons. Using AI to predict recidivism (likelihood of reoffending). Using AI to evaluate bail eligibility. Using AI to determine witness credibility. Using AI to profile or predict future conduct of parties, accused, witnesses, or legal representatives. Submitting AI-generated output as independent evidence without disclosing its AI-generated character. Using blackbox (unexplainable) AI systems in matters affecting personal liberty. These prohibitions are absolute and non-derogable — no authority under the regulations can later permit them. Transparency and Disclosure If a court uses an AI tool to materially assist it in any aspect of case management, document analysis, or judicial administration, it must inform the parties in a timely and accessible manner. Minor or non-material AI use does not trigger this disclosure requirement. Private Vendor Rules Private companies may be involved in supplying AI tools, but only with written approval and subject to mandatory contract terms: ownership of court data and AI outputs must rest with the court; vendors are barred from using sensitive judicial data; vendors cannot retain or fine-tune models using court data without AI Committee approval; vendors cannot claim exclusive IP over tools built substantially on judicial data or public resources. Constitutional and Legal Framework Provision / Case Relevance to AI in Courts Article 21 Right to life and personal liberty; any AI-based decision affecting liberty (bail, sentencing) must meet due process standards. Article 14 Right to equality; algorithmic decisions must not be arbitrary or discriminatory. Doctrine of Natural Justice Audi alteram partem (hear the other side); an AI decision without human review would violate this doctrine. Shreya Singhal v. UoI (2015) SC upheld blocking powers only because of procedural safeguards; analogously, AI use in courts requires safeguards to be constitutional. K.S. Puttaswamy v. UoI (2017) Right to privacy as a fundamental right; AI profiling of litigants/accused may violate informational privacy. The Draft AI Regulations 2026 strike a balance that is philosophically consistent with India’s constitutional tradition: technology as servant, never as sovereign. The absolute prohibition on AI in adjudicative decisions — bail, risk scoring, witness credibility — reflects a recognition that justice requires not just computation but human empathy, contextual reasoning, and accountability. The real test will be in implementation: whether the institutional architecture (Apex Body, CoRE-AI, HC Committees) can keep pace with AI’s rapid evolution. Prelims Pointers Draft AI Regulations for Courts, 2026 = Issued by SC on 3 June 2026; public comment deadline 15 July 2026; not yet binding — comes into force on dates notified by respective Chief Justices. AI Hallucination = When generative AI confidently produces false content (e.g., fabricated case citations) that does not exist in reality. CoRE-AI = Centre of Research and Excellence on Artificial Intelligence; evaluates AI tools for judiciary; part of the Regulations’ institutional framework. SUVAS = Supreme Court Vidhik Anuvad Software; translates SC judgments into regional languages using AI. SUPACE = Supreme Court Portal for Assistance in Court’s Efficiency; AI-based legal research assistance tool for judges. e-Courts Phase III = Ongoing; ₹53.57 crore earmarked for AI and blockchain; builds on digitisation work of Phases I and II. Absolute prohibitions = AI cannot determine bail eligibility, assess risk of flight, predict recidivism, evaluate witness credibility, or use blackbox systems in personal liberty cases — none of these can be permitted later by any authority. Recidivism = The tendency of a convicted criminal to reoffend; AI-based recidivism prediction is prohibited under the Draft Regulations. P.S. Narasimha = Justice, Supreme Court of India; chairs the SC AI Committee that drafted the regulations. Practice Mains Question “The Supreme Court’s Draft AI Regulations 2026 draw a clear line between AI as a procedural aid and AI as a decision-maker. Critically examine this distinction in light of India’s constitutional values, the doctrine of natural justice, and the challenge of AI hallucination in the justice system.” GS Paper 2  |  Judiciary & Governance  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Consider the following statement with reference to the Supreme Court’s Draft Regulations for Use of AI in Courts, 2026: “Under the Draft Regulations, courts are prohibited from using AI to determine bail eligibility or predict recidivism, and these prohibitions are absolute and cannot be overridden by any authority created under the Regulations.” Which of the following is the correct assessment of this statement? AThe statement is incorrect because the Apex Body may grant case-by-case exceptions for bail eligibility assessment using AI in high-security matters. BThe statement is incorrect because the Draft Regulations only restrict AI in sentencing, not in bail determinations. CThe statement is correct; these are listed as absolute and non-derogable prohibitions, meaning no authority under the Regulations may later permit such uses. DThe statement is partially correct; recidivism prediction is prohibited but bail eligibility assessment using AI is allowed with written approval from the AI Committee. Answer: C The Draft Regulations explicitly list several uses as prohibited in “absolute and non-derogable” terms — including risk scoring for flight risk, recidivism prediction, bail eligibility assessment, and witness credibility evaluation. These cannot be permitted by any authority created under the Regulations, including the Apex Body or individual HC AI Committees. This absolute bar reflects the constitutional sensitivity of personal liberty under Article 21. Article 04 Satluj and Section 69A — OTT Regulation, Censorship, and Free Speech GS Paper 2 — Polity: Fundamental Rights (Article 19) | Governance: IT Act | Judiciary Why in News On 5 July 2026, two days after its premiere, the film Satluj (originally titled Punjab ’95) was removed from ZEE5’s Indian catalogue. The film — directed by Honey Trehan and starring Diljit Dosanjh — chronicles the life of human rights activist Jaswant Singh Khalra. The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) directed the takedown under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000, citing “security concerns.” The Centre subsequently referred the film to an Inter-Departmental Committee (IDC) constituted under Rule 14 of the IT Rules, 2021 for detailed examination. The film remains accessible internationally via ZEE5 Global. Who Was Jaswant Singh Khalra? Jaswant Singh Khalra was a Punjabi human rights activist who, in the early 1990s, documented what he alleged were widespread extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, and secret cremations of victims during Punjab’s militancy years. He claimed that approximately 25,000 people had been secretly cremated across the state — bodies registered as unclaimed to conceal alleged custodial killings by Punjab Police. In September 1995, Khalra was abducted from outside his home in Amritsar. He was never seen again. The CBI investigated the case and concluded that police officers had taken him to a police station in Tarn Taran, where he was killed in custody. In 2005, four Punjab Police personnel were convicted and sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment. In 2007, the Punjab and Haryana High Court enhanced their sentences to life imprisonment. The Film’s Journey — From CBFC to OTT 2022: Makers submitted the film under the title Punjab ’95 to the CBFC for a theatrical certification. The CBFC proposed 127 cuts before agreeing to certify it. The filmmakers declined to make the cuts; the theatrical release was indefinitely delayed. 3 July 2026: Film released uncut on ZEE5 under the renamed title Satluj. OTT platforms fall outside CBFC jurisdiction, so no prior certification was required. 5 July 2026: MIB directed ZEE5 to remove the film, citing security concerns. ZEE5 complied, citing “current developments,” but continued streaming internationally. 7 July 2026: Centre referred the matter to the IDC under Rule 14 of IT Rules 2021 for formal examination. Static Background — The Regulatory Framework CBFC and Theatrical Certification The Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) functions under the Cinematograph Act, 1952. It is a statutory body under MIB that certifies films for theatrical exhibition in India. Films cannot be shown in theatres without CBFC certification. The CBFC may certify films with cuts or conditions, or refuse certification. Filmmakers can appeal to the Film Certification Appellate Tribunal (FCAT). OTT Regulation — IT Rules 2021 Content released directly on OTT platforms does not require CBFC certification. Such content is instead regulated under the Information Technology (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021 (IT Rules 2021), specifically Part III, which applies to “publishers of online curated content” (i.e., OTT platforms). These rules prescribe a three-tier self-regulatory structure: Level 1: Self-regulation by the publisher (OTT platform). Level 2: Self-regulation by an industry-level self-regulatory body. Level 3: Oversight by an inter-departmental committee of the MIB. Important caveat: The Bombay High Court in 2021 stayed the operation of the Code of Ethics under Part III of the IT Rules 2021; the Madras High Court subsequently clarified that this stay has a pan-India effect. The constitutional validity of certain IT Rules provisions remains under challenge before the Delhi High Court. Section 69A of the IT Act, 2000 Section 69A empowers the Central Government to direct any agency of the government, or any intermediary, to block public access to online content on any of the following grounds: Sovereignty and integrity of India Defence of India Security of the State Friendly relations with foreign states Public order Prevention of incitement to the commission of a cognisable offence The Supreme Court in Shreya Singhal v. Union of India (2015) upheld Section 69A specifically because it contains procedural safeguards: a reasoned written order, an opportunity for the publisher to be heard, and review by a designated committee. These safeguards make it constitutionally valid under Article 19(2) reasonable restrictions. However, if the blocking order remains confidential (under Rule 16 of the Blocking Rules), the affected party cannot challenge it effectively — undermining the rationale of Shreya Singhal. Key Constitutional and Legal Issues Provision / Judgment Relevance to Satluj Case Article 19(1)(a) Freedom of speech and expression; covers artistic expression and filmmaking. Article 19(1)(g) Right to practise any profession or carry on any trade/business; filmmakers’ right to distribute their work. Article 19(2) Permits reasonable restrictions on free speech on grounds including sovereignty, security, public order, and friendly relations. Shreya Singhal v. UoI (2015) §69A constitutional only because of procedural safeguards; secret blocking orders undermine this rationale. K.S. Puttaswamy v. UoI (2017) Proportionality test: any restriction on fundamental rights must be proportionate to the stated objective. Anuradha Bhasin v. UoI (2020) Internet restrictions must be subject to judicial review; orders must be published. Rule 16, Blocking Rules Confidentiality provision used by government to withhold blocking orders from affected parties, preventing effective challenge. Broader Significance — OTT as a Parallel Censorship Space Unlike theatrical films that go through pre-certification (CBFC), OTT content is subject to post-publication executive control via Section 69A and IT Rules. Critics argue this creates a regime where content can be blocked by executive order without the structured, transparent certification process that cinema goes through — effectively making Section 69A a parallel censorship mechanism for streaming content. The Satluj case has sharpened this debate, with the filmmakers having the option to challenge the blocking order via a writ petition under Article 226 before a High Court. The Satluj episode sits at the intersection of free expression, historical memory, and national security law. It tests whether India’s OTT regulatory framework — still constitutionally contested — can be invoked in a manner that respects the procedural guarantees that courts have said are non-negotiable for any content restriction. The absence of a public blocking order makes that test harder to apply — and harder for the public to evaluate. Prelims Pointers Section 69A, IT Act 2000 = Empowers Centre to block online content on grounds including sovereignty, security, public order, friendly relations; procedural safeguards upheld by SC in Shreya Singhal (2015). IT Rules 2021, Part III = Regulates “publishers of online curated content” (OTT platforms); three-tier self-regulatory structure; Code of Ethics stayed by Bombay HC with pan-India effect. CBFC = Central Board of Film Certification; statutory body under Cinematograph Act 1952; certifies films for theatrical release only; OTT content outside its jurisdiction. IDC = Inter-Departmental Committee; constituted under Rule 14 of IT Rules 2021; examines OTT content grievances; can recommend warning, apology, content modification, or blocking under §69A. Rule 16 (Blocking Rules) = Confidentiality provision; allows govt to withhold blocking orders from affected parties; criticised as undermining Shreya Singhal safeguards. Jaswant Singh Khalra = Human rights activist; documented ~25,000 alleged secret cremations in Punjab; abducted 1995, killed in custody; 4 Punjab Police personnel convicted 2005, life sentence 2007. Article 19(1)(a) = Freedom of speech and expression; subject to Article 19(2) reasonable restrictions including sovereignty, security, public order. Shreya Singhal v. UoI (2015) = SC upheld §69A of IT Act; struck down §66A; established that online content restrictions need reasoned orders and opportunity to be heard. Article 226 = Power of High Courts to issue writs; remedy available to filmmakers to challenge blocking orders. Practice Mains Question “The removal of Satluj from ZEE5 raises fundamental questions about the constitutionality of executive content control in the OTT space. Examine the legal framework governing OTT content in India, the safeguards required for invoking Section 69A, and the broader implications for freedom of expression under Article 19.” GS Paper 2  |  Polity & Governance  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ Match the following with reference to the legal framework governing online content in India: List I (Provision/Case) List II (Description) 1. Section 69A, IT Act 2000 A. Upheld right to privacy as a fundamental right; requires proportionality for restrictions 2. Shreya Singhal v. UoI (2015) B. Empowers Centre to block online content on grounds of sovereignty, security, public order, and friendly relations 3. Rule 14, IT Rules 2021 C. SC upheld §69A but struck down §66A; held procedural safeguards make §69A constitutionally valid 4. K.S. Puttaswamy v. UoI (2017) D. Constitutes the Inter-Departmental Committee to examine OTT content grievances Select the correct answer: A1-B, 2-D, 3-C, 4-A B1-B, 2-C, 3-D, 4-A C1-C, 2-B, 3-A, 4-D D1-D, 2-C, 3-B, 4-A Answer: B 1-B: Section 69A is the blocking power under the IT Act. 2-C: Shreya Singhal upheld §69A (and struck down §66A) because of procedural safeguards. 3-D: Rule 14 of IT Rules 2021 constitutes the IDC. 4-A: Puttaswamy (2017) is the nine-judge bench ruling on right to privacy and the proportionality doctrine. Article 05 China’s Helium Export Ban — Geopolitics of a Critical Gas GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy: Supply Chains & Critical Resources | GS Paper 2 — International Relations: Trade Restrictions Why in News On 10 July 2026, China’s Ministry of Commerce and the General Administration of Customs jointly announced an immediate, temporary ban on helium exports, citing its Foreign Trade Law and relevant regulations. No fixed lifting date was specified. The ban comes as global helium supplies are already under severe strain from the conflict in West Asia, which has disrupted helium flows through the Strait of Hormuz — the chokepoint through which roughly a third of global helium production (Qatar) is routed. Static Background — What Is Helium and Why Does It Matter? How Helium Is Formed Helium is a non-renewable resource. It is not manufactured; instead, it is generated deep within the Earth’s crust through the radioactive decay of uranium and thorium atoms, which emit alpha particles. These alpha particles capture electrons to form helium atoms. Over millions of years, the gas migrates upward and becomes trapped in the same geological reservoirs as natural gas. Helium is extracted commercially from natural gas fields where its concentration exceeds 0.3% by volume. Once helium escapes into the atmosphere, it rises and is lost to space — it cannot be recovered in any practically meaningful quantity. Unique Physical Properties Lowest boiling point of any element: −269°C (just 4 K above absolute zero). This makes it the only practical cryogenic coolant for temperatures this low. Chemically inert: Does not participate in chemical reactions, making it safe as a coolant and purging gas in sensitive manufacturing processes. Smallest atoms: Helium atoms are so small they can detect leaks through gaps too narrow for oxygen or nitrogen molecules. Low density: Second lightest element after hydrogen; used for lifting in balloons and airships. Key Applications Sector Share of Demand Role of Helium Laboratory research 22% Cryogenic cooling for research instruments (NMR, superconducting magnets) Controlled atmospheres + semiconductors 17% Inert purging gas in fab chambers; wafer cooling during lithography; leak testing Lifting gas 17% Weather balloons, blimps, research aerostats MRI scanners 15% Cools superconducting magnets (must stay at ~4 K) Aerospace 9% Pressurising fuel tanks in rockets (ISRO, NASA, SpaceX) Leak detection 5% Identifying micro-leaks in pipelines, aircraft, and reactors Optical fibre manufacturing Significant Rapidly cools molten glass during fibre drawing; displaces oxygen to prevent bubbles Global Supply Structure Country Share of Global Production Key Risk Factor United States ~43% Federal Helium Reserve privatised in 2024; sold to Messer Group; no longer a global buffer Qatar ~33% Output disrupted ~14% by West Asia conflict; supply bottled up behind Strait of Hormuz Russia Significant PM sign-off required for all shipments through 2027; supply restricted Canada, Algeria Small Limited capacity; cannot compensate for other supply gaps China ~1.6% Imports >80% of its own needs; ban is about conserving imported stock, not withholding large export volumes Why China’s Ban Matters Despite Its Tiny Production Share Signal effect: China re-exports a significant volume of helium it imports, particularly to Asian markets. A ban on exports cuts off downstream buyers in East and Southeast Asia who rely on China as a transit point. Transport infrastructure: Helium can only be transported in vacuum-jacketed stainless steel vessels. Several key manufacturers of these specialised containers are Chinese. A prolonged ban could indirectly affect transport capacity. Strategic pattern: China has progressively tightened export controls on critical materials during periods of geopolitical tension: rare earths (2010 and 2023), gallium and germanium (July 2023), graphite (October 2023), and now helium. Each restriction targets materials essential to semiconductor or defence supply chains. Domestic semiconductor priority: China is aggressively expanding domestic chip fabrication capacity. The ban ensures its domestic fabs have guaranteed access to available helium stocks at a time when global supply is tight. Price impact: Spot prices in Northeast Asia had already risen to $150–205 per thousand cubic feet in June 2026 — nearly double late-2025 levels. U.S.-based supplier Airgas invoked force majeure and added a surcharge of $13.50 per hundred cubic feet to existing contracts. Cost Economics of the Helium Supply Chain Purification & liquefaction facility: Mid-to-large scale costs >$100 million; smaller plants ~$10 million. Underground salt-cavern storage: Rare geological formations; developing a new one costs >$200 million. Compressed gas storage: Up to $10 million to build. Cryogenic liquid storage: $0.5–$20 million depending on capacity. Liquid helium boil-off: Helium begins boiling off into the atmosphere once a container’s “holding time” expires — creating irreversible losses if delivery is delayed. India-Specific Impact Semiconductor fabs: India’s nascent chip fabrication ecosystem (Tata Electronics/Foxconn fab in Gujarat, CG Power in Sanand) requires helium for heat management and clean-room environments; higher spot prices feed directly into operating costs. ISRO: Uses helium to pressurise fuel tanks in launch vehicles (PSLV, GSLV, LVM3); a global helium squeeze adds procurement risk to the launch calendar. Medical sector: MRI magnets in Indian hospitals require liquid helium topping-up; tighter supply raises hospital operating costs. No domestic production: India has no significant helium extraction capacity; it is entirely import-dependent. Helium does not currently appear on India’s official Critical Minerals List (2023, 30 minerals) — a potential gap in strategic planning. China’s helium export ban is the latest episode in a broader pattern of weaponising supply-chain dependencies. With the U.S. Federal Helium Reserve privatised, Qatari supply disrupted by conflict, and Russian exports restricted, the global helium market has lost virtually all its traditional buffers simultaneously. For India, the episode underlines the urgency of reviewing its critical minerals strategy to include gaseous elements like helium, and of investing in helium recovery systems in its LNG import terminals — a technically feasible but currently neglected option. Prelims Pointers Helium = 2nd lightest element; inert; boiling point −269°C; formed by radioactive decay of U and Th; non-renewable; cannot be manufactured; HS code 2804290010. Global producers = USA 43%, Qatar 33%, Russia (restricted), Canada, Algeria; China produces only ~1.6% but imports >80% of its needs. Federal Helium Reserve (USA) = Strategic govt stockpile; privatised 2024, sold to Messer Group; no longer available as a market buffer. Strait of Hormuz = Maritime chokepoint between Iran and Oman; ~20% of global oil, ~25% of global LNG, and ~one-third of global helium pass through it; disruption affects Qatar’s helium exports. China’s critical material export controls sequence = Rare earths (2010, 2023) → Gallium + Germanium (July 2023) → Graphite (Oct 2023) → Helium (July 2026); all strategic to semiconductor/defence supply chains. CODOG vs. helium use = (Do not confuse) CODOG is ship propulsion; helium liquefies at −269°C and cools superconducting magnets in MRI and quantum computers, unlike other industrial gases. India’s Critical Minerals List (2023) = 30 minerals; helium is currently NOT on the list — a potential strategic oversight given import dependence. Helium in ISRO rockets = Used to pressurise fuel tanks in PSLV, GSLV, and LVM3; prevents tank collapse as fuel is consumed. Practice Mains Question “China’s helium export ban of July 2026 reflects a growing trend of weaponising critical resource dependencies in global geopolitics. Analyse the strategic implications of the global helium supply structure for India, and suggest measures India should take to reduce its vulnerability.” GS Paper 3  |  Economy & International Relations  |  250 words  |  15 marks Prelims Practice MCQ With reference to the global helium market, which of the following statements is NOT correct? AHelium is a non-renewable resource formed by the radioactive decay of uranium and thorium in the Earth’s crust. BThe United States meets approximately 43% of global helium supply, followed by Qatar at approximately 33%. CChina is the world’s second-largest producer of helium, supplying approximately 20% of global output, and imposed the export ban to leverage its dominant producer status. DHelium liquefies at −269°C and is used to cool superconducting magnets in MRI scanners and semiconductor fabrication facilities. Answer: C Statement C is incorrect on both counts. China produces only approximately 1.6% of global helium — it is not the second-largest producer. China actually imports more than 80% of its own helium needs. The export ban is therefore not about leveraging production dominance but about conserving imported stocks for domestic semiconductor and medical use at a time of extreme global tightness. Statements A, B, and D are all factually accurate per USGS data and the source article. Article 06 Why Red Is the Colour of Danger — Wavelength, Perception, and Physics GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology: Physics of Light | Prelims-Oriented Context A recurring science explainer question: why is red universally adopted as the colour of danger, stop signals, and warnings across human civilisation? The answer combines atmospheric physics, evolutionary biology, and the geometry of colour contrast. The Science Longest wavelength in visible spectrum: Red light has wavelengths of approximately 620–750 nm — the longest of any colour in the visible range (VIBGYOR order: violet is shortest at ~380–450 nm). Longer wavelengths are scattered least by atmospheric particles (dust, fog, rain) — this is why red signals are visible at far greater distances than blue or green ones through adverse weather. Rayleigh scattering: The physics principle governing this is Rayleigh scattering, where scattering intensity is inversely proportional to the fourth power of wavelength (λ−4). Shorter wavelengths (blue, violet) scatter far more; red scatters the least — hence red sunsets and red danger signals both survive long atmospheric paths. Evolutionary hardwiring: Red is the colour of blood and fire — two of the most primal threats in human evolutionary history. The sight of red triggers a subtle fight-or-flight response, measurably increasing heart rate and sharpening attentional focus. Contrast against natural backgrounds: The Earth’s natural palette is dominated by blue (sky and ocean) and green (foliage). Red makes a stark chromatic contrast against both, ensuring high visibility in natural environments. This is why early railroad and automotive engineers standardised red for stop signals. On Mars: A red stop sign would be ineffective on Mars, whose landscape is dominated by reddish-orange dust and whose sky often carries a pinkish hue from iron oxide particles. Effective danger colours on Mars would likely be cyan or deep blue — the complementary (opposite) colours on the colour wheel to reddish-orange. Prelims Pointers Visible spectrum order = VIBGYOR (Violet, Indigo, Blue, Green, Yellow, Orange, Red); red has the longest wavelength (~620–750 nm); violet has the shortest (~380–450 nm). Rayleigh scattering = Scattering of light by particles much smaller than the wavelength; intensity inversely proportional to λ4; explains why sky is blue (blue scatters most) and sunsets are red (blue scattered away, red persists). Red = least scattered = Longest wavelength → least atmospheric scattering → visible through fog, dust, rain from greatest distance; hence used for stop signals and danger warnings. Fight-or-flight response = Physiological arousal triggered by perceived threat; mediated by the sympathetic nervous system and adrenaline; red colour can trigger a mild version of this response due to evolutionary association with blood and fire. Complementary colours = Colour pairs opposite each other on the colour wheel; red’s complementary is cyan; orange’s complementary is blue — relevant for Mars danger-sign design. Iron oxide (Fe2O3) = Responsible for Mars’s reddish surface colour; same compound that causes rust on Earth. Article 07 Kerala’s Fading Research Hubs — JNTBGRI and the Bioeconomy Opportunity GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology: Research Institutions | Biodiversity | GS Paper 2 — Governance Context Kerala’s biological research institutions are in decline, with policy support for basic science eroding and premier institutions becoming increasingly politicised, at a time when the global bioeconomy is expanding at an unprecedented pace. The article argues for a course correction before the state becomes a spectator to opportunities it is uniquely positioned to lead. JNTBGRI — A Case Study The Jawaharlal Nehru Tropical Botanic Garden and Research Institute (JNTBGRI), Palode, Thiruvananthapuram district, was established following the 1972 UN Conference on the Human Environment (Stockholm Conference). Spread across approximately 300 acres, it houses over 50,000 plant accessions representing more than 5,000 species — one of Asia’s largest tropical plant collections. Jeevani: JNTBGRI researchers developed Jeevani, an anti-fatigue herbal formulation based on the traditional knowledge of the Kani tribe of Kerala — an internationally cited model of Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). 2024 Award: JNTBGRI received the Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI) Global Genome Initiative for Gardens Award for its conservation work. Current crisis: Experienced scientists have retired without adequate replacement; the number of research scholars has declined; technical expertise built over decades is at risk of disappearing. Systemic Issues and the Bioeconomy Opportunity Politicisation of institutions: Research organisations thrive when scientific excellence determines leadership; when political considerations dominate appointments, scientific culture suffers and talented young researchers are driven away. New institutions vs. existing ones: A tendency to create new institutions while existing ones face vacancies and ageing infrastructure; scientific excellence cannot be built by inaugurating new buildings. India’s R&D gap: India’s Gross Expenditure on R&D (GERD) stands at approximately 0.65% of GDP vs. the global average of ~1.8% and China’s ~2.4%; basic research bears a disproportionate share of under-investment. Global bioeconomy expansion: Countries worldwide are investing heavily in biotechnology, synthetic biology, nutraceuticals, and biodiversity-based industries. Kerala’s Western Ghats — a UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site and global biodiversity hotspot — gives it unique raw material for participating in this revolution. Peer institutions at risk: The Kerala Forest Research Institute and the Malabar Botanical Garden are named as other institutions with internationally recognised collections facing similar structural challenges. Prelims Pointers JNTBGRI = Jawaharlal Nehru Tropical Botanic Garden and Research Institute; Palode, Thiruvananthapuram; established post-1972 Stockholm Conference; ~300 acres; 50,000+ plant accessions; 5,000+ species. Jeevani = Anti-fatigue herbal formulation by JNTBGRI; based on traditional knowledge of the Kani tribe, Kerala; model ABS case under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) = Framework under CBD and Nagoya Protocol (2010, entered into force 2014) requiring that benefits from using genetic resources and traditional knowledge be shared with source communities and countries. Nagoya Protocol = Supplementary agreement to CBD on ABS; adopted 2010, Nagoya, Japan; operationalises Article 15 of CBD on access to genetic resources. Western Ghats = UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site (2012); one of the world’s 8 “hottest hotspots” of biodiversity; ~30% of India’s plant species; endemic species for flora and fauna. Bioeconomy = Economic activity derived from biological resources (agriculture, forestry, marine resources, biodiversity); includes biotechnology, nutraceuticals, biofuels, synthetic biology; global market valued at over $4 trillion. BGCI Global Genome Initiative for Gardens Award = International conservation award; received by JNTBGRI in 2024. Stockholm Conference (1972) = UN Conference on the Human Environment; first major global environmental conference; led to creation of UNEP; JNTBGRI established in its wake.