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Jul 18, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Contents01 NITI Aayog Investment Friendliness Index: Benchmarking State-Level Investment Ecosystems NITI Aayog · Released 17 July 2026 GS 2GS 3 02 Modified UDAN: Strengthening India’s Regional Aviation Network Ministry of Civil Aviation · Launched 4 July 2026 GS 2GS 3 Article 01 Article 01 NITI Aayog Investment Friendliness Index: Benchmarking State-Level Investment Ecosystems NITI Aayog · Released 17 July 2026 Relevance: GS 2 (Governance, federalism, government policies, statutory and non-statutory bodies) · GS 3 (Indian economy, investment, infrastructure, inclusive growth, competitive federalism). GS 2GS 3 Key Data at a Glance 36States and UTs assessed (28 States + 8 UTs) 84indicators across 8 pillars; no state scored 60 or above 5Top Performers (score >50): Gujarat, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Goa, Odisha 56.6Gujarat’s score — highest among large states ~25%India’s investment rate as % of GDP (vs China ~40% at peak) 15States classified as Frontrunners (scores 45–50) Issue in Brief NITI Aayog released the Investment Friendliness Index (IFI) on 17 July 2026 — a data-driven framework to assess how effectively States and UTs create, enable and sustain a conducive investment environment. Mandated at the 9th Governing Council Meeting (July 2024) and formalised in the Union Budget 2025–26, the IFI aims to foster competitive and cooperative federalism in service of Viksit Bharat @2047. Gujarat, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Goa and Odisha are the Top Performers; rankings are also provided within three peer groups to ensure equitable comparison. Static Background NITI Aayog (National Institution for Transforming India) replaced the Planning Commission in January 2015. Unlike the Commission, it is a policy advisory body and does not allocate funds to States — it produces strategies, indices and reform frameworks. Competitive Federalism is the principle that States compete via performance rankings to attract investment and adopt best practices — seen in earlier indices like the Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) by DPIIT and Export Preparedness Index by NITI Aayog. Cooperative Federalism is the complementary idea of Centre–State partnership rather than hierarchy — embodied in the GST Council model and the spirit of Article 263 (Inter-State Council). India’s investment rate is ~25% of GDP — well below China’s ~40% during its peak growth phase. NITI Aayog Vice Chairman Ashok Kumar Lahiri stressed at the IFI launch that private investment must drive industrialisation, innovation and employment to sustain high growth. The World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business index (discontinued globally in 2021 due to data irregularities) and India’s Business Reform Action Plan (BRAP) by DPIIT are the conceptual predecessors of the IFI at the sub-national level. Viksit Bharat @2047 envisions India as a developed nation by its centenary of independence — requiring sustained GDP growth of 8–9% annually, impossible without a step-change in both private and public investment rates. Key Dimensions — Framework and Methodology IFI evaluates all 36 jurisdictions across 8 pillars: Infrastructure, Business Climate, Resources, Government Policy, Regulatory Ease, Institutional Environment, Financial Health and Environmental Resilience. The framework uses 84 indicators combining secondary data (government/institutional sources) with perception-based measures from a primary investor survey — capturing both policy-on-paper and ground-level business experience. Scores are out of 100; crucially, no State scored 60 or above — signalling deep structural investment-climate gaps even among India’s best-performing states. States and UTs are assessed within three peer groups: Large States · Hilly and North-Eastern States · City States and UTs — to enable contextually fair comparisons across different geographies and economic scales. Key Dimensions — Rankings and Pillar Leadership Overall Top Performers (score >50): Gujarat, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Goa, Odisha. Frontrunners (45–50): 15 States. Emerging Performers (40–44): 8. Aspiring States (<40): 8. Large States: Gujarat (1st, 56.6), Maharashtra (2nd, 53.7), Tamil Nadu (3rd). Odisha, Madhya Pradesh and Andhra Pradesh ranked 4th, 5th, 6th. Bihar, Jharkhand and West Bengal at the bottom. Hilly and North-Eastern States: Uttarakhand (1st, 47.5), Assam (2nd), Himachal Pradesh (3rd). City States and UTs: Goa (1st, 53.1), Delhi (2nd), Chandigarh (3rd). Notably Chandigarh achieved the highest infrastructure score of any jurisdiction (15/25) due to urban density advantages. Pillar-wise leaders among Large States: Infrastructure & Financial Health → Gujarat; Business Climate → Maharashtra; Resources → Odisha; Government Policy → Madhya Pradesh; Institutional Environment & Regulatory Ease → Chhattisgarh; Environmental Resilience → Tamil Nadu. Gujarat’s top infrastructure score reflects port efficiency, competitive industrial electricity tariffs and well-managed T&D (Transmission & Distribution) losses. Critical Analysis — Strengths The peer-group design prevents the distortion of comparing Sikkim with Maharashtra — contextually meaningful benchmarking that earlier flat EoDB rankings lacked. Combining objective indicators + investor perception addresses the chronic gap between policy-as-designed and policy-as-experienced — a key flaw that ultimately discredited the World Bank EoDB methodology. Inclusion of Environmental Resilience as a pillar is forward-looking — aligning with ESG-driven FDI trends and India’s climate commitments under Panchamrit (COP26). The IFI is designed as a reform instrument, not merely a scorecard — state profiles identify specific policy gaps, enabling targeted improvements rather than generic competitive pressure. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions No state crossing 60 out of 100 reveals deep structural weaknesses even at India’s best — the IFI reveals the ceiling, not just the floor of the investment climate challenge. Perception-based components can be gamed — states may improve survey scores through optics rather than substantive reform, similar to how EoDB rankings became subject to methodological gaming before discontinuation. Key investor pain points — land acquisition timelines, labour relations, judicial dispute-resolution speed — are not directly captured as standalone indicators in the publicly disclosed framework. NITI Aayog Vice Chairman himself clarified: “This is not a ranking exercise” — yet political signalling and media framing will make it one, risking incentive distortion toward optics over structural reform. Pillar weights within the composite score are not publicly disclosed — limiting independent peer review and methodological accountability. Way Forward Publish full pillar weights and methodology to enable independent scrutiny and prevent gaming — transparency is non-negotiable for index credibility. Link IFI scores to Centre–State investment facilitation agreements so low-scoring states receive targeted technical assistance, not just rankings. Expand the index to capture investment retention and exit ease — attracting capital and sustaining it are distinct policy challenges requiring distinct metrics. Use IFI to accelerate Single Window Clearance adoption across all 36 jurisdictions — consistently cited by investors as the binding bottleneck for project commencement. Build in district-level data layers progressively, given investment decisions increasingly hinge on cluster-specific conditions rather than state-level averages. Prelims Pointers IFI released by: NITI Aayog, 17 July 2026 · Covers 28 States + 8 UTs · 84 indicators, 8 pillars. Mandate origin: 9th Governing Council (July 2024) + Union Budget 2025–26 · Goal: competitive & cooperative federalism for Viksit Bharat @2047. Top Performers (score >50): Gujarat (56.6), Maharashtra (53.7), Tamil Nadu, Goa (53.1), Odisha. Peer group winners: Large States → Gujarat; Hilly/NE → Uttarakhand (47.5); City States/UTs → Goa · Chandigarh topped infrastructure (15/25). Pillar leaders (Large States): Infrastructure/Financial Health → Gujarat · Business Climate → Maharashtra · Environmental Resilience → Tamil Nadu · Govt Policy → MP. India’s investment rate: ~25% of GDP · NITI Aayog replaced Planning Commission, January 2015 · No state scored 60+ out of 100. Practice Mains Question India’s Investment Friendliness Index marks a shift from input-based to outcome-oriented federal benchmarking. Critically examine its design, significance and limitations in the context of competitive federalism and Viksit Bharat @2047. GS Paper 2 · Governance, Federalism · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the Investment Friendliness Index (IFI): (1) It covers all 28 States and 8 Union Territories. (2) It uses 84 indicators across 8 pillars. (3) Environmental Resilience and Financial Health are among its 8 pillars. (4) States are ranked uniformly in a single national list without any peer groupings. Which are correct? A) 1, 2 and 3 onlyB) 1 and 4 onlyC) 2, 3 and 4 onlyD) 1, 2, 3 and 4 Q2. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): No State in India scored 60 or above in the Investment Friendliness Index. Reason (R): The IFI evaluates pillars including Environmental Resilience and Institutional Environment, where even leading States show structural weaknesses. 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 Q3. Match List I (IFI pillar leadership among Large States) with List II (Leading State): A. Infrastructure · B. Business Climate · C. Government Policy · D. Environmental Resilience // 1. Madhya Pradesh · 2. Tamil Nadu · 3. Gujarat · 4. Maharashtra. A) A-3, B-4, C-1, D-2B) A-4, B-3, C-2, D-1C) A-3, B-1, C-4, D-2D) A-2, B-4, C-3, D-1 Article 02 Article 02 Modified UDAN: Strengthening India’s Regional Aviation Network Ministry of Civil Aviation · Cabinet Approval: March 2026 · Launch: 4 July 2026, Jodhpur Airport Relevance: GS 2 (government policies and programmes, inclusive development, welfare schemes) · GS 3 (infrastructure, transport, Atmanirbhar Bharat, public finance, CAG audit findings). GS 2GS 3 Image: Modified UDAN launch at Jodhpur Airport (4 July 2026) — ₹28,840 crore, 10-year regional aviation expansion. [Replace src with image URL] Key Data at a Glance ₹28,840 crtotal Modified UDAN outlay (FY 2026–27 to 2035–36) 100aerodromes to be developed from unserved airstrips (₹12,159 cr over 8 years) 200modern helipads @ ~₹15 cr each (₹3,661 cr total) 5 yrsextended VGF for airlines (up from 3 yrs); tapered from year 3 679UDAN routes operational (15 July 2026); 95 airports/heliports/water aerodromes 1.68 crpassengers benefited since UDAN launch; 3.58 lakh flights operated Issue in Brief The Regional Connectivity Scheme (RCS) – UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik — “Let the common citizen fly”) was launched in October 2016 under the National Civil Aviation Policy (NCAP) 2016 to make air travel affordable and connect Tier-2/3 cities and remote areas. The Union Cabinet approved Modified UDAN in March 2026; PM Modi formally launched it at Jodhpur Airport on 4 July 2026 — directly responding to a damaging CAG audit finding (2023) that the original scheme had severe route sustainability and implementation failures. Modified UDAN runs for 10 years (FY 2026–27 to 2035–36) with a total outlay of ₹28,840 crore, targeting 120 new destinations and 4 crore passengers over the decade. Static Background — UDAN: Origins and Design UDAN was a product of NCAP 2016, India’s first comprehensive civil aviation policy. It is implemented by the Ministry of Civil Aviation through the Airports Authority of India (AAI). Core mechanism: Viability Gap Funding (VGF) — the government bridges the financial gap between the capped fare passengers pay and what airlines need to cover costs. Original VGF covered up to 50% of seats (max 40 seats/flight) for 3 years per route. Unique RCS-Levy mechanism: a small fee levied on select domestic flights funds the scheme — making aviation fund aviation. India is the first country globally to use such a sectoral self-funding model for regional connectivity. India is now the world’s 3rd largest domestic aviation market. Operational airports grew from 74 in 2014 to 165 as of July 2026; UDAN directly drove most of this expansion by reviving unused airstrips. Static Background — CAG Audit: The Structural Problem Modified UDAN Solves The CAG’s 2023 compliance audit of UDAN (Phases 1–3, up to March 2021) found that 52% of awarded routes (403 of 774) could not commence operations at all. Of the 371 routes that did start, only 112 (30%) completed the full 3-year concession period. A mere 54 routes (just 7% of total awarded) remained operational after the concession ended — connecting only 17 airports as of March 2023. Operations were discontinued at 83 airports/heliports/water aerodromes even after spending ₹1,089 crore on their development — a fiscal waste finding that triggered the redesign. The CAG also flagged ticketing malpractices by certain airlines — concessional UDAN seats not made available to passengers as mandated, defeating the scheme’s core affordability objective. Root cause identified: the 3-year VGF window was too short for demand on thin regional routes to mature. Modified UDAN directly addresses this by extending VGF to 5 years with a tapered structure. Key Dimensions — Five Components of Modified UDAN i. Development of 100 Aerodromes (₹12,159 crore, 8 years): Converting existing unserved airstrips into operational aerodromes — Tier-2/3 cities and remote regions for passenger and cargo connectivity. ii. Operation & Maintenance (O&M) Support (₹2,577 crore): 3-year O&M support for ~441 aerodromes — capped at ₹3.06 crore/annum per airport and ₹0.90 crore/annum per heliport/water aerodrome. Addresses the chronic under-resourcing that caused airport closures in the original scheme. iii. 200 Modern Helipads (₹3,661 crore): @ ~₹15 crore each, targeting regions where conventional airports are not feasible. Focus on healthcare access, emergency response and last-mile connectivity in hilly, North-Eastern and island areas. iv. Enhanced VGF for Airlines (₹10,043 crore, 10 years): VGF extended to 5 years; tapered from year 3 to create a glide path toward commercial viability; route exclusivity stays at 3 years to prevent monopolisation on thin corridors. v. Atmanirbhar Bharat — Indigenous Aircraft: 2 HAL Dhruv helicopters for Pawan Hans and 2 HAL Dornier 228 aircraft for Alliance Air — supporting domestic aviation manufacturing for remote-terrain operations under Make in India. Key Dimensions — Operational Record and Eligibility Reforms As of 15 July 2026: 679 routes operational across 95 airports, heliports and water aerodromes; 3.58 lakh flights and 1.68 crore passengers served since 2016. Key beneficiary regions: Tezpur, Passighat, Diu, Pithoragarh, Rourkela — remote, hilly and island areas that had no regular air services before UDAN. Impact visible in tourism and healthcare access. Relaxed eligibility under Modified UDAN: airports with ≤14 weekly flights qualify as underserved; threshold raised to ≤21 flights for strategically vital North-Eastern and hilly states — expanding the scheme’s potential coverage. Passenger facilitation additions: UDAN Yatri Cafés (affordable food), Flybrary (free books) and free Wi-Fi at airports — improving the ground experience at small regional airports. Critical Analysis — Strengths Extending VGF to 5 years directly addresses the CAG’s root cause finding — 3 years was demonstrably insufficient for demand on thin regional routes to become self-sustaining. The tapered funding structure from year 3 creates a rational glide path toward commercial viability rather than an abrupt cliff-edge withdrawal — a smarter fiscal design than the original scheme. O&M support for ~441 aerodromes fills a structural gap the original scheme left entirely to state and AAI budgets, whose chronic under-resourcing was a primary cause of airport closures. 200 helipads represent genuine last-mile thinking — recognising that conventional airports are not always feasible in the Himalayas, North-East or island territories with difficult terrain. Critical Analysis — Structural Questions The CAG found only 7% of original routes were self-sustaining post-subsidy. Modified UDAN does not publicly disclose a demand-feasibility methodology for route selection — risking the same pattern with a far larger ₹28,840 crore fiscal exposure. Daily domestic passengers now exceed 5 lakh nationally, but this growth is concentrated on metro routes. Thin regional routes face structural demand constraints — low population density, competing road/rail alternatives — that VGF alone cannot overcome. The scheme does not explicitly address the CAG recommendation for independent airline audits to ensure VGF seats are sold at capped fares — the ticketing transparency gap remains a live vulnerability. Helipads at ₹15 crore each × 200 = ₹3,000 crore in capital; recurring operational staffing in remote terrain represents a long-term fiscal commitment without guaranteed utilisation projections. Alliance Air’s financial precariousness — the airline designated for HAL Dornier aircraft — raises questions about the institutional sustainability of the Atmanirbhar Bharat aviation component. Way Forward Publish a demand-viability assessment methodology for every new route before VGF award — incorporating stage length, alternative transport, terrain and tourism potential, as the CAG recommended. Establish real-time digital monitoring of VGF seat utilisation and capped-fare compliance to prevent recurrence of ticketing malpractices documented in the CAG audit. Integrate helipad development with NDRF/SDRF emergency response planning so infrastructure delivers dual civilian and disaster-response utility — strengthening the cost-benefit case. Build a domestic MRO (Maintenance, Repair and Overhaul) ecosystem alongside indigenous aircraft deployment — without domestic MRO, HAL aircraft operations remain cost-inefficient and import-dependent for spare parts. Link route selection to the Aspirational Districts Programme using GIS-based route mapping to prioritise connectivity in the most underserved pockets and align aviation with the broader development convergence model. Prelims Pointers UDAN full form: Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik · Launched October 2016 · Under NCAP 2016 · Ministry of Civil Aviation via AAI. Modified UDAN: Cabinet approval March 2026 · Launch 4 July 2026, Jodhpur · 10 years (FY 2026–27 to 2035–36) · outlay ₹28,840 crore. Component outlays: 100 aerodromes ₹12,159 cr · VGF airlines ₹10,043 cr · 200 helipads ₹3,661 cr · O&M support ₹2,577 cr. VGF change: 3 years (original) → 5 years (modified) with taper from year 3 · Route exclusivity stays at 3 years. Current status (15 July 2026): 679 routes, 95 airports/heliports/water aerodromes, 3.58 lakh flights, 1.68 crore passengers · India airports: 74 (2014) → 165 (2026). CAG 2023 findings: 52% of 774 routes failed to commence · Only 54 routes (7%) survived post-concession · ₹1,089 cr spent on 83 non-operational airports · Ticketing malpractices flagged. Atmanirbhar component: HAL Dhruv helicopters (Pawan Hans) + HAL Dornier 228 (Alliance Air). RCS-Levy: Fee on select domestic flights to fund UDAN — first-of-its-kind sectoral self-funding model · Underserved threshold: ≤14 flights/week (≤21 for NE and hilly states). Practice Mains Question The Modified UDAN Scheme addresses structural failures of its predecessor while retaining its core vision of inclusive air connectivity. Critically evaluate the scheme’s redesigned framework in light of CAG audit findings and the challenges of regional aviation viability in India. GS Paper 3 · Infrastructure, Government Schemes · 250 words · 15 marks Practice MCQs Q1. Consider the following about Modified UDAN (2026): (1) Approved by the Union Cabinet in March 2026 for a 10-year period. (2) VGF support to airlines extended from 3 years to 5 years. (3) The scheme proposes 200 helipads at approximately ₹15 crore each. (4) The funding model relies entirely on the Union government’s budgetary allocation with no levy on domestic flights. Which are correct? A) 1, 2 and 3 onlyB) 2 and 4 onlyC) 1, 3 and 4 onlyD) 1, 2, 3 and 4 Q2. Which of the following were key findings of the CAG’s audit of the UDAN scheme? (1) 52% of routes awarded up to UDAN-3 could not commence operations. (2) Only 54 routes (7% of total) remained operational beyond the 3-year concession. (3) ₹1,089 crore was spent on airports where operations were subsequently discontinued. (4) Airlines universally complied with VGF seat-booking and fare-cap norms. A) 1, 2 and 3 onlyB) 2, 3 and 4 onlyC) 1 and 4 onlyD) 1, 2, 3 and 4 Q3. (Odd One Out) Which of the following is NOT a component of the Modified UDAN Scheme? A) Viability Gap Funding for airline operators for up to 5 yearsB) Development of 200 modern helipadsC) Construction of Greenfield airports in metropolitan citiesD) Operation and Maintenance support for ~441 aerodromes

Jul 18, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Contents01 Promise of Chips The Hindu · India Semiconductor Mission 2.0, Geopolitics of Chipmaking, Talent Strategy GS 3 — Science & TechnologyGS 3 — Industry & EconomyEssay 02 A Trade Deal That Tests India's Competitive Confidence V. Anantha Nageswaran, Chief Economic Adviser · The Hindu · India-UK CETA, Import Liberalisation, Industrial Competitiveness GS 2 — International RelationsGS 3 — Indian EconomyEssay Editorial 01 of 02 Article 01 Promise of Chips The Hindu Relevance: GS 3 (Science & Technology, Industry & Infrastructure, Indian Economy — semiconductor policy, strategic autonomy, talent ecosystem) and Essay (Technology as sovereign power, India's place in global value chains). GS 3 — Science & TechnologyGS 3 — Industry & InfrastructureEssay — Technology as Strategic Power 1 — Issue in Brief The Union Cabinet has approved ISM 2.0 (India Semiconductor Mission Phase 2) with a total outlay of ₹1.27 lakh crore — nearly double the ₹76,000 crore outlay of Phase 1 — signalling that chipmaking is no longer a commercial aspiration but a strategic national imperative. The editorial's central argument: semiconductor capacity is sovereign leverage in a geopolitically fractured world. The 2020–21 global chip shortage — which disrupted automobile, electronics and defence industries worldwide — demonstrated that import dependence is strategic vulnerability, not merely an economic inefficiency. Key concern: talent is India's most decisive asset and most neglected risk. India produces the world's largest pool of semiconductor designers — but they overwhelmingly emigrate, repeating the "brain drain trap" from the software era, only now in hardware. A candid editorial admission: returns on Phase 1 remain unknowable — most approved projects have not yet entered commercial production. Phase 2 is a bet on continuity, not demonstrated success. 2 — Static Background What is a semiconductor? A semiconductor (typically silicon) is a material whose electrical conductivity can be precisely controlled, enabling transistors — the building blocks of all modern chips (integrated circuits). Chips are embedded in smartphones, EVs, defence systems, AI servers and virtually every digital device. The global chipmaking hierarchy has four main layers: (a) Design — IP-intensive, dominated by the US, UK and Netherlands via ARM, Qualcomm, ASML; (b) Fabrication (Fabs) — capital-intensive, monopolised by TSMC (Taiwan) and Samsung (South Korea); (c) ATMP/OSAT — Assembly, Testing, Marking and Packaging — less capital-intensive, where India is beginning; (d) Equipment — dominated by Dutch ASML (lithography) and US Applied Materials (deposition). Moore's Law: Intel co-founder Gordon Moore's 1965 observation that transistor count on a chip doubles roughly every two years, driving the relentless push to smaller, faster, cheaper chips. Advanced nodes today are at 3nm and 2nm. EUV Lithography (Extreme Ultraviolet): Uses 13.5nm wavelength light to etch nanoscale circuits onto silicon wafers. ASML (Netherlands) is the sole global manufacturer of EUV lithography machines — giving one Dutch company extraordinary strategic leverage over the entire global chipmaking industry. These machines cost over $150 million each and require ultra-pure environments. ISM Phase 1 (2021): Approved with an outlay of ₹76,000 crore; offered capital subsidies of up to 50% for approved fabs and ATMP units and a Design-Linked Incentive (DLI) scheme of ₹1,000 crore for chip design start-ups. Under ISM 1.0, the government approved 12 projects with cumulative investments of around ₹1.64 lakh crore. The majority of investment came from Tata Electronics and its semiconductor arm. Asian Tigers reference: South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong achieved rapid industrialisation through export-led electronics manufacturing (1960s–1990s). The editorial invokes this template — arguing that India's semiconductor push, if executed well, could deliver a comparable economic boom. 3 — Key Dimensions ISM 2.0 — what is new: Phase 2 covers the entire semiconductor value chain — from minerals and gases (raw materials) to design IP — marking a maturation from Phase 1's narrower focus on fabs and ATMP. The government expects ISM 2.0 to attract investments of around ₹4 lakh crore and semiconductor production worth ₹2 lakh crore during the scheme period. The government's capital subsidy share is lower than Phase 1's 50%. Incentive structure: ISM 2.0 retains capital subsidies and introduces manufacturing-linked incentives disbursed per unit once sales are made. Incremental boosters are promised for products that leverage domestic capabilities and components — encouraging forward integration. The EUV access barrier: Acquiring or domestically building EUV machines and the ultra-clean fab environments they require (reliable power, ultra-pure water, specialised photoresists, vibration-free environments) represents a formidable barrier. The editorial is candid: the prospect of India deploying investments toward such frontier technology is "hard to imagine, but tantalising." Tata-ASML strategic partnership (May 2026): Tata Electronics and ASML announced a partnership for semiconductor manufacturing in India. ASML — sole provider of EUV lithography machines — is moving beyond a sales relationship to establish maintenance labs and technology-sharing in India. India's Dholera, Gujarat fab will use ASML DUV (Deep Ultraviolet) tools initially, with a pathway toward deeper cooperation. Talent as the decisive asset: The most acute talent shortages include process engineers with advanced-node experience, lithography specialists familiar with EUV, yield optimisation engineers, and materials scientists. India has 105 start-ups already enrolled in the DLI scheme. Global semiconductor companies (Intel, Qualcomm, Nvidia, AMD) run significant R&D centres in Bengaluru and Hyderabad — but the talent pipeline flows outward, not inward. AI dependency: AI chips (GPUs, NPUs) rest on advanced memory and processing infrastructure — DRAM, High Bandwidth Memory (HBM), logic chips at sub-5nm nodes. India's approved fabs currently target legacy nodes (28nm and above) used in automobiles, IoT and defence electronics. The AI chip goal is a long-range aspiration, not a near-term deliverable. Geopolitical resistance is real: Advanced economies will deploy export controls, technology transfer restrictions and talent poaching to retain their position. The editorial is explicit: "the capacity to inflict pain is the best deterrent against supply chain shocks" — but acquiring that capacity requires navigating determined resistance. 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Geopolitical imperative is validated: Supply chain weaponisation is no longer theoretical. US export controls on ASML tools to China, TSMC's geographic concentration in Taiwan, and the 2021 global chip shortage all confirm that import dependence is strategic vulnerability. The editorial's argument that "the wisdom of spending public money in these capabilities is clearer" in a geopolitically fraught environment is well-grounded. In favour — Full value chain coverage is a step forward: ISM 2.0's coverage of raw materials (minerals, gases) through to design IP marks a policy maturation from Phase 1's narrower focus. Incentivising upstream suppliers is essential for genuine indigenisation rather than assembly-level integration. In favour — Talent dividend is real and scalable: India graduates the largest number of electrical and electronics engineers globally. The DLI scheme already has 105 start-ups. India's chip design talent is globally sought — with engineers leading R&D at Intel, Qualcomm, Nvidia and AMD. The structural asset exists; the policy challenge is retention. In favour — Follows the Asian Tiger model: Taiwan and South Korea used decade-long, State-backed industrial policy to climb from assembly to advanced fabrication. India's phased approach — legacy nodes first, advanced nodes later — mirrors this trajectory and is the only realistic sequencing. Against — Phase 1 returns are unproven: The editorial honestly acknowledges that most Phase 1 projects are yet to begin commercial production. Phase 2 is being scaled up before Phase 1 outcomes are known — raising questions about whether the incentive architecture and project execution frameworks are functioning. Against — Technology ceiling is structural: EUV access requires not just machines but entire ecosystems — specialised photoresists, ultra-pure water, vibration-free environments, helium supply chains. India lacks mature fabrication plants and critical infrastructure, and faces a shortage of specialised microelectronics talent at the process engineering level. Against — Brain drain risk persists: Without matching compensation, world-class research infrastructure and intellectual challenge at home, India risks funding the education and early careers of engineers who then migrate — repeating the software-era pattern, only now in the higher-stakes domain of hardware. Against — Geopolitical headwinds: Incumbent powers will resist India's rise in this space through export controls, licensing restrictions and diplomatic pressure. Access to ASML's most advanced EUV systems remains constrained by US export regulations even for allied nations. 5 — Way Forward Talent retention architecture: Establish dedicated semiconductor research parks at IITs and NITs with competitive compensation benchmarked against global offers. Link DLI scholarships to mandatory periods of domestic employment — as South Korea did through its K-Chips Act and KAIST ecosystem. Phased technology ladder: Begin with legacy node fabs (28nm+) and ATMP — where capital and technology access are feasible — then climb to advanced nodes as the ecosystem matures. Avoid skipping to EUV prematurely; this mirrors South Korea's own 1970s–2000s trajectory from packaging to world-class fabrication. Leverage ASML-Tata partnership strategically: Use this partnership to train lithography engineers domestically, build maintenance capabilities and position India as an ASML regional service hub — a pathway to deeper technology transfers and eventually DUV-to-EUV progression. Build a National Semiconductor Research Authority (analogous to DARPA in the US or imec in Belgium) to fund pre-competitive R&D in chip materials, photoresists, and advanced packaging — areas where public investment accelerates industry without duplicating it. Link semiconductor policy to the Critical Minerals Mission: Chips require gallium, germanium, cobalt and rare earths. India's mineral reserves (lithium in J&K, cobalt in Odisha) and its Critical Minerals Mission must be directly integrated into the semiconductor value chain strategy. 6 — Data & Key Facts ₹76,000 CrISM Phase 1 outlay (2021); up to 50% capital subsidy for approved fabs and ATMP ₹1.64 lakh CrCumulative private investment committed under ISM 1.0 across 12 approved projects ₹1.27 lakh CrISM 2.0 outlay approved by Union Cabinet, July 2026 ₹4 lakh CrExpected investments to be attracted under ISM 2.0 during scheme period 105Start-ups enrolled under ISM 1.0's Design-Linked Incentive (DLI) scheme (₹1,000 Cr) $100 BnIndia's projected semiconductor market size by 2030 (ASML internal projection) EUV machines: manufactured exclusively by ASML (Netherlands); priced at over $150 million each; essential for chips below 7nm nodes; ASML's EUV tools are subject to US-led export control restrictions for certain destinations. Tata-ASML Partnership (May 2026): Tata Electronics and ASML announced a strategic partnership to advance semiconductor manufacturing in India; India's Dholera fab will use ASML DUV tools; maintenance labs and technology-sharing initiatives planned inside India. 7 — Prelims Pointers ISM (India Semiconductor Mission) — nodal agency under MeitY; Phase 1: ₹76,000 Cr outlay, 2021, up to 50% capital subsidy, DLI scheme ₹1,000 Cr, 12 projects approved; Phase 2: ₹1.27 lakh Cr, July 2026 EUV Lithography — uses 13.5nm extreme ultraviolet light; sole manufacturer ASML (Netherlands); needed for chips below 7nm; machines priced at $150 million+; subject to export controls DUV Lithography — Deep Ultraviolet (193nm ArF); older technology but essential for most chip layers; India's Dholera fab (Tata Electronics) will use ASML DUV tools initially ATMP / OSAT — Assembly, Testing, Marking & Packaging / Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly & Test; less capital-intensive entry point; Micron building $3 billion packaging facility in India Moore's Law — transistor count doubles ~every 2 years; coined by Gordon Moore (Intel) in 1965; drives chipmaking to smaller nodes (now 3nm/2nm); foundational to understanding chip industry economics Critical Minerals Mission — India's initiative to secure supply of minerals (lithium, cobalt, gallium, rare earths) essential for EVs, chips and clean energy; directly relevant to semiconductor value chain Exam note: Do not confuse ISM 1.0 government outlay (₹76,000 Cr) with total investment attracted from industry (₹1.64 lakh Cr). The government's capital subsidy was up to 50% in Phase 1; Phase 2 reduces the government's share. Also: ATMP and chip design are distinct from fabrication — India currently leads in design and is beginning ATMP, not advanced fab. 8 — Practice Mains Question "India's semiconductor ambitions rest on three pillars — capital, technology access, and talent. Of these, talent is both India's greatest strength and its most neglected asset." Critically examine with reference to the India Semiconductor Mission.GS 3 · 15 marks · ~250 words · Industry, Science & Technology, Strategic Autonomy Intro: Frame the global chip geopolitics and ISM 2.0's ₹1.27 lakh crore commitment as context; note that chipmaking has transitioned from a commercial aspiration to a sovereign imperative. Body 1 — Capital and technology dimensions: What India has secured (Tata-ASML partnership, Micron ATMP, 12 Phase 1 projects) vs. what remains beyond reach (EUV access, advanced node fabrication) — assess the technology ceiling realistically. Body 2 — The talent argument: India's chip design strength, the global talent shortage, the brain drain risk, and what retention requires — DLI expansion, research parks, compensation benchmarking, mandatory domestic employment periods. Conclusion: A phased technology ladder (legacy nodes → advanced nodes) combined with a talent retention architecture is more durable than attempting frontier technology leaps prematurely. The Asian Tiger model shows that patience and sequencing beat ambition without ecosystem. 9 — Practice MCQ With reference to the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM), which of the following statements is/are correct? 1. ISM Phase 1 was approved with an outlay of ₹76,000 crore and offered capital subsidies of up to 50% for approved fabs and ATMP units. 2. ISM Phase 2, approved in July 2026, includes incentives for suppliers of raw materials such as minerals and gases, covering the entire value chain. 3. The Design-Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme under ISM Phase 1 had an allocation of ₹10,000 crore for chip design start-ups. Select the correct answer using the code below: (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3 Editorial 02 of 02 Article 02 A Trade Deal That Tests India's Competitive Confidence V. Anantha Nageswaran — 18th Chief Economic Adviser to the Government of India · The Hindu Relevance: GS 2 (India and its neighbourhood/major powers — bilateral trade agreements, international relations), GS 3 (Indian Economy — effects of liberalisation, import competition, trade policy, industrial competitiveness) and Essay (Competition as the engine of excellence, the state and the citizen). GS 2 — International RelationsGS 3 — Indian EconomyEssay — Competition & Excellence 1 — Issue in Brief On July 24, 2025, India and the United Kingdom signed the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) in London, concluded after 14 rounds of negotiations spanning three years. It is India's most comprehensive trade agreement with a G-7 nation and the UK's most significant bilateral FTA since Brexit. Both CETA and the accompanying Double Contribution Convention (DCC) came into force on July 15, 2026. The editorial is authored by India's Chief Economic Adviser — carrying unusual authority as a defence of import liberalisation from within the government. It argues that the discomfort of competing with British goods is, in fact, the deal's deepest gift. Central thesis: trade agreements are not zero-sum. Their true worth lies not only in what a country exports but in what it is obliged to import. Exposure to import competition is a productivity shock that builds industrial strength over time — the "favour India does to itself." The editorial invokes Thiruvalluvar's Tirukkural to conclude — framing competitive discipline as a civilisational value, not merely economic policy: "Those who strive without slackening will see even destiny retreat before them." 2 — Static Background What is an FTA / CETA? A Free Trade Agreement (FTA) reduces or eliminates tariffs and quotas between countries. A Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) or CETA goes further — covering services, investment, intellectual property, digital trade and government procurement. India-UK CETA covers 26 sectors. India's FTA history: India has FTAs with ASEAN (2010), Japan CEPA (2011), South Korea CEPA (2010), UAE CEPA (2022), Australia ECTA (interim, 2022) and Mauritius. The India-UK CETA is the most ambitious by scope and India's first comprehensive G-7 FTA. India-UK trade baseline: Bilateral trade in goods and services stood at approximately $56 billion in 2024–25. In 2024, India's merchandise exports to the UK totalled about $14 billion (~3% of India's total exports), making the UK India's sixth largest export market. The pre-CETA tariff asymmetry: India's average tariff on UK goods was ~15%; the UK imposed sector-specific duties of 12% on textiles and garments, 16% on leather and footwear, 21.5% on marine products and 18% on engineering goods. These concentrated in labour-intensive sectors where India's competitive edge lies. The Bangladesh/LDC advantage (pre-CETA): Under the UK's post-Brexit Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS) — successor to the EU's GSP — Least Developed Countries (LDCs) like Bangladesh, Pakistan and Cambodia shipped garments to Britain duty-free, while India, as a middle-income country, paid 12%. CETA closes this structural disadvantage. The "protection paradox" (India's own evidence): Where India's carmakers were forced to compete — in small and mid-sized vehicles — they became genuinely globally competitive (Maruti-Suzuki, Tata Motors export success). Where they remained permanently shielded — luxury vehicles — they remained weak. The editorial uses this as evidence that protection without time limits preserves weak industries, not strong ones. 3 — Key Dimensions Export gains — the immediate harvest: The UK eliminates duties on 99% of Indian tariff lines by value immediately, removing tariffs of up to 70% on processed foods, 21.5% on marine products, 18% on engineering goods and auto components, 16% on leather and footwear, and 12% on textiles and clothing. Labour-intensive sector workers in Tiruppur (garments) and Agra (footwear) are the primary beneficiaries. Pharmaceuticals — the scale story: India is the world's largest supplier of generic medicines. Zero UK duties allow Indian generics to compete on price in one of the world's largest pharmaceutical markets. This is a scale story, not a labour story — a mature, cost-competitive Indian industry gaining equal-terms access. The Double Contribution Convention (DCC): Indian employees temporarily posted to the UK will no longer have to pay into Britain's National Insurance (NI) system for up to five years, provided they continue contributing to India's Provident Fund. This applies to "detached workers" sent by Indian employers only — not to Indians who take up local UK jobs. More than 75,000 Indian workers and 900 companies are expected to benefit, with estimated annual savings of over $600 million. The import-side concessions: India has agreed to reduce automotive tariffs from ~110% toward 10% (under quota, phased over time) and Scotch whisky tariffs from 150% to 40% over a decade. Cuts are carefully sequenced — capped by quotas and drafted to give India's automobile industry time to enhance competitiveness. Services and digital concessions: The UK secured India's commitments on data-localisation waivers and faster patent examination timelines — important for British pharmaceutical and fintech companies. These could constrain India's future data sovereignty policy choices and affect the generic pharmaceutical sector's IP timeline. FTA utilisation gap: India historically under-utilises FTAs — exporters, especially MSMEs, lack awareness of rules of origin requirements, documentation, and certification pathways needed to claim preferential tariffs. The editorial explicitly flags this as a critical implementation gap: "signing an agreement and making it work are two different tasks." 4 — Critical Analysis In favour — Ends structural discrimination against India: The closure of the Bangladesh-India garment tariff gap is a direct employment multiplier for workers in Tiruppur, Surat and Agra who were losing orders on price, not on quality. Every percentage point of tariff reduction translates into order wins for India's labour-intensive export clusters. In favour — DCC is a concrete, immediate material gain: Indian-origin professionals contribute approximately $500 million annually to the UK's National Insurance system — money that would almost never be returned in benefits. The DCC ends this double drain and is verified, quantifiable, and politically popular in India. In favour — Import competition as dynamic industrial policy: The CEA's argument rests on the theory of dynamic comparative advantage — that exposure to superior products forces domestic producers to improve over time. India's own automobile sector partially validates this: competitive pressure in small cars produced globally competitive manufacturers; perpetual protection in luxury vehicles did not. In favour — G-7 anchor for trade diversification: As US-China decoupling reshapes global supply chains, securing structured, rule-based access to a G-7 market reduces India's trade concentration risk and signals to other potential FTA partners (EU, Canada) India's willingness to negotiate meaningfully on market access. Against — Rules of origin complexity: CETA's preferential tariffs are conditional on rules of origin requirements — products must meet domestic value-addition thresholds to qualify for zero duty. India's fragmented MSME sector often lacks documentation, compliance capacity and technical knowledge to meet these conditions — potentially leaving export gains unrealised. Against — Services and IP concessions carry long-term costs: India's data-localisation waivers and faster patent examination commitments benefit UK fintech and pharmaceutical companies, but may constrain India's future policy space on data sovereignty and the timelines on which Indian generic manufacturers can launch life-saving medicines. Against — UK political economy instability: The DCC has faced domestic opposition in the UK from opposition parties who claim it creates "two-tier taxes" undercutting British workers. Political headwinds in the UK — particularly if the Starmer government changes — may affect the deal's stability or implementation. Against — Asymmetric liberalisation risk: India opens its market to British cars (luxury segment, where Indian manufacturers are weakest) and Scotch (competing with a growing Indian premium spirits industry). The phased tariff cuts reduce, but do not eliminate, the disruption risk for workers in those industries during the transition decade. 5 — Way Forward Activate FTA literacy at the district level: Partner with FIEO (Federation of Indian Export Organisations), MSME clusters and State Governments to run FTA awareness drives — explaining rules of origin, documentation, certification pathways and origin-marking requirements so that Tiruppur garment exporters and Agra footwear clusters actually claim the preferential tariff benefits. Strengthen product standards infrastructure: The UK requires UKCA (UK Conformity Assessed) marking for goods sold in Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales) post-Brexit. India's Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) and Export Inspection Council (EIC) must be upgraded and harmonised to help exporters meet UK conformity requirements. Leverage the pharmaceuticals window strategically: Indian generic companies should pre-position for UK NHS (National Health Service) procurement cycles. The government should facilitate joint regulatory pathways with the UK's MHRA (Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency) to accelerate product approvals for the Indian generics pipeline. Treat import competition as an upgrade mandate: The CEA's message should inform industrial policy — the automobile sector must use CETA's phased timeline (10 years) to raise quality and achieve European safety standards, not to lobby for tariff extensions. Public support should be conditional on measurable competitiveness milestones. Build a robust CETA dispute resolution pathway: India must proactively develop capacity to invoke CETA's dispute resolution mechanisms against non-tariff barriers — technical standards, sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures — that the UK may deploy informally even as tariffs fall. 6 — Data & Key Facts $56 BnIndia-UK bilateral trade (goods + services), 2024–25; target: $112 Bn by 2030 99%Share of Indian tariff lines receiving immediate duty-free access in UK under CETA 150% → 40%India's tariff on Scotch whisky reducing over 10 years; automotive ~110% → 10% under quota 75,000+Indian professionals and 900+ companies benefitting from Double Contribution Convention (DCC) $600 MnEstimated annual savings for Indian workers and employers under DCC (verified, PIB-cited) 14 roundsNegotiations spanning 3 years; signed July 24, 2025; in force July 15, 2026; covers 26 sectors DCC (Double Contribution Convention): Indian "detached workers" — employees sent by Indian employers to the UK — exempt from UK National Insurance contributions for up to five years, provided they continue contributing in India. Exemption extended from the earlier three-year standard. Applies to employees transferred to affiliates or sister concerns as well. Does not apply to Indians who independently take up local UK employment. India's sensitive sector exclusions: India kept dairy products, cereals, millets, edible oils, oilseeds, apples and several vegetables outside CETA — protecting politically and nutritionally sensitive agricultural sectors. 7 — Prelims Pointers India-UK CETA — signed July 24, 2025; in force July 15, 2026; 26 sectors; 14 rounds; India's most comprehensive G-7 FTA; target: double bilateral trade to $112 Bn by 2030 DCC (Double Contribution Convention) — Indian detached workers exempt from UK National Insurance for up to 5 years; covers 75,000+ workers, 900+ companies; $600 Mn annual savings; not applicable to local hires DCTS (Developing Countries Trading Scheme) — UK's post-Brexit GSP successor; gave LDCs (Bangladesh, Cambodia, Pakistan) duty-free garment access; CETA now grants India equivalent access, closing structural disadvantage Rules of Origin — conditions products must meet (domestic value-addition thresholds) to qualify for preferential tariff rates under an FTA; critical compliance requirement for MSMEs claiming CETA benefits UKCA Mark — UK Conformity Assessed; post-Brexit product safety certification required for goods sold in Great Britain; India's BIS and EIC must harmonise to help exporters comply MHRA — UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency; Indian pharma companies need MHRA approval to supply NHS; zero duty under CETA makes regulatory approval the key bottleneck Exam note: India-UK CETA is distinct from the EU's CETA with Canada (also called CETA — Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement). India has no FTA with the EU yet (negotiations ongoing). Also: DCC covers only "detached workers" sent by Indian employers — not all Indian professionals in the UK. Confusing scope is a common exam trap. 8 — Practice Mains Question "The India-UK CETA is as much about disciplining Indian industry as it is about opening British markets." Discuss the logic of import liberalisation as industrial policy, with reference to the agreement's key provisions.GS 2 / GS 3 crossover · 15 marks · ~250 words · Trade Policy + Industry + Bilateral Relations Intro: Situate CETA as India's most ambitious G-7 trade pact — its export dimension is visible but its import-side logic is more consequential in the long run; note the CEA's authorship as signal of official endorsement. Body 1 — Export gains: Garments (12% tariff eliminated), pharma (scale access), marine products, DCC ($600 Mn savings); quantify the labour-intensive benefit and the closure of the Bangladesh structural gap. Body 2 — Import-side argument: Automotive and Scotch concessions; the CEA's "protection paradox" argument; India's own evidence (small-car competitiveness vs. luxury-car weakness); balance with concerns — rules of origin complexity, data-localisation concessions, UK political economy risks. Conclusion: The deal's deeper value is as a competitive stress test. Its gains are realised only if India invests in FTA literacy, standards infrastructure and treats import competition as an upgrade mandate — not a threat to be lobbied away. 9 — Practice MCQ With reference to the India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), consider the following statements: 1. The CETA and the Double Contribution Convention (DCC) both came into force on July 15, 2026. 2. Under the DCC, Indian workers temporarily posted to the UK are exempt from UK National Insurance contributions for up to five years, provided they continue contributing to India's social security system. 3. India has agreed to reduce its automotive tariffs to zero immediately upon entry into force of the CETA, with no phasing or quota conditions. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only(b) 2 and 3 only(c) 1 and 3 only(d) 1, 2 and 3

Jul 18, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Contents Saturday, July 18, 2026 Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme (MPMS)GS3 Cyclosporiasis: The Cyclospora Parasite OutbreakGS3 Gitchak Nakana: India's First Subterranean Fish from AssamGS3 Supreme Court on Misuse of Special Intensive Revision DataGS2 Gujarat's Rising Lion Attacks and the Maneater DeclarationGS3 Mansbal Lake: Ecological Recovery of J&K's Deepest Freshwater LakeGS1 | GS3 Article 01 Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme (MPMS) GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy | Science & Technology | Infrastructure Why in News The Union Cabinet has approved the Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme (MPMS) with a budgetary outlay of ₹62,500 crore, designed to succeed the Production Linked Incentive Scheme for Large Scale Electronics Manufacturing (PLI-LSEM), whose tenure concluded on 31 March 2026. MPMS will operate from FY 2026–27 to FY 2030–31 and targets a cumulative mobile phone production of approximately ₹39 lakh crore over its five-year span. Static Background India's Electronics Manufacturing Journey India's electronics manufacturing sector was a modest domestic-consumption-oriented industry until the mid-2010s, with limited export footprint and significant import dependence for components. The National Policy on Electronics (NPE) 2012 and the revised NPE 2019 laid the policy foundation for building a domestic electronics manufacturing ecosystem, targeting a USD 400 billion production base. The Phased Manufacturing Programme (PMP), introduced in 2017, imposed a staggered tariff structure on mobile phone imports to incentivise domestic assembly and component sourcing. The PLI-LSEM (2020–2026) was a landmark scheme that provided output-linked financial incentives to large-scale electronics manufacturers, with a particular focus on smartphones. It was the first major PLI scheme and became a template for subsequent sectoral schemes. Key global manufacturers including Apple's contract partners (Foxconn, Pegatron, Tata Electronics) and Samsung significantly expanded India operations under PLI-LSEM. India's Position in Global Electronics Value Chains Global electronics value chains are dominated by East Asian economies (China, Taiwan, South Korea, Vietnam), with India historically occupying a peripheral position as an assembler rather than a value-added manufacturer. Domestic Value Addition (DVA) is a key metric in electronics manufacturing: it measures the share of a product's value generated within the country through local components, labour, and R&D, as opposed to imported inputs. India's DVA in electronics stood at 15% in FY 2014–15 — meaning 85% of a device's value was imported. Raising DVA is critical to reducing the current account deficit and deepening industrial capability. Technological sovereignty refers to a nation's ability to design, produce, and own the intellectual property of critical technology goods, reducing geopolitical and supply-chain vulnerabilities. Key Data: Electronics & Mobile Manufacturing Growth (FY15 to FY26) Indicator FY 2014–15 FY 2025–26 (Est.) Growth Total Electronics Production ₹1.90 lakh crore ₹13.11 lakh crore ~7x Electronics Exports ₹38,263 crore ₹4.24 lakh crore ~11x Mobile Phone Production ₹18,900 crore ₹6.27 lakh crore ~33x Mobile Phone Exports ₹1,566 crore ₹2.60 lakh crore ~165x Domestic Value Addition (DVA) 15% 23% +8 pp Mobile phones' export rank 153rd largest export Largest export category — Analysis: MPMS — Design, Incentive Architecture & Strategic Intent Incentive Structure of MPMS MPMS deploys a three-layered incentive architecture to align industry behaviour with national policy objectives: Base production incentive (2.25%–5% on eligible sales): Differentiated rates reward higher-value or higher-volume production, preventing a one-size-fits-all approach that could disadvantage niche or emerging players. Domestic sourcing incentive (up to 1.5%): Linked to procurement of key components and sub-assemblies from within India, this tier directly addresses the DVA gap. It creates a financial pull for global component manufacturers to set up in India, deepening the Tier-2 and Tier-3 supplier ecosystem. Indian brand and R&D incentive (3% additional): This is the most strategically significant layer. By incentivising domestic design and patent creation, it seeks to shift India's role from contract manufacturer to technology originator — the highest rung of global value chains. Indian brands currently hold a small share of the premium smartphone segment, dominated by Apple and Samsung. Why DVA Matters: The Component Gap Despite the 33-fold rise in mobile production, India's DVA remains at 23% — far below Vietnam (30–35%) and China (40%+) in comparable product categories. The critical bottleneck is the component ecosystem: display panels, camera modules, semiconductors, and lithium-ion cells are largely imported, primarily from China, Taiwan, and South Korea. MPMS's domestic sourcing incentive is designed to change this calculus by making local sourcing financially attractive. Over 40 major component manufacturers have established or expanded India operations, supported by growing Tier-2 to Tier-4 supplier networks — but the country remains import-dependent for high-value components. India's semiconductor ambitions (India Semiconductor Mission, Tata–PSMC fab in Gujarat) are complementary: a domestic chip supply would dramatically raise DVA across electronics. Women's Employment in Electronics Manufacturing Women constitute nearly 70% of the direct workforce in mobile phone manufacturing — one of the highest female-participation rates in any Indian manufacturing segment. The PLI-LSEM scheme generated employment for approximately 90,000 women, providing structured, formal-sector employment to workers from semi-urban and rural areas. This dimension of the sector is relevant to GS2 topics of gender equity and inclusive growth, as well as GS3 discussions on employment and social security. MPMS vs. PLI-LSEM: Key Differences Parameter PLI-LSEM (2020–2026) MPMS (2026–2031) Primary focus Scale up production & exports DVA deepening + Indian brands + R&D Brand incentive Not separately structured 3% additional for design/patents Component sourcing Implicit Explicit: up to 1.5% additional Outlay ₹40,951 crore ₹62,500 crore Expected direct jobs ~90,000 (women) ~60,000 direct Conclusion / Way Forward: MPMS represents a qualitative leap from PLI-LSEM by embedding R&D and brand-building incentives into a production scheme. Its success will depend on how effectively the component ecosystem matures, whether Indian brands can competitively penetrate mid-premium segments, and whether the semiconductor supply chain develops in parallel. For UPSC, this topic sits at the intersection of industrial policy, trade policy, employment and technological sovereignty — key themes across GS2 and GS3. Prelims Pointers MPMS outlay: ₹62,500 crore | Tenure: FY 2026–27 to FY 2030–31 (5 years) Base incentive rate: 2.25%–5% on eligible sales; Domestic sourcing bonus: up to 1.5%; Indian brand/R&D bonus: 3% Cumulative production target: ~₹39 lakh crore over the scheme period; expected direct jobs: ~60,000 PLI-LSEM (predecessor scheme) ended 31 March 2026; it established India as the world's second-largest mobile phone manufacturer by volume India's DVA in electronics: rose from 15% (FY15) to 23% (FY26) — still significantly below leading manufacturing nations Mobile phones' export trajectory: From India's 153rd largest export (FY15) to the single largest export category (FY26), surpassing diesel fuel and cut diamonds Women in mobile manufacturing: ~70% of direct workforce; PLI-LSEM generated employment for ~90,000 women Domestic manufacture share: 99.2% of mobile phones used in India are domestically manufactured Electronics exports (FY26): USD 47.96 billion — India's third-largest export category overall Mains Practice Question The Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme (MPMS) introduces incentive layers for domestic value addition and Indian brand development that were absent in its predecessor. Critically examine whether this design can help India transition from a contract manufacturing hub to a technology-originating economy in the electronics sector. GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy & Industrial Policy | 15 Marks | 250 Words MCQ Practice Match the following incentive tiers under the Mobile Phone Manufacturing Scheme (MPMS) with their correct rates: List I (Incentive Tier)     List II (Rate) A. Base production incentive     1. Up to 1.5% B. Domestic component sourcing     2. 3% C. Indian brand / R&D     3. 2.25%–5% AA–1, B–2, C–3 BA–3, B–1, C–2 CA–3, B–2, C–1 DA–2, B–3, C–1 Answer: B The base production incentive under MPMS is set at a differentiated rate of 2.25%–5% on eligible sales (List II: 3). The domestic sourcing incentive for key components and sub-assemblies is capped at an additional 1.5% (List II: 1). The Indian brand and R&D incentive is the highest at 3% on eligible sales (List II: 2). Therefore, the correct match is A–3, B–1, C–2. Article 02 Cyclosporiasis: The Cyclospora Parasite Outbreak GS Paper 3 — Science & Technology | Health | Food Safety Why in News The United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued a health advisory on July 14, 2026 reporting a significant surge in cyclosporiasis cases. As of the advisory date, 1,645 confirmed domestic cases had been reported since May 1, with an additional 5,100 probable cases from 34 states awaiting confirmation — substantially higher than the 249 cases recorded by the same period in the previous year. The CDC has not yet confirmed a specific food source for the current outbreak. Static Background What is Cyclospora cayetanensis? Classification: Cyclospora cayetanensis is a unicellular, coccidian protozoan parasite belonging to the phylum Apicomplexa — the same phylum as Plasmodium (malaria) and Cryptosporidium. It was first described comprehensively in the 1990s and named after the Cayetano Heredia University in Peru, where early research was conducted. Lifecycle: The parasite completes its lifecycle within the human intestinal epithelium. Oocysts (the infectious stage) are shed in faeces; they require days to weeks of environmental conditioning (sporulation) before becoming infectious — which is why the parasite does not spread directly from person to person, unlike norovirus or hepatitis A. Environmental resistance: Oocysts are highly resistant to standard chemical disinfectants including chlorine, making conventional sanitation protocols insufficient for elimination from produce or water. Global distribution: Cyclospora infections are endemic in many tropical and subtropical countries, including parts of South Asia (Nepal, India), Central America, and Southeast Asia. Outbreaks in developed nations are typically travel-associated or linked to imported fresh produce. Transmission and Epidemiology Route: Strictly faeco-oral — ingestion of food or water contaminated with sporulated oocysts. Person-to-person transmission does not occur. Seasonal pattern (US context): The CDC designates May 1–August 31 as the annual cyclosporiasis season, corresponding to spring–summer fresh produce consumption peaks. High-risk produce: Outbreaks are repeatedly linked to raw leafy greens (lettuce, spinach, basil, cilantro), berries, and other minimally processed fresh produce. Cooking eliminates the parasite. Underdiagnosis: The true disease burden significantly exceeds reported cases. Cyclospora requires targeted stool testing (PCR or acid-fast microscopy) and is routinely missed in standard stool panels, leading to chronic, untreated illness in many patients. Clinical Features Feature Details Incubation period ~1 week (range 2–14 days) Primary symptom Prolonged watery diarrhoea (may last weeks–months if untreated) Associated symptoms Fatigue, anorexia, weight loss, bloating, stomach cramps, nausea At-risk groups Immunocompromised individuals, elderly, young children, travellers from non-endemic areas Complications (if untreated) Malabsorption syndrome, cholecystitis (gallbladder inflammation), reactive arthritis, biliary disease Standard treatment Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) for 7–10 days + aggressive oral hydration Analysis: Public Health, Food Safety & Policy Dimensions Diagnostic Challenges and Surveillance Gaps Cyclospora's irregular shedding pattern means a single stool sample often yields a false-negative result. Accurate diagnosis requires stool PCR (polymerase chain reaction) for DNA detection or specialised modified acid-fast staining microscopy, neither of which is part of routine stool panels in most clinical settings. This creates a structural underdetection problem that distorts epidemiological understanding and delays outbreak response. The 2026 US outbreak — where potential cases outnumber confirmed cases by more than 3:1 — illustrates this gap. Food Safety Implications: Why Washing Alone Is Insufficient Unlike most bacterial pathogens (E. coli, Salmonella), Cyclospora oocysts are resistant to chlorine-based sanitisers at standard concentrations used in commercial produce washing. This challenges the food industry's standard sanitation protocols and raises questions about the adequacy of existing food safety standards for parasitic threats. The CDC's advisory specifically warns that chemical sanitising of produce may not eliminate the parasite, placing the burden on mechanical washing under clean running water and supply chain traceability. India's Relevance India is considered an endemic country for Cyclospora, with sporadic case reports from several states and higher seroprevalence in populations consuming untreated water. As India's fresh produce export market grows — particularly for leafy greens, herbs, and berries to the EU, US, and Gulf — food safety standards for parasitic contamination become critical to market access. The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) regulates food safety; enhanced surveillance for Cyclospora and mandatory testing for exported produce are policy considerations raised by outbreaks in importing countries. Conclusion / Way Forward: The 2026 US cyclosporiasis surge highlights recurring vulnerabilities in food safety surveillance, produce supply-chain traceability, and the limitations of chemical disinfection against resistant protozoan parasites. For India, this has dual relevance: as an endemic country with a developing food export sector, India must strengthen parasitological surveillance and align its food safety testing standards with international requirements to prevent export rejections and protect public health. Prelims Pointers Causative organism: Cyclospora cayetanensis — a unicellular coccidian protozoan; belongs to phylum Apicomplexa (same as Plasmodium) Transmission: Strictly faeco-oral (contaminated food/water); does not spread person-to-person Key feature: Oocysts require environmental sporulation before becoming infectious; resistant to standard chemical disinfectants including chlorine Diagnosis: Stool PCR or modified acid-fast staining microscopy — missed in routine stool panels due to irregular shedding Treatment: Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX), 7–10 days; aggressive hydration Complications: Malabsorption, cholecystitis, reactive arthritis — especially in immunocompromised patients High-risk produce: Leafy greens (lettuce, spinach, basil, cilantro), berries — cooking eliminates the parasite US 2026 outbreak: 1,645 confirmed + 5,100 probable cases from 34 states as of July 14, 2026 advisory CDC cyclosporiasis season: May 1–August 31 annually in the United States Mains Practice Question Recurring outbreaks of parasitic foodborne illnesses such as cyclosporiasis reveal systemic gaps in food safety surveillance and supply-chain traceability. Examine the challenges in detecting and controlling such outbreaks and suggest measures India should adopt as both a food-exporting and endemic country. GS Paper 3 — Food Security | Science & Technology | Health | 15 Marks | 250 Words MCQ Practice Which of the following statements about Cyclospora cayetanensis is/are correct? 1. It belongs to the same phylum as the malaria parasite Plasmodium. 2. It can spread directly from person to person through contact with an infected individual. 3. Standard chlorine-based sanitisers are insufficient to eliminate its oocysts from produce. Select the correct answer using the codes given below: A1 only B2 and 3 only C1 and 3 only D1, 2 and 3 Answer: C Statement 1 is correct: Cyclospora cayetanensis is a coccidian protozoan belonging to phylum Apicomplexa, which also includes Plasmodium (malaria) and Cryptosporidium. Statement 2 is incorrect: cyclosporiasis does not spread directly person-to-person; the oocysts must undergo environmental sporulation before they become infectious, which takes days to weeks. Statement 3 is correct: Cyclospora oocysts are resistant to standard chemical disinfectants including chlorine, which is why the CDC specifically warns that chemical sanitising of produce may not eliminate the parasite. Article 03 Gitchak Nakana: India's First Subterranean Fish from Assam GS Paper 3 — Biodiversity & Conservation | Environment Why in News A doctoral researcher at Assam Don Bosco University, Guwahati, has confirmed the discovery of Gitchak nakana — the first subterranean (cave-dwelling, aquifer-inhabiting) fish species recorded from Assam. The species is eyeless, lacks a skull roof, and was found in a dug well in Goalpara district. Its discovery, formally documented after the researcher connected childhood observations of a 'dancing worm' in a household well to a previously undescribed species, highlights how subterranean biodiversity across India's Northeast remains significantly under-surveyed. Static Background Subterranean Biodiversity: Definitions and Ecology Subterranean fauna refers to organisms that live in underground habitats — caves, karst systems, subsurface aquifers, and dug wells — as opposed to surface (epigean) ecosystems. These organisms are broadly classified as troglobites (obligate cave-dwellers) or stygobites (obligate groundwater-dwellers). Troglomorphism is the suite of morphological adaptations seen in long-isolated subterranean fauna: regressive traits include eye reduction or complete eye loss (anophthalmia), loss of pigmentation (depigmentation), and skull bone reduction; constructive traits include enlarged lateral line systems (for detecting water pressure/movement) and elongated sensory appendages. Aquifers as habitat: Subterranean fish often inhabit the water-filled porous zones of aquifers, which provide stable temperature, low nutrient input, and near-total darkness — strong selective pressures for troglomorphic evolution over geological timescales. India's subterranean fish diversity: India's known subterranean fish fauna includes species from the genera Indoreonectes, Schistura, Nemacheilus, and others — predominantly from cave systems in Meghalaya (Krem Umthloo, Liat Prah), Andhra Pradesh (Borra Caves), and Kerala. The Northeast, despite its rich surface biodiversity, has had limited subterranean fish documentation. Northeast India: Biodiversity Significance The Northeast falls within the Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot — one of 36 global biodiversity hotspots recognised by the Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund (CEPF). Hotspots are defined by two criteria: harbouring at least 1,500 endemic vascular plant species and having lost at least 70% of their original habitat. Assam's Brahmaputra floodplain and the surrounding hill ecosystems support exceptionally high freshwater fish diversity, including many species with narrow range endemism. However, subterranean fish in this region represent a near-unexplored frontier. The Garo Hills of Meghalaya — adjacent to Goalpara district — contain karst limestone formations that are the geological precondition for cave-aquifer systems in which subterranean fish can evolve. Threats to Subterranean Species Groundwater extraction: Dug wells and bore wells for irrigation and domestic use disrupt aquifer hydrology, reducing the water column and connectivity that subterranean fish depend on. Agricultural runoff: Fertiliser and pesticide contamination of groundwater degrades water quality in subterranean habitats, which evolved under ultra-low nutrient and contaminant conditions. Limestone mining and quarrying: Karst formations — the geological substrate of cave and aquifer systems — are commercially mined for cement and construction aggregate, destroying the physical habitat of cave fauna. Climate change and groundwater depletion: Altered precipitation patterns and increased groundwater extraction are lowering water tables, threatening aquifer connectivity across South and Southeast Asia. Analysis: Conservation and Policy Dimensions Discovery Methodology and Citizen Knowledge The Gitchak nakana discovery illustrates the interface between traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) and formal taxonomy. The researcher's childhood observation — dismissed as a worm but retained as memory — ultimately led to a scientifically significant discovery. This underscores the value of community-based biodiversity monitoring and structured TEK documentation programmes, particularly in regions like India's Northeast where formal scientific surveys are limited by access and funding constraints. Conservation and Legal Frameworks India's Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 and its schedules do not currently extend protection to freshwater fish unless specifically listed. Subterranean fish are particularly vulnerable because their habitats fall outside protected area boundaries. Groundwater governance in India is fragmented across state-level regulations, the Central Ground Water Authority (CGWA), and the draft National Water Framework legislation. The ecological value of aquifers — beyond their resource utility — is rarely incorporated into groundwater management decisions. The Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (2022) commits signatories to protecting 30% of land and water by 2030 (30x30 target), but subterranean habitats remain largely excluded from protected area accounting. Conclusion / Way Forward: The discovery of Gitchak nakana in Assam is both a scientific milestone and a conservation signal. Subterranean fish are highly specialised, geographically restricted species with no capacity for range expansion — making them acutely vulnerable to groundwater disruption. A systematic national survey of subterranean ichthyofauna, coupled with aquifer habitat protection under groundwater legislation, and community-based monitoring programmes drawing on local ecological knowledge, would represent a meaningful policy response to the threats facing this hidden biodiversity. Prelims Pointers Gitchak nakana: First subterranean fish recorded from Assam; discovered in a dug well in Goalpara district; eyeless and lacks a skull roof Researcher: Doctoral student at Assam Don Bosco University, Guwahati; research context was fish diversity of the Jinari river, Goalpara Subterranean fauna classification: Troglobites (cave-dwellers) and stygobites (groundwater-dwellers); both are obligate underground species Troglomorphism: Evolutionary adaptation in subterranean fauna — key regressive traits include anophthalmia (eye loss), depigmentation, and skull bone reduction; constructive traits include enlarged lateral line system Northeast India's hotspot status: Part of the Indo-Burma Biodiversity Hotspot — one of 36 global hotspots (CEPF); defined by ≥1,500 endemic plant species and ≥70% original habitat loss Key threats: Groundwater extraction (reduces aquifer water column), agricultural runoff, limestone/karst quarrying, climate-driven water table decline Legal context: Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 does not generally list freshwater fish; Central Ground Water Authority (CGWA) governs groundwater extraction — ecological protection not adequately incorporated Global framework: Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (2022) — 30x30 target (protect 30% of land and inland waters by 2030) Mains Practice Question Subterranean biodiversity in India remains largely undocumented and outside the ambit of existing conservation frameworks. Using the discovery of Gitchak nakana as a reference, discuss the ecological significance of subterranean fauna and the policy measures needed to safeguard aquifer-dependent species. GS Paper 3 — Biodiversity & Conservation | Environment & Ecology | 15 Marks | 250 Words MCQ Practice Consider the following statement about Gitchak nakana, recently in news: “Gitchak nakana is the first subterranean fish species recorded from Assam and exhibits complete eye loss, a feature characteristic of obligate subterranean fauna adapted to life in permanent darkness.” Is this statement correct? AYes, the statement is correct BNo — Gitchak nakana was found in Meghalaya, not Assam CNo — the species has eyes but lacks pigmentation DNo — Gitchak nakana is a surface-dwelling species found in the Brahmaputra floodplain Answer: A The statement is correct. Gitchak nakana was found in a dug well in Goalpara district of Assam, making it the first subterranean fish documented from the state. It is described as eyeless (anophthalmic), which is a classic regressive troglomorphic adaptation to life in permanently dark aquifer habitats where vision confers no survival advantage. The discovery was made by a researcher at Assam Don Bosco University, Guwahati. Article 04 Supreme Court on Misuse of Special Intensive Revision Data GS Paper 2 — Polity & Constitution | Judiciary | Election Commission | Citizenship Why in News A three-judge bench of the Supreme Court of India, headed by Chief Justice of India Justice Surya Kant and including Justice Joymalya Bagchi, heard a petition filed by Congress leader Prasenjit Bose challenging the West Bengal government's use of Special Intensive Revision (SIR) data to withdraw benefits under welfare schemes. The Court stated that the SIR process is exclusively tied to electoral roll revision and that its outcomes cannot be used to determine citizenship or strip beneficiaries of entitlements such as food security, cash transfers, and caste certificates. Static Background Special Intensive Revision (SIR): What It Is The Electoral Roll is the official list of persons eligible to vote in elections, maintained and periodically updated by the Election Commission of India (ECI) under the Representation of the People Act, 1950 and Registration of Electors Rules, 1960. Special Intensive Revision (SIR) is a process through which the ECI undertakes a comprehensive door-to-door verification and revision of electoral rolls in specific areas, typically conducted before elections. It aims to remove ineligible names, add new eligible voters, and correct inaccuracies. Deletions from electoral rolls under SIR may occur for reasons including: death, shifting of residence, or determination that a person is not a citizen of India. The SIR does not, by itself, constitute a finding on citizenship — it is an administrative exercise confined to electoral eligibility. The Bihar SIR case (Supreme Court judgment, May 27) had previously clarified the limited scope of SIR outcomes, holding that deletion from an electoral roll cannot be used as a conclusive determination of citizenship or for any non-electoral purpose. Citizenship Determination: Constitutional and Legal Framework Articles 5–11 of the Constitution define citizenship at the commencement of the Constitution. Post-commencement, the Citizenship Act, 1955 governs acquisition, determination, and termination of citizenship. Articles 9, 10, 11 — referenced by Justice Bagchi in his observations — deal with persons who have voluntarily acquired foreign citizenship (Art. 9), continuance of rights of citizenship (Art. 10), and Parliament's power to regulate citizenship rights (Art. 11). The Election Commission of India has no constitutional authority to make binding determinations on citizenship. If the ECI identifies a potential non-citizen during electoral roll revision, it is constitutionally obligated to refer the matter to the competent government authority for adjudication under the Citizenship Act — it cannot itself make that determination. The Foreigners Tribunals (in Assam, constituted under the Foreigners Act, 1946) are the statutory bodies designated to adjudicate citizenship disputes. In other states, district-level or High Court proceedings govern citizenship challenges. West Bengal Orders Challenged Order Date Action Taken Scheme/Document Affected May 14 Re-verification and cancellation of caste certificates of persons deleted from SIR list Backward Caste certificates May 19 Voters purged from rolls to lose Annapurna scheme benefits unless appeals filed before SIR tribunal Annapurna Scheme (cash transfer to women) June 4 Deletion of beneficiaries from PDS on basis of SIR outcome Public Distribution System (food security) Analysis: Constitutional and Policy Dimensions The Core Legal Issue: Administrative Overreach The West Bengal orders represent a conflation of two legally distinct processes: electoral roll revision (an administrative exercise with limited, defined scope) and welfare scheme eligibility (governed by separate statutory frameworks covering food security, social justice, and women's welfare). Justice Bagchi's observation captures the constitutional problem precisely: deletion from an electoral roll leaves a person's civil status — including citizenship — unresolved until the competent authority acts under the Citizenship Act. Using that deletion as a proxy determination of ineligibility for welfare entitlements bypasses due process and creates serious civil consequences beyond the right to vote. Right to Food and PDS: Legal Grounding The National Food Security Act (NFSA), 2013 entitles eligible households to subsidised foodgrains through the PDS. Removal from NFSA entitlements requires a process governed by the Act and associated state rules — not an electoral administrative proceeding. The Supreme Court has repeatedly affirmed the right to food as an aspect of Article 21 (Right to Life). Arbitrary removal from PDS without due process constitutes a potential violation of this fundamental right. ECI's Constitutional Position The Election Commission of India is constituted under Article 324 of the Constitution, with superintendence, direction and control of elections. Its mandate is electoral, not judicial or quasi-judicial on citizenship. The distinction between electoral roll deletion and citizenship determination is foundational: an Indian citizen who moves address may be deleted from a roll; a non-citizen who has lived in India for decades may still appear on a roll. These are administrative imperfections, not legal findings. Conclusion / Way Forward: The Supreme Court's intervention reinforces a critical constitutional principle: administrative processes have defined and limited scopes, and outcomes from one process cannot be casually transplanted into another. For UPSC aspirants, this case is significant across multiple dimensions — the limits of ECI's authority under Article 324, the constitutional framework for citizenship (Articles 5–11), the right to food under Article 21, and the distinction between electoral administration and civil status determination. Prelims Pointers SIR (Special Intensive Revision): An ECI process for comprehensive revision of electoral rolls; conducted door-to-door; governed by Representation of the People Act, 1950 and Registration of Electors Rules, 1960 Bihar SIR case (SC, May 27): Supreme Court held that SIR outcomes cannot be used conclusively to determine citizenship or for any non-electoral purpose — the precedent cited in the West Bengal case ECI's constitutional basis: Article 324 — superintendence, direction and control of elections; ECI has no authority under Articles 9, 10, 11 (citizenship articles) to make citizenship determinations Citizenship adjudication: Must be referred to the government for adjudication under the Citizenship Act, 1955; Foreigners Tribunals in Assam (under Foreigners Act, 1946) are the statutory bodies for Assam-specific disputes Bench: Three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice of India Justice Surya Kant (53rd CJI, assumed office November 24, 2025); includes Justice Joymalya Bagchi Petitioner: Congress leader Prasenjit Bose; represented by Senior Advocate Gopal Sankaranarayanan and Advocate Neha Rathi Schemes affected by WB orders: Annapurna (cash transfer for women), PDS/NFSA (food security), Backward Caste certificates Article 21 linkage: Supreme Court has read the right to food as part of the right to life — arbitrary PDS removal could raise Article 21 concerns Mains Practice Question The Supreme Court's observations on the West Bengal use of Special Intensive Revision (SIR) data for welfare scheme exclusions raise important questions about the boundaries of administrative authority and the constitutional guarantee of due process. Examine the constitutional limits on using electoral roll deletion for non-electoral purposes and its implications for welfare entitlements. GS Paper 2 — Polity & Constitution | Judiciary | Fundamental Rights | 15 Marks | 250 Words MCQ Practice Assertion (A): Deletion of a name from an electoral roll during a Special Intensive Revision (SIR) does not, by itself, constitute a conclusive determination of the person's citizenship status. Reason (R): The Election Commission of India derives its authority from Article 324 of the Constitution, which grants superintendence over elections, but does not confer power to adjudicate citizenship under Articles 9, 10, or 11. Select the correct option: 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 true but R is an incomplete explanation — the correct and complete explanation is that citizenship adjudication must be referred to the government under the Citizenship Act, 1955, not the ECI Answer: A Both Assertion and Reason are correct, and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion. The ECI's mandate flows from Article 324 — superintendence, direction and control of elections. This does not extend to making binding determinations under citizenship law (Articles 9–11 of the Constitution, read with the Citizenship Act, 1955). When the ECI identifies a potential non-citizen, it must refer the matter to the government for adjudication under the Citizenship Act. Until such adjudication is complete, the person's civil status remains unaffected for all non-electoral purposes, including welfare scheme eligibility. Option A is therefore correct. Article 05 Gujarat's Rising Lion Attacks and the Maneater Declaration GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Wildlife Conservation | Human-Wildlife Conflict Why in News Gujarat's forest department has reported at least nine lion attacks since June 2026, resulting in six fatalities. In response, the department has captured approximately 31 lions and relocated them, while declaring seven as 'maneaters' — meaning they will remain in permanent captivity. The Wildlife Institute of India (WII) has been engaged to conduct a study on possible changes in lion behaviour. The scale of the response — seven maneater declarations in a short period — is described as alarming even for a region historically accustomed to human-lion coexistence. Static Background The Asiatic Lion: Status and Distribution The Asiatic lion (Panthera leo persica) is the sole surviving sub-species of lion outside Africa and is classified as Endangered on the IUCN Red List. It is also listed under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, providing the highest level of legal protection in India. The species' entire wild population exists exclusively in and around the Gir Forest National Park and Wildlife Sanctuary in the Saurashtra region of Gujarat — a single-population, single-location distribution that makes it uniquely vulnerable to localised threats. The 2020 lion census recorded a population of 674 individuals across the Greater Gir landscape (including Gir National Park, Gir Sanctuary, Pania Sanctuary, Mitiyala Sanctuary, and surrounding revenue forests and coastal areas) — an increase from 523 in 2015. Significantly, lions have dispersed beyond the core Gir protected area into revenue forests, agricultural land, and coastal areas across several districts of Saurashtra, including Junagadh, Amreli, Gir Somnath, and Bhavnagar. This range expansion is ecologically significant but increases human-lion interface. Human-Wildlife Conflict (HWC): Concepts and Drivers Human-wildlife conflict occurs when the needs or behaviour of wildlife negatively impact humans or their livelihoods, and vice versa. It is a leading conservation challenge globally, particularly for large carnivores with wide home ranges. Key drivers in the Gujarat lion context include: population recovery and range expansion beyond protected area boundaries; habitat connectivity loss as the landscape between core areas and dispersal zones is fragmented by roads, settlements, and agriculture; prey base dynamics (reduced wild prey can increase livestock depredation, and habituated lions may develop boldness around humans); and human activity in lion habitat (Maldharis — pastoral communities — traditionally coexist with lions, but changing land-use increases exposure). The 'maneater' declaration is an administrative designation used by forest departments under state wildlife management protocols when an individual animal has killed humans and is deemed to pose an ongoing public safety threat. It results in permanent captivity or, in some states and for other species, culling — though for a Schedule I species like the Asiatic lion, captivity is the standard response. Wildlife Institute of India (WII) WII is an autonomous institution under the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC), based in Dehradun. It functions as India's premier research and training institution for wildlife science, conservation biology, and protected area management. WII conducts population censuses, habitat assessments, species recovery plans, and human-wildlife conflict research across India's protected area network. Its engagement in Gujarat follows a pattern of deploying scientific expertise to diagnose behavioural or ecological anomalies behind conflict spikes. Analysis: Conservation, Behaviour, and Policy Dimensions Why Might Lion Behaviour Be Changing? The Gujarat forest department's decision to commission a WII behavioural study signals uncertainty about whether the current attack surge reflects a systemic shift rather than isolated events. Possible explanatory factors include: Habituation: Lions in dispersal zones outside Gir core have increasing exposure to humans and human-dominated landscapes. Over generations, habituation can reduce flight distance and increase boldness, lowering the threshold for conflict. Prey availability shifts: If wild prey (chital, sambar, nilgai) populations are declining in dispersal zones due to habitat degradation, lions may turn to livestock and, in rare cases, humans. Individual learning: A single lion that successfully attacks a human can transmit this behaviour to cubs or associated pride members through social learning — a documented phenomenon in large carnivore ecology. Population density in Gir core: With 674 lions concentrated primarily in a protected area of ~1,412 sq km (Gir National Park) and the broader ~1,884 sq km sanctuary, density pressures may be pushing more lions into peripheral habitats where conflict probability is higher. The Single-Population Risk The Supreme Court's 2013 judgment in the Asiatic lion translocation case (State of Gujarat v. Madhya Pradesh) directed the translocation of some lions to Kuno-Palpur Wildlife Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh as a hedge against the single-population risk — that a disease outbreak, flood, or other catastrophic event in Gir could eliminate the entire species. Gujarat resisted translocation; the Kuno sanctuary was subsequently used for cheetah reintroduction instead. The current attack surge renews questions about the wisdom of maintaining a single isolated population and the urgency of establishing a second free-ranging population. Conclusion / Way Forward: Seven maneater declarations in a short period is a statistically significant signal that warrants careful scientific investigation rather than purely reactive management. The WII study is a positive step. A comprehensive human-wildlife conflict mitigation framework for the Greater Gir landscape — covering livestock insurance, rapid-response teams, community engagement with Maldharis, and re-examination of the translocation imperative — is essential to balance lion conservation with community safety. Prelims Pointers Asiatic lion (Panthera leo persica): IUCN status — Endangered; Schedule I of Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972; sole wild population in Greater Gir landscape, Gujarat 2020 lion census: 674 individuals across Greater Gir landscape; up from 523 in 2015 — a 29% increase Greater Gir landscape: Includes Gir National Park (~1,412 sq km), Gir Sanctuary, Pania Sanctuary, Mitiyala Sanctuary, and adjoining revenue and coastal forests across Saurashtra, Gujarat Maneater declaration: Administrative designation for an animal deemed to pose ongoing human safety threat; results in permanent captivity for Schedule I species in India Wildlife Institute of India (WII): Autonomous body under MoEFCC; headquartered in Dehradun; India's apex wildlife research and training institution SC 2013 judgment: Directed translocation of some Asiatic lions to Kuno-Palpur WLS, Madhya Pradesh, to establish a second free-ranging population — never implemented; Kuno subsequently used for cheetah reintroduction Maldhari community: Traditional pastoral communities in and around Gir forest historically practising coexistence with lions; key stakeholders in HWC management HWC key drivers: Habituation, prey base depletion, population density pressure, habitat fragmentation in dispersal corridors Mains Practice Question The surge in lion attacks in Gujarat and the declaration of seven maneaters in a short period raise important questions about the sustainability of the single-population model for Asiatic lion conservation. Critically examine the drivers of human-lion conflict in the Greater Gir landscape and evaluate the policy options available for long-term conservation and community safety. GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Biodiversity | Conservation | 15 Marks | 250 Words MCQ Practice Which of the following statements about the Asiatic lion is/are NOT correct? 1. It is listed as Vulnerable on the IUCN Red List. 2. Its entire wild population is restricted to the Greater Gir landscape in Gujarat. 3. The Supreme Court of India has never issued any direction regarding translocation of the Asiatic lion. 4. It is protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972. Select the correct answer: A2 and 4 only B1 and 3 only C1, 2 and 3 D3 and 4 only Answer: B Statement 1 is NOT correct: the Asiatic lion is classified as Endangered (not Vulnerable) on the IUCN Red List. Statement 2 is correct: its entire wild population exists in the Greater Gir landscape of Gujarat. Statement 3 is NOT correct: the Supreme Court in its 2013 judgment in the case of State of Gujarat v. Madhya Pradesh directed translocation of some Asiatic lions to Kuno-Palpur Wildlife Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh to hedge against the single-population risk — a direction that was not implemented. Statement 4 is correct: the Asiatic lion holds the highest legal protection under Schedule I of the WPA, 1972. Therefore, statements 1 and 3 are NOT correct, making Option B the answer. Article 06 Mansbal Lake: Ecological Recovery of J&K's Deepest Freshwater Lake GS Paper 1 & GS Paper 3 — Geography | Environment & Ecology | Wetlands & Lakes Why in News Mansbal Lake in central Kashmir's Ganderbal district is showing measurable signs of ecological recovery, with the return of migratory birds and improved water quality following restoration interventions by the Wular-Manasbal Development Authority (WMDA). The lake, described as the deepest freshwater lake in India at 43 feet, witnessed a notable increase in migratory bird species during the winter of 2025–26, prompting the WMDA to organise a bird-watching festival. Restoration work has included large-scale weed removal, dredging over 70,000 sq ft, and plans for a sewerage treatment plant and integrated solid waste management facility. Static Background Mansbal Lake: Physical and Ecological Profile Location: Ganderbal district, central Kashmir, Jammu & Kashmir. Situated in the Kashmir Valley, one of the major freshwater lake clusters of the Himalayan region. Physical dimensions: Depth — approximately 43 feet (deepest natural freshwater lake in India); Length — 3.5 km; Breadth — 1.5 km. Ecological significance: The lake supports over 46 bird species from 23 families, including Mallard, White-Headed Duck, Eurasian Hoopoe, Lesser Pied Kingfisher, Golden Eagle, Grey-Backed Shrike, and Tickell's Thrush. It serves as a critical wintering and stopover ground for migratory waterfowl on the Central Asian Flyway. Central Asian Flyway: One of the world's major bird migration routes, stretching from breeding grounds in Siberia and Central Asia to wintering areas across South and Southeast Asia. India's wetlands — including Kashmir's lake systems — are critical nodes on this flyway. Kashmir's Lake Ecosystem and Threats Kashmir Valley contains several ecologically significant lakes including Dal Lake (Srinagar), Wular Lake (Asia's largest freshwater lake by some estimates), Nagin Lake, Anchar Lake, and Manasbal Lake. Most have faced severe degradation from encroachment, sewage discharge, agricultural runoff, and aquatic weed proliferation. Aquatic weed proliferation — particularly of invasive species — is a pan-Kashmir problem. Excessive macrophyte growth reduces open water surface, impairs light penetration, depletes dissolved oxygen, degrades aquatic biodiversity, and reduces the lake's carrying capacity for migratory birds. Eutrophication (nutrient loading, primarily from nitrogen and phosphorus in agricultural runoff and untreated sewage) is the primary driver of weed proliferation in these lakes. It triggers algal blooms and macrophyte overgrowth, ultimately degrading water quality. The Wular-Manasbal Development Authority (WMDA) is the administrative body responsible for the conservation and development of both Wular and Manasbal lakes in J&K. Restoration Interventions: What Was Done Intervention Scale / Details Ecological Purpose Weed removal ~7,202.50 cubic metres of accumulated weeds removed from lake surface Restores water circulation, light penetration, and open-water habitat for waterfowl Dredging Over 70,000 sq ft of lake bed dredged Restores depth, clears channels, removes accumulated sediment and organic matter Sewerage treatment plant (planned) Facility to treat waste before it enters the lake Prevents nutrient loading and eutrophication from untreated sewage Solid waste management plant (planned) Integrated facility over 1 acre Prevents solid waste from entering lake from surrounding habitation Water budgeting (planned) By J&K Water Resources Regulatory Authority; to quantify lake's carrying capacity, water supply drawls, and surplus Ensures scientifically derived minimum water level is maintained for ecological health Analysis: Wetland Conservation Policy and Ecological Significance Water Budgeting: A Scientific Approach to Lake Management Water budgeting involves quantifying all inflows (precipitation, surface runoff, groundwater recharge) and outflows (evaporation, seepage, human extraction through water supply schemes and irrigation) to determine a lake's net water availability and minimum ecologically safe water level. The WMDA's plan to undertake water budgeting through the J&K Water Resources Regulatory Authority is a shift from reactive (weed removal, dredging) to proactive (flow and volume management) lake governance — a more sustainable approach. Legal and Policy Framework for Wetland Conservation The Wetlands (Conservation and Management) Rules, 2017 under the Environment (Protection) Act, 1986 provide the regulatory framework for wetland conservation in India. They classify wetlands into categories and prohibit activities that degrade wetland ecology. India's National Wetland Conservation Programme (NWCP), operated by MoEFCC, provides financial and technical support for the conservation of identified wetlands, including Kashmir's lake systems. Ramsar Convention (Convention on Wetlands of International Importance, 1971): India has 89 Ramsar sites (as of 2024) — the largest number in Asia. J&K's Wular Lake and Hokersar Wetland are listed Ramsar sites; Manasbal is not currently Ramsar-listed despite its ecological significance. The Central Asian Flyway Action Plan, to which India is a signatory, commits India to conserving wetlands critical to migratory waterbirds along this flyway — providing an international conservation obligation relevant to Manasbal's restoration. Conclusion / Way Forward: Manasbal Lake's recovery illustrates that targeted restoration — weed removal, dredging, and pollution control — can reverse ecological decline within measurable timeframes, as evidenced by the return of migratory birds. However, sustaining recovery requires the planned infrastructure (sewerage treatment, solid waste management) to be operationalised and water budgeting to establish legally enforceable minimum ecological flows. Consideration of Manasbal for Ramsar designation would add international recognition and additional conservation obligations to its protection framework. Prelims Pointers Mansbal Lake: Deepest natural freshwater lake in India; depth ~43 feet; length 3.5 km, breadth 1.5 km; located in Ganderbal district, central Kashmir, J&K Bird diversity: Supports 46+ species from 23 families; notable species include Mallard, White-Headed Duck, Eurasian Hoopoe, Lesser Pied Kingfisher, Golden Eagle, Tickell's Thrush, Horned Grebe, Long-Eared Owl Central Asian Flyway: Major bird migration corridor from Siberia/Central Asia to South and Southeast Asia; India's wetlands are critical nodes; India is signatory to the Central Asian Flyway Action Plan WMDA: Wular-Manasbal Development Authority — administrative body for conservation and development of Wular and Manasbal lakes in J&K Restoration work: Weed removal (~7,202.50 cubic metres), dredging (~70,000 sq ft); planned sewerage treatment plant and integrated solid waste management facility (1 acre) Water budgeting: To be conducted by J&K Water Resources Regulatory Authority; quantifies lake's carrying capacity, extraction, and ecologically safe water level — proactive rather than reactive lake management Wetlands (Conservation and Management) Rules, 2017: Regulatory framework under Environment (Protection) Act, 1986; prohibits activities degrading wetland ecology Ramsar context: India has 89 Ramsar sites (largest count in Asia); J&K's Wular Lake and Hokersar Wetland are Ramsar sites; Manasbal is currently not Ramsar-listed Eutrophication: Key threat to Kashmir's lakes — nutrient loading (nitrogen, phosphorus) from agricultural runoff and sewage drives aquatic weed growth and algal blooms, impairing water quality and biodiversity Mains Practice Question Freshwater lakes in the Kashmir Valley face multiple stressors that have led to significant ecological degradation over recent decades. Using Mansbal Lake as a case study, examine the causes of freshwater lake degradation in India and evaluate the effectiveness of restoration approaches adopted by state and central agencies. GS Paper 3 — Environment & Ecology | Wetlands & Water Bodies | 15 Marks | 250 Words MCQ Practice Consider the following two statements about Mansbal Lake: Statement 1: Mansbal Lake is the deepest freshwater lake in India and is located in Ganderbal district of central Kashmir. Statement 2: Mansbal Lake is a designated Ramsar site and supports over 46 bird species from 23 families. Which of the above statements is/are correct? AStatement 1 only BStatement 2 only CBoth Statement 1 and Statement 2 DNeither Statement 1 nor Statement 2 Answer: A Statement 1 is correct: Mansbal Lake is described as the deepest natural freshwater lake in India, at approximately 43 feet deep, and is situated in Ganderbal district of central Kashmir. Statement 2 is incorrect in one respect: while the lake does support over 46 bird species from 23 families, Mansbal Lake is NOT a designated Ramsar site — the J&K Ramsar sites are Wular Lake and Hokersar Wetland. Therefore, only Statement 1 is correct.