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Jun 2, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content FIRST PRESS RELEASE OF ALL INDIA INDEX OF INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION OF NEW SERIES WITH BASE YEAR 2022-23 4,000 yrs of climate history from world’s largest inhabited river island offer adaption insights FIRST PRESS RELEASE OF ALL INDIA INDEX OF INDUSTRIAL PRODUCTION OF NEW SERIES WITH BASE YEAR 2022-23 Relevance : GS Paper 3 (Indian Economy & Industrial Development) 1 Issue in Brief MoSPI released the first press release of the revised All India Index of Industrial Production (IIP) with base year shifted from 2011-12 to 2022-23, aimed at making the index more representative of India’s current industrial structure. IIP for April 2026 recorded 4.9% growth (year-on-year), driven primarily by Manufacturing sector growth of 6.2%, reflecting sustained momentum in industrial activity. The revision incorporates an updated item basket, revised weighting structure, expanded sectoral coverage, and adoption of NIC 2025, aligning IIP with contemporary economic realities and global standards. 2 Static Background IIP is a composite index measuring short-term changes in volume of production of industrial goods relative to a chosen base period — it is a quantity index, not a value index, making it relatively insulated from price fluctuations. Published by: MoSPI | Frequency: Monthly | Released with approximately a 6-week lag from the reference month, limiting its real-time utility for policymakers. Sectors in new series (4): Mining & Quarrying, Manufacturing, Electricity & Gas Supply, and Water Supply, Sewerage & Waste Management — the last being an entirely new addition to the IIP framework. Use-Based Classification (6 categories, retained from old series): Primary Goods, Capital Goods, Intermediate Goods, Infrastructure/Construction Goods, Consumer Durables, Consumer Non-Durables — individual item group classifications within these were reviewed and updated. Base year revision was overseen by the Technical Advisory Committee for Base Year Revision of IIP (TAC-IIP); committee report was released on 25 May 2026, preceding this press release. NIC 2025 has been adopted for compilation and dissemination of the new series, replacing the earlier classification framework used in the 2011-12 series. 3 Key Dimensions A. April 2026 IIP Performance Sector Growth (YoY) Index Value Overall IIP 4.9% 118.9 Manufacturing 6.2% 119.3 Electricity & Gas Supply 4.9% 125.5 Water Supply & Waste Mgmt 6.6% 146.1 Mining & Quarrying -5.1% 104.6 Manufacturing showed broadbased strength with 17 out of 23 industry groups at NIC 2-digit level recording positive growth in April 2026 over April 2025. Mining & Quarrying was the sole sectoral drag, contracting by 5.1%, primarily due to a 5.7% decline in Fuel Minerals, weighing on the overall IIP figure significantly. B. Top Manufacturing Contributors (April 2026) Electrical Equipment (+19.2%): Growth driven by switchgear, circuit breakers, control panels, small transformers, and carbon/graphite articles used for electrical purposes — reflecting capital investment in power infrastructure. Other Transport Equipment (+18.9%): Strong performance across this group; specific item-level contributors not detailed in the press release for this sub-group. Machinery & Equipment n.e.c. (+12.9%): Growth led by fire-fighting equipment, cranes of all types, and stationary/internal combustion piston engines not used for motor vehicles. Motor Vehicles, Trailers & Semi-Trailers (+12.7%): Driven by auto components, spares and accessories, passenger cars, and wheel rims — indicating healthy demand in the automobile sector. C. Use-Based Classification (April 2026) Category Weight Growth Policy Signal Capital Goods 8.082% 16.0% Investment cycle strengthening Intermediate Goods 22.416% 7.7% Supply chain activity healthy Infrastructure/Construction 10.908% 7.1% Government capex push visible Consumer Durables 11.311% 4.3% Moderate urban demand Consumer Non-Durables 16.147% 2.8% Mass consumption sluggish Primary Goods 31.136% 0.4% Near-stagnant, structural concern Capital Goods at 16% growth is the most significant signal — capital goods production is a leading indicator of private investment and future productive capacity expansion in the economy. Consumer Non-Durables at 2.8% and Primary Goods at 0.4% together suggest demand-side weakness at the base of the consumption pyramid, potentially reflecting rural income or inflation stress. D. What Changed in the New IIP Series?i. New Sector Added Water Supply, Sewerage & Waste Management (weight: 2.02%) added as a completely new sector; data sourced from MoHUA and Department of Drinking Water & Sanitation — two of the four newly added source agencies. ii. Revised and Expanded Item Basket Old series (2011-12): 839 items mapped to 407 item groups | New series (2022-23): 1,042 items mapped to 463 item groups — representing a significant expansion in the breadth and granularity of industrial production measurement. Newly added items include: CCTV cameras, stents, vaccines (non-veterinary), non-woven textile articles, parts of aircraft and spacecraft, and cards with magnetic stripe — capturing emerging industrial segments. Deleted items include: Kerosene, fluorescent tubes, CFLs, bicycle/LMV tyre tubes, sewing machines, printing machinery — removed on grounds of technological obsolescence and declining industrial relevance. Items reported in value terms increased substantially: from 109 item groups in the old series to 234 item groups in the new series — a more than twofold increase, improving measurement accuracy. iii. Enhanced Granularity Electricity sector now disaggregated into: (i) Renewable Sources (hydro, wind, solar) and (ii) Non-Renewable Sources (thermal, nuclear) — enabling tracking of India’s energy transition within the IIP framework itself. Mining & Quarrying now split into three sub-groups: (i) Fuel Minerals, (ii) Metallic Minerals including Rare Earth Minerals, and (iii) Non-Metallic Minerals including Minor Minerals — a significant improvement over the single undifferentiated index of the old series. Rare Earth Minerals are now tracked with data sourced from IREL (India) Limited, Department of Atomic Energy — critical given India’s strategic push in electronics, EV batteries, and defence manufacturing sectors. Minor Minerals (sand, gravel, stone etc.) now included via data from State Directorates of Economics and Statistics (DES) — previously excluded, despite accounting for a significant share of Mining GVA per National Accounts estimates. iv. Updated Weights (Key Shifts) Weights derived from GVA data (National Accounts Statistics, 2022-23) at sectoral level and Annual Survey of Industries (ASI) 2022-23 at NIC 2/3/4-digit level — ensuring contemporaneous economic relevance. Petroleum products weight fell sharply: 11.77% → 7.72% — reflects India’s economic diversification away from petroleum-intensive industrial production over the past decade. Motor Vehicles weight rose: 4.86% → 6.42% | Pharma weight rose: 4.98% → 5.83% | Electrical Equipment weight rose: 2.998% → 3.175% — all reflecting sectoral expansion. Mining & Quarrying overall weight declined: 14.37% → 11.05% | Manufacturing slightly declined: 77.63% → 76.06% | Electricity & Gas Supply rose: 7.99% → 10.87% — signalling energy sector’s growing economic footprint. v. Linking Factor Linking factor calculated using Geometric Mean (GM) method to connect the old 2011-12 series with the new 2022-23 series — allows users to construct a back-linked historical series for trend analysis. Sector Linking Factor Mining & Quarrying 1.1890 Manufacturing 1.3700 Electricity 1.8495 General Index 1.3834 Linking factor for Water Supply, Sewerage & Waste Management cannot be computed as this sector was entirely absent from the old series — a direct comparability gap users must account for. MoSPI explicitly states it does not prescribe any specific linking methodology — the choice is left to users based on their analytical requirements, which may lead to inconsistency across research and policy uses. vi. Data Source Agencies Total agencies: 16 (12 existing + 4 new). New agencies: IREL (India) Ltd, State DES (minor minerals), MoHUA, and Dept. of Drinking Water & Sanitation — institutionalising data collection from previously uncovered industrial segments. 4 Critical Analysis Capital Goods growth of 16% in April 2026 is a strongly positive signal, suggesting that the private investment/capex cycle may be gaining traction — historically, sustained capital goods expansion precedes broader industrial employment and output growth. Renewable electricity growing at 18% within the new disaggregated electricity index reflects the accelerating shift in India’s energy mix — the IIP can now serve as a real-time tracker of the energy transition, which was not possible in the old series. Inclusion of rare earth minerals and CCTV cameras, stents, vaccines in the item basket directly aligns IIP with Atmanirbhar Bharat and Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme priority sectors, improving its relevance for industrial policy evaluation. Mining sector contraction of 5.1%, particularly the 5.7% decline in Fuel Minerals, is a recurring structural concern — it may signal issues with coal/petroleum extraction, affecting input availability for downstream manufacturing and energy sectors. Consumer Non-Durables at just 2.8% growth is a persistent worry — this category captures mass-consumption goods (soaps, edible oils, medicines etc.) and its weakness signals demand stress among lower and middle-income households, potentially linked to food inflation or wage stagnation. Non-comparability between old and new series is a significant analytical challenge — differences in item basket, weights, sectoral scope, and factory panel mean that growth rate comparisons across the two series must be made with explicit caveats and cannot be treated as continuous data. WPI continues to be used for deflating value-based item groups until the Output Producer Price Index (PPI) is released — this is a methodological gap, as WPI includes traded goods and may not accurately reflect ex-factory price movements used in industrial production. Provision for factory substitution (replacing closed/non-operational units) is a methodologically important addition — the old series suffered from “ghost units” continuing to influence the index even after ceasing production, distorting growth readings. 5 Way Forward Expedite release of Output PPI to replace WPI as the deflator for value-based item groups — this will improve methodological consistency with international standards such as those recommended by the IMF Industrial Production Index Manual. Address Mining sector structural weakness by fast-tracking environmental and forest clearances, operationalising the National Mineral Policy 2019, and strengthening the Critical Minerals Mission to reduce import dependence on rare earth and strategic minerals. Stimulate rural and mass-market consumption to lift Consumer Non-Durables growth — targeted fiscal transfers, MGNREGS wage indexation to inflation, and rural credit expansion can support bottom-of-pyramid demand revival. Reduce IIP data lag from 6 weeks — MoSPI should explore integration of GST e-way bill data and GSTN production records for near-real-time cross-validation of factory-level output, improving timeliness of the index. Align IIP classification with ISIC Rev. 5 (UN International Standard Industrial Classification) as NIC 2025 evolves — essential for ensuring global comparability, attracting FDI, and enabling India’s participation in international industrial statistics databases. Publish sub-state/regional IIP using the State DES infrastructure now formally integrated as a data source — this would enable state-level industrial performance tracking, supporting cooperative federalism in industrial planning. 6 Prelims Pointers IIP released by: MoSPI New base year: 2022-23 | Old: 2011-12 Old item groups: 407 | New: 463 | Old items: 839 | New items: 1,042 Sectors in new IIP: 4 — Mining & Quarrying (11.05%), Manufacturing (76.06%), Electricity & Gas Supply (10.87%), Water Supply/Sewerage/Waste (2.02%) Largest weighted use-based category: Primary Goods (31.136%) Highest growth use-based category (April 2026): Capital Goods (+16%) Linking factor method: Geometric Mean Industrial classification used: NIC 2025 Total data source agencies: 16 (4 newly added) Renewable electricity growth (April 2026): +18% IIP nature: Short-term, volume-based, composite index TAC-IIP report released: 25 May 2026 Deflator used currently: WPI (Output PPI to replace when available) Value-based item groups: 234 (new) vs 109 (old) Newly added items: CCTV cameras, stents, vaccines, non-woven textiles, aircraft/spacecraft parts, magnetic stripe cards Deleted items: Kerosene, CFLs, fluorescent tubes, sewing machines, printing machinery, bicycle/LMV tyre tubes Rare Earth Mineral data sourced from: IREL (India) Ltd, Department of Atomic Energy Minor Mineral data sourced from: State Directorates of Economics and Statistics (DES) Linking factor for Water Supply sector: Cannot be computed (new sector, no old series equivalent) Manufacturing industry groups with positive growth (April 2026): 17 out of 23 7 Practice Mains Question Q. The revision of India’s Index of Industrial Production (IIP) base year from 2011-12 to 2022-23 is both a statistical necessity and a policy opportunity. Critically examine the structural changes introduced in the new series and assess their implications for industrial policymaking in India.(GS Paper 3 — Indian Economy / Industrial Development — 15 marks) Answer structure hints: Define IIP and the rationale for periodic base year revision Detail key structural changes: item basket expansion, new sector, granularity improvements, weight updates Assess policy implications: PLI tracking, energy transition monitoring, rare earth strategy, rural demand gaps Critical angle: non-comparability problem, WPI deflation gap, mining weakness, data lag Conclude with: Output PPI, GST data integration, regional IIP, and global alignment 8 Practice MCQ with Explanation Q. With reference to the revised Index of Industrial Production (IIP) with base year 2022-23, consider the following statements: Water Supply, Sewerage and Waste Management has been included as a new sector in the revised IIP series. The revised IIP series uses the National Industrial Classification (NIC) 2025 for compilation and dissemination. The linking factor between the old and new IIP series is calculated using the Arithmetic Mean method. Rare Earth Minerals are now included under the Mining & Quarrying sector of the revised IIP, with data sourced from IREL (India) Limited. Which of the statements given above are correct? (A) 1 and 4 only (B) 1, 2 and 4 only (C) 2 and 3 only (D) 1, 3 and 4 only Answer: (B) 1, 2 and 4 only Explanation: Statement 1 — Correct. Water Supply, Sewerage & Waste Management is an entirely new sector in the 2022-23 series with a weight of 2.02%; it had no equivalent in the 2011-12 series. Statement 2 — Correct. The press release explicitly states that NIC 2025 will be used for compilation and dissemination of the new IIP series. Statement 3 — Incorrect. The linking factor is calculated using the Geometric Mean (GM) method, not the Arithmetic Mean. This is explicitly stated in Part B of the press release. Statement 4 — Correct. Rare Earth Minerals are included under Metallic Minerals in the Mining & Quarrying sector, with production data sourced from IREL (India) Limited, Department of Atomic Energy — one of the four newly added source agencies. 4,000 yrs of climate history from world’s largest inhabited river island offer adaption insights Relevance : GS Paper 3 (Environment, Disaster Management & Climate Change) 1 Issue in Brief Scientists from Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), Lucknow published the first-ever comprehensive palaeoecological reconstruction of Majuli Island, Assam, covering nearly 4,000 years of climate and vegetation history. The study, published in Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (Elsevier), uses pollen analysis and grain-size studies from a 150 cm deep sediment core to reconstruct past climate, vegetation, and flood dynamics of the Upper Brahmaputra Valley. Findings offer a scientific basis for climate adaptation strategies for flood-affected communities on Majuli, one of India’s most geographically and culturally vulnerable river islands. 2 Static Background Majuli Island is the world’s largest inhabited river island, located in Assam, bounded by the Brahmaputra River (south and east), Subansiri River (west), and a Brahmaputra branch (north) — making it acutely vulnerable to flooding and riverbank erosion. Majuli holds UNESCO tentative list status for its cultural significance — it is a major centre of Neo-Vaishnavite culture, a reformist Vaishnavism movement, and serves as the traditional settlement of several tribal communities. BSIP, Lucknow is an autonomous institute under the Department of Science and Technology (DST), specialising in palaeobotany, palynology, and earth sciences — the lead institution behind this study. Palynology is the scientific study of pollen and spores; pollen grains are among the most reliable proxies for past environmental conditions as they are durable and can remain preserved in sediments for thousands to millions of years. Holocene refers to the current geological epoch, beginning approximately 11,700 years ago — the study specifically covers the Mid-Late Holocene period (approximately 4040 to 500 calibrated years Before Present). The Brahmaputra basin is one of the world’s most flood-prone and seismically active river systems, making long-term climate-flood interaction studies in this region critically important for disaster risk reduction planning. 3 Key Dimensions A. Study Methodology Sediment core: A 150 cm deep core was extracted from Sakali Wetland on Majuli Island — wetland sediments are ideal archives as they accumulate and preserve pollen, organic matter, and mineral grains over millennia without significant disturbance. Pollen analysis (Palynology): Used to reconstruct past vegetation cover and infer climate conditions — different plant species produce characteristic pollen, allowing scientists to identify which vegetation types dominated in different time periods. Grain-size analysis: Used to understand river dynamics and flood intensity — coarser sediment particles indicate high-energy (stronger) flood events, while finer particles reflect calmer, low-energy depositional conditions. Coexistence Approach: A quantitative palaeoclimatic reconstruction method using modern pollen analogues to estimate past Mean Annual Temperature (MAT) and Mean Annual Precipitation (MAP) — providing numerical climate estimates rather than qualitative descriptions alone. Modern pollen analogues: Contemporary pollen samples from known vegetation types used as reference points to interpret fossil pollen assemblages — a standard methodological control in palynological research. B. Key Climate Phases Identified Period (cal. yrs. BP) Climate Phase Vegetation/Condition 4040–2260 Warm and humid Dense forest cover; resilience during 4.2 ka event 2260–1100 Fluctuating monsoon Variable flood regimes; shifting vegetation 1100–500 Relatively moist Corresponds to Medieval Climatic Anomaly Last ~500 years Declining temp. and precipitation Consistent with Little Ice Age; rising human influence The 4.2 ka (kiloannum) dry climatic event — a globally recognised severe drought event approximately 4,200 years ago — appears to have had limited ecological impact on Majuli, suggesting the region maintained ecological resilience during this period. The Medieval Climatic Anomaly (MCA), a period of relatively warmer global temperatures roughly 1,000–500 years ago, is reflected in Majuli’s record as a moist phase, showing clear synchronicity between local vegetation and global climatic forcing. The Little Ice Age signature — declining temperature and precipitation over the last ~500 years — is accompanied in Majuli’s record by increased anthropogenic influence and expansion of scattered, degraded vegetation, suggesting compounding human and climate pressures. C. Key Findings and Significance Grain-size data indicate a clear shift from low- to high-energy fluvial conditions over time — reflecting increasing hydrodynamic instability in the Brahmaputra system, with implications for future flood frequency and intensity projections. The study demonstrates clear synchronicity between local vegetation dynamics on Majuli and major global climatic events — establishing that the Upper Brahmaputra Valley is highly sensitive to broader global climate forcing, not just local factors. Multi-proxy approach (combining pollen + grain-size) is the methodological innovation — no prior study had applied this integrated framework to Majuli, making this the first comprehensive long-term environmental record for the island. Findings identify specific phases of ecological resilience and vulnerability, providing a scientific basis for targeted biodiversity conservation, wetland restoration, and sustainable land-use planning on and around the island. D. Institutional and Publication Details Lead researchers: Ms. Arya Pandey (DST-INSPIRE SRF) and Dr. Swati Tripathi (Scientist-E, BSIP, Supervisor) Collaborating institutions: BSIP Lucknow, a German institution, BHU (Banaras Hindu University), and internal BSIP collaborators Published in: Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (Elsevier) — a peer-reviewed international journal in palaeosciences Funding mechanism: DST-INSPIRE (Innovation in Science Pursuit for Inspired Research) fellowship supported the lead researcher — a flagship DST scheme for attracting talented researchers to science 4 Critical Analysis The 4,000-year climate record fills a critical data gap in the Upper Brahmaputra Valley — prior absence of such long-term palaeoecological data meant that flood management and adaptation planning in this region lacked a historical baseline, limiting policy effectiveness. Majuli’s resilience during the 4.2 ka event is scientifically significant — it challenges assumptions that the region was uniformly vulnerable to past droughts and suggests that local hydrology and vegetation acted as buffers, a finding relevant for ecosystem-based adaptation strategies. The increasing hydrodynamic instability detected in grain-size data is alarming in the context of climate change projections — intensifying Brahmaputra floods driven by Himalayan glacial melt and erratic monsoons could accelerate land loss on Majuli beyond historical precedent. Anthropogenic influence over the last 500 years — visible in pollen records as vegetation degradation — demonstrates that human pressures compound climate stress on the island, making integrated conservation and disaster risk governance essential, not optional. Majuli’s UNESCO tentative list status creates an international obligation for India to demonstrate proactive cultural and ecological preservation — this study strengthens the scientific case for Majuli’s inscription and for disaster-resilient heritage management. The study’s policy translation gap is a limitation — while findings are scientifically robust, the pathway from palynological data to actionable flood management policy for Assam’s administration requires deliberate institutional bridging, which the study does not address. DST-INSPIRE fellowship enabling frontier research by a young researcher (SRF level) demonstrates the scheme’s role in building India’s scientific capacity in niche but strategically important earth science disciplines. 5 Way Forward Integrate palaeoecological findings into Brahmaputra flood management plans — the Brahmaputra Board (statutory body under Ministry of Jal Shakti) should incorporate long-term climate-flood interaction data into its river management and embankment planning frameworks. Scale up wetland sediment coring studies across the Brahmaputra basin — similar multi-proxy reconstructions from other wetlands and oxbow lakes in Assam and Arunachal Pradesh would build a regional climate atlas essential for basin-wide adaptation planning. Accelerate Majuli’s UNESCO World Heritage inscription — the scientific credibility of this study strengthens India’s nomination dossier; MoEFCC and ASI should use these findings in the Outstanding Universal Value (OUV) documentation for Majuli. Develop community-based wetland conservation frameworks for Sakali Wetland and similar ecosystems on Majuli — these archives of climate history must be protected from drainage, construction, and agricultural encroachment through Wetlands (Conservation and Management) Rules, 2017. Link findings to the National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) — specifically the National Water Mission and National Mission for a Green India — to mainstream long-term climate evidence into adaptation scheme design for flood-prone riverine communities. Strengthen DST-INSPIRE and BSIP funding for palaeosciences — India’s capacity in palaeoecology and palynology remains limited relative to its vast geological and ecological diversity; sustained institutional investment is necessary for building this strategic scientific capability. 6 Prelims Pointers Majuli Island: World’s largest inhabited river island | Located in Assam Rivers bounding Majuli: Brahmaputra (south, east), Subansiri (west), Brahmaputra branch (north) UNESCO status of Majuli: Tentative list (not yet inscribed as World Heritage Site) Cultural significance: Major centre of Neo-Vaishnavite culture; tribal settlements Lead institution: Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), Lucknow BSIP under: Department of Science and Technology (DST) Study period: ~4,000 years | Mid-Late Holocene | 4040 to 500 cal. yrs. BP Sediment core depth: 150 cm | Site: Sakali Wetland, Majuli Methods used: Palynology (pollen analysis) + Grain-size analysis (multi-proxy approach) Quantitative climate method: Coexistence Approach — estimates past MAT and MAP 4.2 ka event: Globally recognised severe drought ~4,200 years ago; Majuli showed resilience Medieval Climatic Anomaly: Reflected as moist phase during 1100–500 cal. yrs. BP on Majuli Little Ice Age: Last ~500 years; declining temperature + precipitation + rising human influence Published in: Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology (Elsevier) Lead researcher fellowship: DST-INSPIRE SRF (Innovation in Science Pursuit for Inspired Research) Pollen: Durable biological proxy; preserved in sediments for thousands to millions of years Grain-size data finding: Shift from low- to high-energy fluvial conditions over time Brahmaputra Board: Statutory body under Ministry of Jal Shakti Wetlands Rules: Wetlands (Conservation and Management) Rules, 2017 7 Practice Mains Question Q. Palaeoecological studies can serve as a scientific foundation for climate adaptation and disaster risk reduction in vulnerable riverine ecosystems. Critically examine this argument with reference to the recent Majuli Island climate reconstruction study.(GS Paper 3 — Environment and Ecology / Disaster Management — 15 marks) Answer structure hints: Define palaeoecology and palynology; explain why long-term climate data matters for policy Describe Majuli’s geographical and cultural vulnerability; explain the study’s methodology briefly Analyse key findings — resilience during 4.2 ka event, increasing fluvial instability, anthropogenic influence Link findings to flood management, wetland conservation, UNESCO inscription, NAPCC missions Critical angle — policy translation gap, data-to-governance bridge, scaling up such studies Conclude with institutional recommendations: Brahmaputra Board, BSIP funding, community conservation 8 Practice MCQ with Explanation Q. With reference to the palaeoecological study on Majuli Island published in 2026, consider the following statements: Majuli Island is bounded by the Brahmaputra River to the south and east, and the Subansiri River to the west. The study used the Coexistence Approach to reconstruct past Mean Annual Temperature and Mean Annual Precipitation. Grain-size analysis in the study was used primarily to reconstruct past vegetation cover on the island. The study found that Majuli showed ecological resilience during the globally recognised 4.2 ka dry climatic event. Which of the statements given above are correct? (A) 1, 2 and 4 only (B) 2 and 3 only (C) 1 and 4 only (D) 1, 2, 3 and 4 Answer: (A) 1, 2 and 4 only Explanation: Statement 1 — Correct. The press release explicitly states Majuli is bounded by the Brahmaputra to the south and east, and the Subansiri River to the west, with a Brahmaputra branch to the north. Statement 2 — Correct. The Coexistence Approach is specifically identified as the quantitative palaeoclimatic reconstruction method used to estimate past MAT and MAP values from modern and fossil pollen records. Statement 3 — Incorrect. Grain-size analysis was used to understand river dynamics and flood intensity, not vegetation. Pollen analysis was the method used for reconstructing past vegetation cover — the two methods serve distinct purposes in this multi-proxy study. Statement 4 — Correct. The study records an early warm and humid phase (4040–2260 cal. yrs. BP) with dense forest cover, explicitly described as suggesting resilience during the 4.2 ka dry climatic event.

Jun 2, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content IMEC is caught between commerce and geopolitics Orbital rivalry — the challenge of China’s space power IMEC is caught between commerce and geopolitics Source: The Hindu | Relevance: The Iran conflict has violently exposed global choke-point dependence, making IMEC simultaneously more urgent and more fragile — directly relevant to GS-2 (IR), GS-3 (Infrastructure, Energy Security), Essay, and Interview. 1 Issue in Brief / Central Argument The ongoing Iran-Israel-US conflict has shattered the myth that military superiority alone guarantees victory, while simultaneously exposing how dangerously the global economy depends on a handful of narrow maritime passages — the Strait of Hormuz being the most critical example right now. IMEC — the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor — was conceived to bypass the Suez Canal and reduce choke-point dependence, but the very West Asian region it must traverse has become a theatre of active conflict, putting the corridor's foundational architecture under severe stress. The core argument of the editorial is that IMEC must evolve into a more flexible, multi-route framework — not abandon its vision — by exploring alternative ports and alignments while India and European partners manage the deepening diplomatic fault lines among Gulf partners. Fig : Strait of Hormuz 2 Static Background IMEC was officially announced at the G-20 Summit in New Delhi in September 2023, envisioned as a transformative multimodal corridor integrating railways, ports, highways, energy grids, undersea data cables, and green hydrogen pipelines to connect India with Europe across the Arabian Peninsula. The corridor has three distinct legs: the eastern sea link connecting India to the UAE; the central overland route traversing UAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Israel terminating at the Port of Haifa; and the western sea leg connecting Haifa to various European ports where the continent's own transport network takes over. Rival connectivity projects such as the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) and China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) were built with a similar logic — to bypass single-point maritime choke points — but both have their own strategic complications and neither fully replaces the India-Europe arc IMEC seeks to serve. India's energy vulnerability is acute: the country imports approximately 88% of its crude oil requirements, amounting to about 1.8 billion barrels annually, making disruptions to the Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly 20 million barrels of crude pass daily — a direct economic and strategic threat. The Gaza war of October 7, 2023 broke out almost immediately after IMEC was announced, freezing diplomatic momentum and directly compromising the corridor's Israeli nodes. The project has been stalled in varying degrees ever since, with the Iran conflict delivering the latest and most severe blow. 3 Key Dimensions Military-strategic dimension: The US reportedly lost 42 aircraft including fifth-generation F-35 stealth fighters, and expended over half its Patriot, Tomahawk, and THAAD missile inventories in the conflict — demonstrating that even overwhelming technological superiority cannot guarantee quick, decisive victory against an asymmetric, resilient adversary like Iran. Choke-point and energy dimension: Iran's early imposition of a Strait of Hormuz blockade has virtually paralysed roughly one-third of global daily crude oil supply, delivering a real-time lesson in how dependent the global economy remains on a handful of narrow, militarily vulnerable maritime passages that no insurance policy fully covers. Infrastructure vulnerability dimension: Key UAE ports — Jebel Ali and Fujairah — which are central to IMEC's eastern architecture, have been repeatedly targeted by Iranian strikes, exposing the geographic liability of building critical trade infrastructure in close proximity to an active conflict and a contested choke point. Saudi-UAE geopolitical faultline: The UAE's exit from OPEC in April 2026, combined with its growing strategic coordination with Israel — including the deployment of Israel's Iron Beam laser defence system — risks deepening mistrust with Saudi Arabia, threatening the seamless cross-border coordination that the central overland leg of IMEC fundamentally depends upon. India's diplomatic centrality: PM Modi's May 2026 Europe visit resulted in India and Italy elevating ties to a Special Strategic Partnership and jointly reaffirming commitment to IMEC — signalling that India sees the corridor not merely as a trade route but as a long-term strategic and diplomatic investment worth defending through turbulence. 4 Arguments in Favour of IMEC Trade efficiency and cost reduction: By bypassing the Suez Canal and integrating sea, rail, and road links into a seamless multimodal chain, IMEC can significantly reduce freight time and logistics costs between Asia and Europe — making Indian exports more competitive and reducing India's dependence on existing, congestion-prone global shipping routes. Energy and digital infrastructure: Unlike conventional transport corridors, IMEC embeds green hydrogen pipelines, energy transmission grids, and undersea high-speed data links — making it a future-facing infrastructure that serves not just today's fossil fuel trade but the emerging clean energy and digital economy of the coming decades. Strategic hedge against China's BRI: IMEC offers a democratic, rules-based, multilaterally backed alternative to China's Belt and Road Initiative — one that does not come bundled with debt-trap fears, sovereignty concerns, or opaque financial terms, giving partner countries a genuine choice in infrastructure diplomacy. India's centrality in global trade: IMEC positions India as a pivot of the Asia-Europe trade corridor rather than a peripheral node — directly supporting the Atmanirbhar Bharat vision, boosting port-led development, and giving Indian infrastructure projects international visibility and investment appeal. Abraham Accords economic operationalisation: IMEC effectively translates the diplomatic normalisation achieved under the Abraham Accords into tangible economic architecture — giving Arab-Israeli normalisation a commercial backbone that could prove more durable than political agreements alone, if successfully implemented. 5 Concerns and Criticisms Israel node severely compromised: The Port of Haifa — the critical western terminus of IMEC's central overland leg — sits in a country actively involved in regional conflict, making it politically toxic for Arab partners to engage with openly and logistically vulnerable until a durable peace settlement is achieved. UAE infrastructure under direct attack: Jebel Ali and Fujairah — the UAE ports that anchor IMEC's eastern sea link — have been repeatedly targeted during the Iran conflict, revealing that the corridor's foundational nodes are geographically too close to the Strait of Hormuz to be considered reliably safe during any future West Asian escalation. Saudi-UAE divergence threatens coordination: IMEC's central overland leg requires seamless cooperation between Saudi Arabia and the UAE, but the UAE's OPEC exit, Israeli defence ties, and growing independent strategic posture risk creating an adversarial dynamic between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi that would make cross-border corridor coordination practically unworkable. No binding legal or financial framework: Unlike BRI, which has direct Chinese state financing and bilateral treaty structures, IMEC currently rests on a G-20 declaration with no committed funding pool, no institutional secretariat, and no legally binding obligations on any partner — making it vulnerable to political reversals or benign neglect. Competing, more operationally ready alternatives: The INSTC already has active freight movement through Russia and Iran, and China's BRI has established infrastructure across Central Asia and Europe — meaning that for many countries, IMEC must compete against corridors that are already partially functional, not just conceptually superior. 6 Way Forward Develop Oman as the alternative eastern gateway: Ports at Salalah, Duqm, and Muscat are located well away from the Strait of Hormuz conflict zone and offer deep-water capacity, making them viable substitute eastern entry points for IMEC that reduce Iran-related risk without fundamentally restructuring the corridor's broader logic. Egypt as the western spur until Haifa stabilises: Egypt already possesses the Suez Canal Economic Zone, six operational ports, and four industrial zones specialising in green hydrogen, LNG, and shipbuilding — giving IMEC a ready-made western alternative that bypasses the Israeli node while keeping the corridor commercially functional during the conflict period. Institutionalise IMEC with a binding multilateral framework: Move beyond the G-20 declaration toward a formal treaty architecture with a dedicated institutional secretariat, committed financing mechanism, and clear dispute resolution procedures — giving the corridor the legal and financial backbone it currently lacks and making partner commitments more durable. India as active diplomatic broker among Gulf partners: India's unique position as a trusted partner of both Saudi Arabia and the UAE must be leveraged proactively to prevent the widening Saudi-UAE faultline from fracturing IMEC's central overland segment — a quiet but consequential diplomatic role that India is well-placed to play. Phased, adaptive implementation strategy: Prioritise segments that are currently viable — the India-UAE sea link and the Europe western leg — while maintaining the full corridor alignment as a long-term vision to be activated progressively as conflict subsides and political conditions improve across the region. 7 Data, Reports, and Examples US Congressional Research Service report on "Operation Epic Fury": 42 US aircraft lost or damaged, including F-35 stealth fighters; over 240 American targets struck by Iran; more than half of total Patriot, Tomahawk, and THAAD inventories expended — figures that underscore the unprecedented scale and cost of the conflict. (Treat as reported in the editorial; independent verification recommended) Strait of Hormuz: Approximately 20 million barrels of crude oil per day — roughly one-third of global supply — passes through this narrow waterway, making any Iranian-imposed blockade an immediate global economic event rather than a regional inconvenience. India's crude dependence: Imports approximately 88% of its crude oil needs, amounting to around 1.8 billion barrels annually — placing India among the countries most severely affected by any Hormuz disruption, and underlining why IMEC's energy security dimension is of existential strategic importance. UAE OPEC exit, April 2026: A significant geopolitical signal indicating Abu Dhabi's growing strategic independence from the Gulf consensus — with direct implications for Saudi-UAE relations and, by extension, for the viability of IMEC's central overland coordination architecture. PM Modi's Europe visit, May 2026: India and Italy announced a Special Strategic Partnership and jointly reaffirmed commitment to IMEC, recognising its transformative potential to reshape global trade — a diplomatic signal that major IMEC partners remain committed despite the ongoing turbulence. 8 Prelims Pointers IMEC announced: G-20 Summit, New Delhi, September 2023; officially backed by India, USA, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Israel, EU, France, Germany, and Italy. Western terminus of IMEC: Port of Haifa, Israel — connects the central overland section to European sea routes via the Mediterranean. Strait of Hormuz: Narrow waterway between Iran and Oman; approximately 20 million barrels/day of crude transit; critical global choke point for energy supply. INSTC (International North-South Transport Corridor): Multimodal route connecting India to Russia and Europe via Iran, bypassing the Suez Canal; conceived independently of IMEC. Iron Beam: Israeli laser-based air defence system designed to intercept drones, rockets, and missiles at low cost per intercept; reportedly deployed in the UAE during the current conflict. THAAD: Terminal High Altitude Area Defense — a US Army missile defence system designed to intercept ballistic missiles during their terminal phase; significant inventory reportedly expended in the Iran conflict. Oman alternative ports: Salalah (established container hub), Duqm (deepwater, strategic), and Muscat — all located outside the immediate Hormuz risk zone, making them viable IMEC alternative nodes. Egypt's infrastructure readiness: Suez Canal Economic Zone + six operational ports + four industrial zones (green hydrogen, LNG, shipbuilding) — positions Egypt as a credible western spur for a reconfigured IMEC. 9 Practice Mains Question "The India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC) holds transformative potential for India's trade connectivity and strategic positioning, yet remains hostage to the geopolitical volatility of West Asia. Critically examine the challenges facing IMEC and suggest a viable way forward."(GS Paper 2 / Essay — 250 words) Answer hint: Open with IMEC's strategic promise → explain structural architecture → examine Gaza and Iran conflict disruptions → analyse the Saudi-UAE faultline as an underappreciated internal threat → propose Oman/Egypt alternatives and flexible realignment → conclude with India's role as diplomatic guarantor, not just a corridor beneficiary. 10 Practice MCQ Q. With reference to the India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor (IMEC), consider the following statements: IMEC was announced at the G-20 Summit held in New Delhi in 2023. The central overland section of IMEC passes through Iraq and Turkey. The Port of Haifa in Israel is envisioned as a key western node of IMEC. IMEC includes provisions for green hydrogen corridors and undersea digital data links. Which of the above statements are correct? (a) 1 and 3 only(b) 1, 2 and 4 only(c) 1, 3 and 4 only(d) 2, 3 and 4 only Answer: (c) 1, 3 and 4 only Explanation: Statement 1 is correct — G-20 New Delhi, September 2023. Statement 2 is incorrect — the central overland leg runs through UAE, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Israel; Iraq and Turkey are not part of this alignment. Statement 3 is correct — Haifa is the Mediterranean terminus of IMEC's central section. Statement 4 is correct — IMEC explicitly encompasses green hydrogen pipelines, energy grids, and undersea high-speed data infrastructure as part of its multidimensional design. Orbital rivalry — the challenge of China’s space power Source: The Hindu | Relevance: China's rapidly expanding counter-space programme poses a direct threat to India's satellite infrastructure and military ISR capabilities — critical for GS-2 (India's security challenges), GS-3 (Space technology, Defence), and Interview. 1 Issue in Brief / Central Argument China is systematically developing offensive counter-space capabilities — kinetic missiles, laser systems, and co-orbital satellites — that blur the line between routine space operations and acts of war, creating a dangerous new theatre of military competition with no adequate international regulatory framework. The core argument is that while China cannot yet cripple India's space assets without triggering catastrophic Kessler Syndrome consequences, India's limited satellite redundancy — roughly 60 operational satellites versus 400-plus Chinese military satellites — makes it disproportionately vulnerable to even targeted, limited counter-space strikes. India must urgently expand its space industrial base, disaggregate large satellite platforms into resilient constellations, protect ground infrastructure, and clearly define red lines — so that China fully understands the escalation risks before choosing to exploit India's current asymmetry in orbit. 2 Static Background Space as a military domain: A single successful strike on critical satellites can simultaneously disrupt communications, power grids, GPS navigation, financial markets, and military C2 (Command and Control) and ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance) networks — making space control a decisive first-mover advantage in any future conflict. China's satellite programme timeline: In January 2007, China destroyed its own satellite using a ground-launched missile — demonstrating basic ASAT capability. By 2022, it used a robotic spacecraft to push a defunct satellite into graveyard orbit, and in 2024, it demonstrated an orbital dog-fight between co-orbital spacecraft. India's Mission Shakti (2019): India successfully conducted an Anti-Satellite (ASAT) missile test, destroying a low-earth orbit satellite and demonstrating basic kinetic counter-space capability — a significant deterrence signal, though the test also generated space debris that raised international concern. Kessler Syndrome: A cascading chain reaction where the destruction of one satellite generates debris that destroys others, eventually rendering entire orbital bands unusable — this mutual vulnerability acts as a natural deterrent against large-scale, indiscriminate counter-space attacks by any party. NavIC (Navigation with Indian Constellation): India's indigenous satellite navigation system, comprising seven satellites, designed to provide accurate positioning services across India and neighbouring regions — a strategic asset that is simultaneously a vulnerability if targeted by Chinese jammers or laser systems. Starlink vs. China's LEO ambition: SpaceX's Starlink operates thousands of LEO satellites; China plans to deploy over 36,000 LEO satellites by 2030 through its Guowang constellation — making low-earth orbit the most immediate and contested zone of the emerging space race. 3 Key Dimensions Kinetic dimension: China has developed and tested DN-3 and SC-19 missiles capable of physically destroying satellites in various orbital bands — hard-kill capabilities that can permanently eliminate ISR and communication assets, though at the risk of generating destabilising orbital debris at scale. Non-kinetic dimension: Laser-based dazzling and blinding systems can temporarily or permanently disable satellite sensors without generating debris, making them the preferred tool for peacetime harassment or early-conflict disruption — providing China plausible deniability and avoiding immediate escalation thresholds. Co-orbital dimension: China's SJ (Shijian) and TJS (Tongxin Jishu Shiyan) series satellites are designed to manoeuvre close to adversary satellites in orbit — capable of interfering with, jamming, or physically dislodging them — representing the most sophisticated and difficult-to-attribute form of counter-space capability. Temporal dimension: China's counter-space doctrine aims to blind ISR and communication networks within the first 24–48 hours of a conflict — shaping the battlespace narrative before hard-kill attacks that would trigger immediate international escalation responses from allies and partners. India-specific vulnerability dimension: India has approximately 60 operational satellites compared to over 400 Chinese military satellites alone — meaning India has far less redundancy, and losing even five to six satellites (such as the CARTOSAT or RISAT series) could create critical tactical intelligence blind spots for hours or days. 4 Arguments in Favour (of Taking China's Space Threat Seriously) Asymmetry is strategically dangerous: India's limited satellite redundancy means China does not need to conduct a large-scale orbital strike to degrade Indian military capability — a few precise, targeted strikes or sustained laser harassment can achieve disproportionate operational impact at acceptable escalation cost for Beijing. Taiwan scenario is a direct template for India: If China were to act against Taiwan, it would first conduct soft-kill counter-space operations — blinding ISR and communications — before any hard military move. India faces the same doctrinal threat on a smaller scale along the Line of Actual Control (LAC), making space preparedness inseparable from land border defence. China's civilian-military fusion accelerates risk: Chinese space start-ups like LandSpace, iSpace, and OneSpace operate within a system where civilian space assets can be rapidly repurposed for military objectives — blurring the distinction between commercial and military space operations in ways that existing international law cannot adequately regulate. Regulatory vacuum intensifies danger: Unlike nuclear weapons (NPT) or chemical weapons (CWC), outer space currently lacks a comprehensive arms control treaty governing counter-space weapons — meaning there are no agreed red lines, no verification mechanisms, and no established escalation management frameworks for space-based conflict. Moon and asteroid competition will escalate tensions: If China becomes the first to establish a presence on the far side of the moon or begins exploiting asteroid mineral resources, it could trigger an escalatory dynamic that pulls in the US, India, and others — transforming today's competitive space race into tomorrow's contested space conflict. 5 Concerns and Criticisms Mission Shakti's limitations: A single successful ASAT test does not translate into operational reliability or genuine deterrence — India still lacks co-orbital manoeuvring capabilities to counter China's SJ and TJS satellite series, which operate at close range and do not require direct kinetic engagement to cause serious damage. India's satellite production bottleneck: ISRO's historically centralised and slow production model means India cannot rapidly replace destroyed satellites in a conflict scenario — the absence of a robust private space industry with surge production capacity leaves India strategically exposed in any prolonged counter-space engagement. Ground infrastructure vulnerability: Space capability is only as strong as its terrestrial backbone — India's ground stations, tracking facilities, and satellite control centres remain potentially vulnerable to conventional missile or cyber attacks that could neutralise India's space assets without touching a single satellite in orbit. Over-reliance on large satellite platforms: India's dependence on large, expensive, multi-mission satellites like GSAT creates single points of failure — one successful strike on a large platform causes disproportionate capability loss compared to distributed small-satellite constellations that are inherently more resilient and harder to target efficiently. Data-sharing gaps with strategic partners: India does not yet have deep, real-time satellite data-sharing arrangements with the US, France, or other strategic partners — meaning that if key Indian satellites are lost, there is no established rapid-restoration pathway through allied commercial or military networks to fill critical intelligence gaps. 6 Way Forward Expand and privatise satellite production: India must scale its space industry beyond ISRO by empowering private players under the IN-SPACe framework to dramatically increase satellite manufacturing and launch capacity — because greater numerical redundancy is the single most effective strategic insurance against counter-space attacks. Disaggregate large constellations into small-satellite clusters: Replace large, vulnerable platforms like GSAT with distributed small-satellite constellations that spread risk across multiple cheaper units — making it economically and operationally impractical for an adversary to neutralise India's space capability through a limited number of strikes. Harden ground space infrastructure: Protect satellite control centres, ground stations, and tracking facilities against conventional missile strikes, cyber intrusions, and electronic warfare attacks — because destroying ground infrastructure can neutralise space assets just as effectively as a direct orbital strike. Develop co-orbital counter-space capabilities: India must invest in robotic spacecraft and co-orbital manoeuvring technologies to credibly counter China's SJ and TJS series — establishing the capability to inspect, interfere with, or neutralise threatening co-orbital satellites as part of a graduated deterrence posture. Formalise red lines and escalation doctrine: India must publicly or diplomatically define its red lines in the space domain — specifying what level of satellite degradation or attack will trigger a proportionate response — so that Beijing cannot miscalculate India's tolerance threshold during a border crisis or wider military confrontation. Institutionalise data-sharing with Quad and strategic partners: Establish real-time satellite data-sharing agreements with the US, Japan, Australia, and France so that if Indian satellites are degraded or destroyed, partner commercial and military networks can restore critical ISR and navigation services within hours rather than days. 7 Data, Reports, and Examples China currently operates approximately 1,900 satellites in orbit, compared to over 8,000 American satellites including the SpaceX Starlink constellation — a numerical gap China is aggressively working to close through its planned 36,000-satellite LEO constellation by 2030. China's stated long-term space goals: lunar landing by 2036, launch of a nuclear-powered space shuttle by 2040, and establishment of a solar power transmission system from space by 2050 — each representing a major strategic capability that doubles as potential military infrastructure. India has approximately 60 operational satellites, while China operates over 400 military satellites alone — a roughly 7:1 asymmetry in military space assets that translates directly into India's lesser redundancy and greater vulnerability to even limited counter-space strikes. Mission Shakti (March 2019): India destroyed a low-earth orbit satellite at approximately 300 km altitude using an indigenously developed ASAT missile, becoming only the fourth country after the US, Russia, and China to demonstrate this capability. Hypothetical Indian vulnerability: A Chinese strike on the CARTOSAT/RISAT series could cause loss of tactical imagery for hours to days; laser harassment as these satellites pass over the LAC could create temporary blind spots without generating debris or triggering formal escalation responses. 8 Prelims Pointers ASAT (Anti-Satellite) weapons: Systems designed to destroy or disable satellites in orbit; categories include kinetic kill vehicles, directed-energy weapons (lasers), co-orbital interceptors, and electronic jammers. Mission Shakti: India's March 2019 ASAT test conducted by DRDO; destroyed an Indian satellite at ~300 km LEO altitude; India became the fourth nation to demonstrate this capability after USA, Russia, and China. Kessler Syndrome: Scenario proposed by NASA scientist Donald Kessler (1978); cascading satellite collisions generate debris that destroys more satellites, eventually rendering orbital bands permanently unusable. DN-3 and SC-19 missiles: Chinese kinetic ASAT systems; DN-3 is assessed to have direct-ascent capability against satellites in medium and higher earth orbits beyond low-earth orbit. SJ and TJS satellites: China's Shijian and Tongxin Jishu Shiyan series — co-orbital satellites assessed by analysts to have counter-space roles including proximity operations, jamming, and potential satellite dislodging capability. NavIC: India's regional satellite navigation system; seven-satellite constellation providing positioning across India and up to 1,500 km beyond its borders; strategic alternative to GPS but vulnerable to jamming. IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre): Established 2020; nodal agency to promote, authorise, and regulate private sector participation in India's space activities under the broader space sector reform. CARTOSAT / RISAT series: India's earth observation satellites providing high-resolution optical (CARTOSAT) and all-weather radar (RISAT) imagery — primary tactical ISR assets that would be priority targets in any counter-space strike against India. LEO (Low Earth Orbit): Orbital band between approximately 200–2,000 km altitude; hosts ISR, communication, and navigation satellites; most contested zone in the emerging space race between Starlink and China's Guowang constellation. 9 Practice Mains Question "China's expanding counter-space capabilities pose an asymmetric but underappreciated threat to India's national security. Critically examine the nature of this threat and suggest measures India must adopt to safeguard its strategic interests in outer space."(GS Paper 3 / Essay — 250 words) Answer hint: Open with space as the new domain of strategic competition → explain China's three-tier counter-space toolkit (kinetic, laser, co-orbital) → establish India's numerical and redundancy asymmetry → apply the Taiwan scenario template to India-China LAC context → propose redundancy, disaggregation, ground hardening, co-orbital capability development, and red line definition → conclude with the regulatory vacuum as the overarching structural problem demanding multilateral engagement. 10 Practice MCQ Q. With reference to China's counter-space capabilities, consider the following statements: China's DN-3 and SC-19 are kinetic anti-satellite missiles capable of physically destroying satellites. Co-orbital satellites such as the SJ and TJS series are designed to manoeuvre close to and interfere with adversary satellites in orbit. India demonstrated an Anti-Satellite (ASAT) capability through Mission Shakti in 2019, becoming the third country to do so. Kessler Syndrome refers to a cascading chain of satellite collisions that could render orbital bands permanently unusable. Which of the above statements are correct? (a) 1, 2 and 4 only(b) 2, 3 and 4 only(c) 1 and 4 only(d) 1, 2 and 4 only Answer: (d) 1, 2 and 4 only

Jun 2, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content PM SVANidhi: From Survival to Self-Reliance What is Bangladesh’s Padma Barrage? UN places Israel and Russia on sexual violence blacklist Why do cities get polluted in summer? Ethical use of AI in cultural space to be a key focus area at BRICS culture meetings Delhi HC recognises ‘Right to be Forgotten’, lays down rules for de-indexing judicial records The overlooke war and humanitarian disaster in South Sudan PM SVANidhi: From Survival to Self-Reliance Why in News? The Prime Minister Street Vendor’s AtmaNirbhar Nidhi (PM SVANidhi) scheme completed 6 years since its launch on 1 June 2020 by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. The government highlighted the scheme’s role in transforming street vendors from informal survival-based livelihoods to financially empowered micro-entrepreneurs. Relevance GS II – Welfare Schemes, Urban Governance, Inclusive Development GS III – Financial Inclusion, Informal Economy, Digital Economy Practice Question “PM SVANidhi represents a transition from welfare-based assistance to credit-led empowerment of the urban informal sector.” Examine its significance in promoting inclusive urbanisation and financial inclusion. (250 words) PM SVANidhi: Core Features About the Scheme PM SVANidhi is a Central Sector Scheme launched in June 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic to support urban street vendors affected by lockdown-induced economic disruption. It is the first dedicated micro-credit scheme for street vendors providing collateral-free working capital loans backed by a government credit guarantee mechanism. Institutional Framework Implemented by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs in collaboration with the Department of Financial Services. Small Industries Development Bank of India acts as the technical partner and manages the Credit Guarantee Fund for lending institutions. Loan Structure Vendors receive progressive collateral-free loans in three tranches: ₹15,000 (1st tranche) ₹25,000 (2nd tranche) ₹50,000 (3rd tranche) Timely repayment improves credit history, enabling access to higher-value institutional loans. Digital Inclusion Components Vendors receive cashback incentives up to ₹1,600 annually for adopting digital payments through UPI-based transactions. Successful borrowers become eligible for UPI-linked RuPay Credit Cards with limits up to ₹30,000. Welfare Convergence: SVANidhi se Samriddhi The SVANidhi se Samriddhi (SSS) initiative maps the socio-economic profile of beneficiaries and links them to 8 central welfare schemes. Important schemes include: Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana Pradhan Mantri Jeevan Jyoti Bima Yojana Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana One Nation One Ration Card Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Maandhan Yojana. Constitutional & Legal Dimensions Constitutional Linkages Supports Article 19(1)(g) guaranteeing the freedom to practice any occupation, trade or business. Advances Directive Principles of State Policy (DPSPs), especially: Article 38 – social and economic justice Article 39(a) – adequate livelihood Article 41 – right to work and public assistance. Street Vendors Act Integration Complements the Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Act, 2014 by recognising vendors as legitimate urban economic actors rather than encroachers. Encourages formalisation through vendor identification, municipal databases and financial linkages. Governance & Administrative Significance Formalisation of Informal Economy The scheme represents a major shift from welfare-oriented subsidy models toward credit-led empowerment and formal financial integration. It institutionalises vendor databases, improving urban governance, policy targeting and municipal planning capacity. Strengthening Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) Urban Local Bodies played a key role in vendor identification, loan facilitation and awareness generation. Enhances the role of municipalities in implementing inclusive urban governance models. Digital Governance Model Integration with UPI, Aadhaar, and banking platforms reflects India’s growing Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) ecosystem. Promotes paperless governance, direct transfers and transparent subsidy administration. Economic Dimensions Massive Financial Inclusion Over 75.5 lakh beneficiaries have availed more than 1.12 crore loans amounting to over ₹17,800 crore. Nearly 95% beneficiaries accessed formal institutional credit for the first time, reducing dependence on moneylenders charging exploitative interest rates. Increased Creditworthiness Around 30% beneficiaries later accessed additional institutional credit beyond PM SVANidhi, indicating creation of formal credit histories. Demonstrates how micro-credit can integrate informal workers into the formal banking ecosystem. Income Enhancement Independent impact assessments reported an average annual income increase of nearly 20% among beneficiaries. Working capital availability improved inventory management, business diversification and income stability. Urban Economic Multiplier Street vendors support urban supply chains by providing low-cost goods and services to low-income and middle-class households. Enhancing vendor productivity contributes to urban consumption, local employment and grassroots entrepreneurship. Social Dimensions Gender Inclusion Nearly 46% beneficiaries are women, reflecting strong gender inclusion in urban self-employment. Financial independence strengthens women’s decision-making power and household welfare outcomes. Inclusion of Marginalised Communities About 70% beneficiaries belong to marginalised communities, including SCs, STs and OBCs. The scheme addresses long-standing exclusion from formal finance and social protection systems. Improvement in Household Welfare Beneficiaries reported better access to: nutritious food healthcare children’s education improved housing stability. Shows the strong linkage between livelihood security and broader human development indicators. Social Security Expansion More than 50 lakh vendor families were profiled under SVANidhi se Samriddhi, receiving over 1.52 crore welfare benefits through converged schemes. Reflects the movement from isolated schemes toward an integrated social protection architecture. Digital & Technological Dimensions Expansion of Digital Payments Over 55 lakh vendors have been digitally onboarded under PM SVANidhi. Beneficiaries conducted more than 841 crore digital transactions worth nearly ₹8.96 lakh crore. Digital Literacy and Behavioural Change Cashback incentives encouraged small vendors to adopt QR-code based payments and digital bookkeeping. Builds long-term financial discipline and improves transaction traceability. DPI-Based Financial Ecosystem PM SVANidhi demonstrates the potential of combining: Jan Dhan accounts Aadhaar authentication UPI payments RuPay cards into a unified inclusion framework. Challenges & Criticisms Exclusion Errors Many migrant or unregistered vendors lacked official vending certificates, limiting access during initial implementation. Identification challenges remain acute in smaller towns and peri-urban areas. Credit Limit Constraints Loan sizes of ₹15,000–₹50,000 may be insufficient for scaling businesses in high-cost urban markets. Inflation and rising input costs reduce the real value of assistance. Digital Divide Elderly vendors, women and digitally illiterate groups still face difficulties using digital payment systems and banking applications. Cyber fraud and lack of digital awareness remain concerns. Urban Regulatory Issues Despite financial support, many vendors continue facing: eviction drives harassment lack of designated vending zones municipal corruption. Credit support alone cannot resolve structural urban informality. Limited Long-Term Enterprise Support The scheme primarily focuses on working capital rather than business expansion, skill upgradation or market integration. Absence of strong linkages with e-commerce and formal retail networks limits scalability. Way Forward Expand Credit Architecture Increase loan ceilings and provide differentiated credit products based on business scale and repayment history. Introduce micro-insurance and inventory financing models. Strengthen Legal Protection Ensure effective implementation of the Street Vendors Act, 2014 through functional Town Vending Committees and designated vending zones. Build Digital Capacity Expand financial literacy and cybersecurity awareness programmes for digitally vulnerable groups. Integrate with Urban Planning Include street vending within smart city planning, transit-oriented development and urban master plans. Promote Enterprise Growth Link vendors with: e-commerce platforms food safety certification skill development missions MSME value chains. Enhance Data Governance Build dynamic vendor databases integrated with municipal GIS systems for evidence-based policymaking. Prelims Pointers PM SVANidhi is a Central Sector Scheme launched in 2020. Implemented by MoHUA with SIDBI as technical partner. Provides collateral-free working capital loans to street vendors. Loan tranches: ₹15,000 → ₹25,000 → ₹50,000. Includes cashback incentives for digital payments. “SVANidhi se Samriddhi” links beneficiaries to 8 welfare schemes. Complements the Street Vendors Act, 2014. What is Bangladesh’s Padma Barrage? Why in News? Bangladesh approved the Padma Barrage Project on the Padma River (Bangladesh stretch of the Ganga River) to address chronic water scarcity in its southwest region. The project has revived debates on transboundary river governance, ecological sustainability and the future of the 1996 Ganges Water Sharing Treaty due for renewal in December 2026. Relevance GS II – India–Bangladesh Relations, Transboundary River Governance GS III – Water Resources, Environmental Impact Assessment, Climate Adaptation Practice Question The proposed Padma Barrage Project highlights the growing tension between water security and ecological sustainability in transboundary river systems. Discuss in the context of India–Bangladesh relations. (250 words) About the Padma Barrage Project Location & Infrastructure The barrage will be constructed in the Rajbari district of Bangladesh on the Padma River, aiming to regulate dry-season flows and improve irrigation capacity. The proposed barrage will be 2.1 km long with 78 spillway gates, undersluices, fish passages, navigation locks and embankments. Hydrological Capacity The project will impound nearly 2.9 billion cubic metres of water, significantly altering downstream hydrology and seasonal water availability. It includes a proposed 113 MW hydropower generation component, integrating irrigation and energy objectives. Claimed Benefits Bangladesh estimates the project will impact around 37% of the country’s land area and irrigate nearly 2.88 million hectares of farmland. Intended to mitigate drought-like conditions attributed to reduced seasonal flows after construction of India’s Farakka Barrage. Historical & Geographical Context Padma River The Padma is the name given to the Ganga River after it enters Bangladesh. It eventually merges with the Jamuna River (Brahmaputra in Bangladesh) and later with the Meghna River before entering the Bay of Bengal. Farakka Barrage Farakka Barrage is located in Murshidabad and Malda districts of West Bengal. Constructed to divert water into the Bhagirathi-Hooghly system to maintain navigability of Kolkata Port. Features a Feeder Canal with designed capacity of 40,000 cusecs. India–Bangladesh Water Sharing Dimension Ganges Water Sharing Treaty, 1996 India and Bangladesh signed the 30-year Ganges Water Sharing Treaty in 1996 to share dry-season flows at Farakka. The treaty expires in December 2026, making renegotiation strategically sensitive for bilateral relations. Core Bilateral Concerns Bangladesh argues that upstream diversion at Farakka reduced dry-season river discharge, intensifying: drought conditions salinity intrusion agricultural distress ecosystem degradation in southwest Bangladesh. India maintains Farakka is essential for sustaining Kolkata Port and regional river navigation. Strategic Significance The Padma Barrage reflects Bangladesh’s attempt to reduce dependence on upstream flow variability through domestic river engineering. It may become a negotiating instrument during future water-sharing discussions with India. Constitutional, Legal & International Dimensions International Water Law Principles Raises issues related to the principles of: equitable and reasonable utilisation no significant harm prior notification and cooperation in transboundary rivers. These principles are reflected in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Non-Navigational Uses of International Watercourses. Hydro-Diplomacy Challenges South Asia lacks a robust basin-wide institutional framework comparable to the Mekong River Commission or European river governance systems. Bilateral river governance remains fragmented and often driven by strategic mistrust rather than ecological planning. Economic Dimensions Irrigation & Agricultural Benefits Bangladesh expects irrigation support for 2.88 million hectares, potentially improving crop productivity and food security in drought-prone districts. Enhanced water storage may reduce dependence on groundwater extraction and improve dry-season cultivation. Energy Generation The proposed 113 MW hydropower generation could contribute to Bangladesh’s renewable energy mix and reduce fossil-fuel dependence. Inland Navigation Navigation locks may improve inland water transport, reducing logistics costs and strengthening regional connectivity. Regional Economic Security Stable water availability is crucial for Bangladesh’s agriculture-dependent rural economy and export-oriented sectors linked to agro-processing. Environmental & Ecological Concerns Alteration of Natural River Flow Mega-barrages disrupt the natural hydrological cycle by modifying seasonal flooding, sediment transport and river morphology. Such alterations can destabilise delta ecosystems already vulnerable to climate change. Sedimentation Risks Barrages often trap sediments upstream, affecting downstream nutrient flows and increasing riverbed instability. Unpredictable sediment deposition may reduce long-term effectiveness of the barrage. Waterlogging & Salinity Critics warn large impoundments can increase: waterlogging soil degradation salinity accumulation in deltaic regions. This may ultimately reduce agricultural productivity. Fisheries Impact Bangladesh’s riverine fisheries are highly sensitive to flow disruption and blocked fish migration pathways. Fish passages may not fully offset ecological fragmentation caused by the barrage. Climate Change Vulnerability The Ganga-Brahmaputra delta is among the world’s most climate-vulnerable regions. Hard-engineering approaches may reduce ecosystem resilience against floods, cyclones and sea-level rise. Global Comparative Perspective South Asian Trend: More River Barriers Countries in South Asia increasingly rely on dams and barrages for water security, irrigation and hydropower. Reflects developmental priorities focused on infrastructure-led resource control. Western Trend: River Restoration Europe and North America are increasingly dismantling obsolete dams to restore free-flowing rivers and ecological connectivity. In 2025, 21 European countries removed 603 river barriers, reflecting a shift toward ecological restoration models. Emerging Debate The Padma Barrage symbolises the global debate between: engineering rivers for economic control, versus restoring natural river ecosystems for long-term sustainability. Governance & Policy Issues Need for Basin-Level Governance River systems like the Ganga require integrated basin management involving: India Bangladesh Nepal Bhutan. Fragmented national interventions can create cascading ecological and political consequences. Public Participation Deficit Environmental groups criticised the speed of project approval and limited public scrutiny. Large river projects require stronger environmental impact assessments and local stakeholder consultations. Data Transparency Issues Hydrological data-sharing between India and Bangladesh remains limited and politically sensitive. Scientific cooperation is essential for evidence-based river management. Way Forward Renew the Ganges Treaty with Ecological Focus India and Bangladesh should renegotiate the 1996 Ganges Water Sharing Treaty using climate-resilient and ecological-flow principles. Promote Environmental Flows Ensure minimum ecological flow requirements to sustain fisheries, sediment transport and delta health. Integrated River Basin Management Shift from isolated infrastructure projects toward basin-wide planning integrating hydrology, agriculture, ecology and climate adaptation. Strengthen Environmental Governance Conduct cumulative environmental impact assessments rather than project-specific studies alone. Nature-Based Solutions Combine barrages with: wetland restoration groundwater recharge floodplain conservation climate-resilient agriculture. Prelims Pointers Padma River is the Bangladesh stretch of the Ganga River. Farakka Barrage is located in West Bengal. Constructed mainly to improve navigability of Kolkata Port. The 1996 Ganges Water Sharing Treaty is valid for 30 years and expires in 2026. Proposed Padma Barrage includes 113 MW hydropower generation. Europe removed 603 river barriers in 2025 to restore river ecosystems. UN places Israel and Russia on sexual violence blacklist Why in News? The United Nations added Israel and Russia to the UN blacklist for conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV) in the Secretary-General’s 2025 annual report. Israel reacted sharply, announcing suspension of ties with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, while Ukraine welcomed Russia’s inclusion. Relevance GS II – United Nations, International Organisations, Human Rights GS III – Internal Security, Conflict Zones, Humanitarian Issues GS IV – Ethics in Warfare, Human Dignity, International Humanitarian Law Practice Question Conflict-related sexual violence has emerged as a strategic tool in contemporary warfare. Analyse the limitations of existing international mechanisms in ensuring accountability and humanitarian protection. (250 words) What is Conflict-Related Sexual Violence (CRSV)? Definition CRSV includes rape, gang rape, sexual slavery, forced prostitution, forced pregnancy, enforced sterilisation, genital violence and sexual torture directly or indirectly linked to armed conflict. Recognised as a grave violation under: International Humanitarian Law (IHL) International Human Rights Law Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (ICC). UN Monitoring Mechanism The blacklist forms part of the annual report of the UN Secretary-General on CRSV prepared by the Office of the Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict. The list identifies parties “credibly suspected” of systematic sexual violence during conflict situations. Key Findings of the 2025 UN Report Scale of Violence The report documented nearly 10,000 verified cases globally in 2025, representing a 100% increase over 2024 according to UN Special Representative Pramila Patten. The annex lists 77 parties, including 62 non-state actors, accused of patterns of CRSV. Israel-Related Findings The UN verified 31 cases involving Palestinians from Gaza and the occupied West Bank between 2023–2025. Violations allegedly included: rape and gang rape genital violence forced nudity humiliating strip searches sexual torture during detention and interrogation. Russia-Related Findings The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission verified 310 CRSV cases linked to Russian armed and security forces in Ukraine. Victims included 280 men, 26 women and 4 girls, highlighting that CRSV increasingly targets men and boys in detention settings. Hamas Already Listed Hamas was already included in the blacklist following the October 7, 2023 attacks on Israel. International Humanitarian Law (IHL) Dimension Sexual Violence as War Crime Under the International Criminal Court framework, systematic sexual violence may constitute: War Crimes Crimes Against Humanity potentially Genocide, if intended to destroy protected groups. Geneva Convention Framework The Geneva Conventions prohibit torture, degrading treatment and violence against civilians and prisoners during armed conflict. Sexual violence violates the principles of: distinction proportionality humane treatment. UNSC Resolution 1325 United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 recognised sexual violence as a peace and security issue and called for protection of women in conflict zones. Later resolutions like 1820, 1888 and 2467 strengthened accountability mechanisms for CRSV. Geopolitical & Diplomatic Dimensions Israel–UN Tensions Israel accused the UN of political bias and objected to being listed alongside Hamas and terrorist groups. Israel’s decision to sever ties with the Secretary-General’s office reflects deepening distrust between Israel and UN institutions since the Gaza war. Russia–Ukraine Conflict Russia’s inclusion strengthens Ukraine’s diplomatic efforts to frame Russian conduct as systematic violations of international law. CRSV allegations increasingly form part of broader hybrid warfare narratives and accountability campaigns. Reputational Consequences Listing does not automatically impose sanctions, but creates substantial diplomatic and reputational pressure. Repeatedly listed states may face restrictions in participation in UN peacekeeping operations. Human Rights & Gender Dimensions Weaponisation of Sexual Violence CRSV is often used strategically to: terrorise populations extract confessions humiliate communities enforce ethnic domination break civilian morale. Expanding Victim Profile The report highlights increasing violence against: men and boys journalists human-rights defenders detainees. Reflects broader recognition that CRSV is not exclusively gendered against women. Underreporting Crisis UN officials described verified cases as only the “tip of the iceberg” due to: social stigma fear of retaliation weak reporting systems collapse of institutions during war. Governance & Institutional Challenges Verification Difficulties Conflict zones like Gaza and occupied territories face severe restrictions on: independent investigations humanitarian access evidence collection. This creates disputes regarding attribution and credibility. Politicisation of Human Rights Mechanisms Powerful states frequently accuse international institutions of selective targeting and politicisation. Such perceptions weaken confidence in multilateral accountability systems. Enforcement Deficit International law lacks strong enforcement mechanisms against major military powers. Accountability often depends on geopolitical alignments within bodies like the United Nations Security Council. Broader Global Trends Rising CRSV Worldwide The UN reported a doubling of verified CRSV cases in 2025, reflecting intensifying conflicts globally including: Gaza Ukraine Sudan Democratic Republic of Congo Myanmar. Non-State Actors Dominance Out of 77 listed parties, 62 are non-state armed groups, showing how civil wars and insurgencies increasingly drive CRSV incidents. Weakening Humanitarian Norms Growing disregard for international humanitarian norms indicates erosion of post-World War II legal frameworks amid prolonged geopolitical fragmentation. India’s Perspective India’s Traditional Position India consistently supports: protection of civilians in conflict adherence to international humanitarian law peaceful resolution through diplomacy. Balancing Diplomacy India maintains strategic relations with: Israel Russia Palestine while advocating dialogue-based conflict resolution. The issue highlights India’s challenge in balancing strategic partnerships with principled multilateral commitments. Peacekeeping Relevance India, as one of the largest UN peacekeeping contributors historically, has strong institutional interest in maintaining credibility of international humanitarian standards. Critical Analysis Accountability vs Geopolitics The blacklist reflects growing efforts to strengthen accountability for wartime sexual violence, but enforcement remains uneven due to geopolitical power asymmetries. Crisis of Multilateralism Increasing confrontation between states and UN institutions demonstrates weakening trust in multilateral governance mechanisms. Limits of Naming-and-Shaming Public listing creates reputational costs but may not significantly alter behaviour without: sanctions judicial accountability ceasefire enforcement independent investigations. Humanitarian Catastrophe in Modern Wars The findings underline how contemporary conflicts increasingly blur distinctions between combatants and civilians, with sexual violence emerging as a systematic tool of coercion. Way Forward Strengthen International Investigations Expand independent fact-finding missions with guaranteed humanitarian access and forensic support. Enhance Survivor-Centric Justice Ensure rehabilitation, trauma care, legal aid and witness protection for survivors of CRSV. Reform UN Accountability Mechanisms Improve transparency and consistency in listing procedures to reduce allegations of politicisation. Strengthen International Humanitarian Law Compliance States must integrate stronger military training, command accountability and zero-tolerance protocols regarding sexual violence. Promote Ceasefires & Humanitarian Corridors Long-term reduction of CRSV ultimately depends on conflict de-escalation, humanitarian access and negotiated settlements. Prelims Pointers Conflict-Related Sexual Violence (CRSV) is monitored by the UN Secretary-General’s annual report. The blacklist identifies parties “credibly suspected” of systematic sexual violence during conflicts. UNSC Resolution 1325 relates to Women, Peace and Security. The International Criminal Court treats systematic sexual violence as war crimes/crimes against humanity. The 2025 report documented nearly 10,000 verified cases globally. The blacklist includes both state actors and non-state armed groups. Why do cities get polluted in summer? Why in News? The Commission for Air Quality Management repeatedly imposed and revoked Stage-1 GRAP restrictions during the summer of 2026, highlighting the rise of non-winter pollution episodes in Indian cities. Between 1 April–31 May 2026, Delhi recorded: 54 days exceeding PM10 standards 40 days with ozone breaches at one or more monitoring stations. Relevance GS III – Environment Pollution, Urbanisation, Climate Change GS II – Governance and Urban Administration Practice Question Air pollution in India is increasingly becoming a year-round crisis rather than a seasonal phenomenon. Discuss the causes behind rising summer pollution and suggest policy measures required for effective mitigation. (250 words) Understanding Summer Air Pollution Shift from Winter Smog to Summer Pollution Winter pollution in North India is dominated by PM2.5 due to temperature inversion, stagnant winds and biomass burning. Summer pollution is increasingly driven by: PM10 (coarse particulate matter) Ground-level ozone (O₃) triggered by heat, sunlight and dust mobilisation. Key Pollutants in Summer PM10 PM10 refers to particulate matter with diameter less than 10 micrometres. Main summer sources include: dust storms road dust resuspension construction activity industrial emissions vehicular movement. Ground-Level Ozone Ozone is a secondary pollutant formed when: Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) react under intense sunlight and heat. Major sources include: vehicle exhaust industrial solvents paints fuel combustion. Data & Evidence Delhi Pollution Data (Summer 2026) Delhi witnessed 54 PM10 exceedance days in just two summer months despite stronger atmospheric dispersion conditions. At least one CAAQMS station breached the ozone standard (180 µg/m³) on 40 days. National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) India’s 24-hour PM10 standard under NAAQS is 100 µg/m³. Ozone’s hourly threshold is 180 µg/m³. Multi-City Trend Cities like: Mumbai Chennai Hyderabad Bengaluru Kolkata also recorded repeated PM10 and ozone spikes during summer 2026. Global Burden According to World Health Organization, air pollution causes nearly 7 million premature deaths annually worldwide. India remains among the countries with the highest urban particulate pollution burden globally. Meteorological & Scientific Dimensions Why Does PM10 Rise in Summer? Dust Storm Dynamics Summer heating creates a low-pressure zone over the Indian subcontinent interacting with high-pressure systems over West Asia. This produces hot winds and dust transport from: the Thar Desert West Asia towards the Indo-Gangetic Plain. Loo and Andhi Phenomena Loo refers to hot, dusty winds common in North India carrying suspended particles over long distances. Andhi are localised dust storms generated by thunderstorm downdrafts lifting loose dust into the atmosphere. Road Dust Resuspension Dry summer conditions and vehicular movement over damaged roads resuspend settled dust particles, significantly increasing PM10 concentration. Why Does Ozone Increase During Heatwaves? Photochemical Reactions Ozone formation accelerates during: high temperatures intense solar radiation stagnant atmospheric conditions. Heatwaves therefore intensify photochemical smog formation. Urban Emission Sources NOx emissions mainly originate from: diesel vehicles thermal power plants industrial combustion. VOCs originate from: fuel evaporation solvents paints petrochemical industries. Climate Change Link Rising temperatures due to climate change are expected to increase ozone formation frequency and intensity across Indian cities. Health Dimensions Respiratory & Cardiovascular Impacts PM10 and ozone exposure can trigger: asthma COPD bronchitis cardiovascular diseases lung inflammation. Ozone-Specific Risks Unlike PM2.5, ozone strongly irritates lung tissue and reduces pulmonary function even at relatively low exposure durations. Vulnerable Groups High-risk populations include: children elderly persons outdoor workers traffic police construction labourers. Governance & Policy Dimensions GRAP Limitations Commission for Air Quality Management largely evolved as a winter pollution response mechanism focused on emergency restrictions. Summer pollution demonstrates the need for year-round air quality governance. Air Quality Early Warning System (AQEWS) Delhi’s AQEWS was developed after the severe 2018 dust storms and winter smog episodes. It now provides: pollutant forecasts meteorological alerts AQI forecasts for 140 Indian cities. Municipal Innovations Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation uses an Air Quality Decision Support System (AQDSS) to monitor construction sites. Since October 2025, action was reportedly initiated against 1,000+ construction sites in Mumbai. Economic & Urbanisation Dimensions Construction Boom & Dust Rapid urban infrastructure growth without effective dust suppression has emerged as a major PM10 contributor. Metro projects, highways and real-estate construction generate continuous coarse dust emissions. Vehicular Growth India has over 35 crore registered vehicles, with urban congestion increasing NOx emissions and ozone formation. Idling emissions at traffic intersections significantly worsen summer ozone levels. Informal Urbanisation Unpaved roads, debris dumping and weak urban planning increase susceptibility to dust resuspension. Environmental Dimensions Seasonal Pollution Misconception Public discourse often treats pollution as a “winter-only” problem, neglecting summer atmospheric chemistry. Summer pollution differs scientifically but remains equally hazardous. Climate Change Feedback Loop Heatwaves intensify ozone formation, while pollution itself worsens warming through atmospheric interactions. Creates a dangerous heat-pollution nexus in Indian megacities. Ecosystem Impacts Ozone damages crops by reducing photosynthesis and agricultural productivity. Ground-level ozone also harms urban vegetation and biodiversity. Challenges Weak Enforcement Dust-control rules at construction sites remain poorly implemented outside winter months. Environmental compliance often weakens once GRAP restrictions are lifted. Fragmented Governance Urban pollution management involves multiple agencies with overlapping mandates and poor coordination. Monitoring Gaps Smaller cities still lack dense monitoring infrastructure for ozone and PM10 tracking. Limited Public Awareness Citizens remain less aware of ozone pollution compared to visible winter smog. Seasonal Policy Bias Most interventions remain reactive and winter-centric rather than preventive and annual. Best Practices & Solutions Strengthen Dust Management Mandatory: anti-smog guns covered construction sites mechanised road sweeping debris transport regulation. Control Vehicular Emissions Expand EV adoption, public transport and congestion pricing mechanisms. Strengthen BS-VI compliance and inspection systems. Ozone-Focused Strategy Target VOC emissions from: paints solvents fuel stations industries. Current policies disproportionately focus only on particulate matter. Urban Heat Mitigation Increase urban green cover and cool-roof programmes to reduce urban heat island effects that intensify ozone formation. Forecast-Based Governance Use AQEWS and India Meteorological Department forecasts for anticipatory action and public advisories. Public Behavioural Measures Campaigns like Delhi’s “Red Light On, Gaadi Off” reduce idling emissions and ozone precursors. Critical Analysis Air Pollution is Now a Year-Round Crisis The emergence of summer pollution episodes indicates structural urban environmental stress rather than seasonal anomalies. PM2.5-Centric Policies are Insufficient India’s policy discourse has excessively focused on winter PM2.5 while neglecting PM10 and ozone chemistry. Urbanisation Without Environmental Planning Rapid infrastructure expansion without dust governance is converting cities into chronic pollution hotspots. Climate Adaptation Challenge Rising temperatures will likely intensify ozone pollution, making climate adaptation inseparable from air-quality governance. Way Forward Adopt Annual Clean Air Plans All major cities should develop season-specific air pollution strategies, not only winter action plans. Integrate Climate & Air Policies Air pollution mitigation must align with heat-action plans and climate resilience frameworks. Strengthen NCAP Expand the scope of National Clean Air Programme to include: ozone reduction targets PM10-specific action summer pollution indicators. Scientific Urban Planning Prioritise dust-resistant road infrastructure, green buffers and decentralised urban mobility systems. Data-Driven Governance Real-time monitoring and source-apportionment studies should guide targeted interventions. Prelims Pointers PM10 = particulate matter ≤10 micrometres. Ground-level ozone is a secondary pollutant formed by NOx and VOC reactions under sunlight. Commission for Air Quality Management implements GRAP in NCR. AQEWS provides AQI forecasts for 140 Indian cities. Loo and andhi are summer dust phenomena in North India. Ozone differs from the protective stratospheric ozone layer. Ethical use of AI in cultural space to be a key focus area at BRICS culture meetings Why in News? BRICS Culture Working Group meetings beginning in 2026 will deliberate on the ethical use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the cultural and creative sectors. India unveiled the roadmap for the BRICS Culture Track 2026 through the Ministry of Culture. Relevance GS II – BRICS, Cultural Diplomacy, Global Governance GS III – Artificial Intelligence, Digital Governance, Intellectual Property Rights Practice Question The rise of Generative AI has created new challenges regarding copyright, cultural diversity and digital sovereignty. Examine the need for ethical AI governance in the cultural sector. (250 words) Key Highlights The 2nd BRICS Culture Working Group Meeting will be held in Varanasi, one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities, symbolising India’s attempt to combine civilisational heritage with emerging digital technologies and cultural diplomacy. The BRICS Culture Track will involve 11 member nations — Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Indonesia — along with 10 partner countries, expanding BRICS’ cultural and geopolitical outreach. Major themes include: Creative economy & people-to-people cooperation Copyright and ethical AI Cultural heritage protection Return of cultural property Culture-driven sustainable development. Ethical AI in Cultural Space The rise of Generative AI in music, cinema, literature and visual arts has triggered debates over copyright ownership, unauthorised data training, deepfakes and the replacement of human creativity with algorithmic outputs. AI models are often trained on copyrighted books, paintings, films and music without explicit creator consent, raising concerns over intellectual property rights, royalty distribution and fair compensation mechanisms for artists and cultural workers. Dominance of Western-language datasets in AI systems may marginalise indigenous traditions, local languages and Global South narratives, leading to algorithmic cultural homogenisation and digital invisibility of smaller cultural ecosystems. Deepfake technologies can distort historical memory, manipulate cultural symbols and spread misinformation, making ethical AI governance critical for preserving authenticity and public trust in cultural content. Ethical AI can also become a powerful preservation tool through: digital archiving heritage restoration language preservation virtual museums AI-assisted cultural mapping. Economic Dimensions According to UNESCO, cultural and creative industries contribute nearly 3.1% of global GDP and support around 48 million jobs worldwide, highlighting the strategic importance of the creative economy. India possesses immense creative-economy potential through: 3,000+ traditional craft forms one of the world’s largest film industries expanding gaming and digital creator ecosystems rapidly growing cultural tourism sectors. AI-enabled translation, dubbing, recommendation systems and immersive experiences can significantly expand global access to Indian cultural products, strengthening creative exports and digital soft power. Cultural industries increasingly influence: employment generation tourism revenue urban regeneration innovation ecosystems making culture a strategic economic sector rather than merely a heritage issue. Cultural Diplomacy & Soft Power The BRICS Culture Track reflects the grouping’s attempt to strengthen non-Western cultural cooperation platforms and promote alternative narratives in global governance, technology ethics and cultural representation. India’s decision to host meetings in Varanasi strengthens its image as a civilisational state capable of bridging ancient heritage with emerging technologies like AI and digital governance. Cultural diplomacy enhances people-to-people connectivity, trust-building and geopolitical influence, complementing traditional diplomacy based on trade, defence and strategic partnerships. Discussions on the return of cultural property gain significance amid increasing global demands for repatriation of colonial-era artefacts held in Western museums and institutions. Governance & Legal Dimensions Existing copyright laws globally remain inadequate for AI-generated content because they were designed around human authorship, not machine-generated creative outputs and automated training datasets. UNESCO adopted the Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence (2021), emphasising principles of: transparency inclusivity cultural diversity human rights protection. India’s evolving AI governance ecosystem under initiatives such as: IndiaAI Mission Digital India Bhashini BharatGen aligns with discussions on culturally sensitive and multilingual AI systems. Cultural datasets stored and controlled by foreign technology platforms raise concerns regarding digital sovereignty, data colonialism and unequal control over global cultural narratives. Challenges There is currently no universally accepted global legal framework governing AI-generated cultural content, resulting in fragmented regulations and jurisdictional uncertainty. Many developing countries lack adequate infrastructure for: digitisation of heritage AI research archival preservation multilingual dataset development. AI-driven commercialisation risks exploiting traditional knowledge and indigenous cultural expressions without consent or benefit-sharing mechanisms for local communities. BRICS countries themselves differ substantially in: internet governance models censorship approaches data regulations digital rights frameworks making consensus-building difficult. Way Forward BRICS nations should develop common principles on: ethical AI use creator rights consent-based data usage cultural sensitivity algorithmic transparency. Governments should promote multilingual AI systems trained on local languages, oral traditions and indigenous cultural datasets to ensure inclusive digital representation. Stronger international frameworks are needed to prevent unauthorised exploitation of traditional cultural expressions and ensure fair benefit-sharing with local communities. India should leverage the BRICS platform to strengthen its role as a leader in ethical digital governance, combining technological innovation with civilisational and cultural preservation. Prelims Pointers BRICS currently has 11 member countries. UNESCO adopted the Recommendation on the Ethics of Artificial Intelligence in 2021. Ethical AI concerns include: copyright infringement deepfakes algorithmic bias data ownership. Delhi HC recognises ‘right to be forgotten’, lays down rules for de-indexing judicial records Why in News? Delhi High Court recognised the Right to be Forgotten (RTBF) as flowing from the Right to Privacy under Article 21 and directed search engines and digital platforms to de-index judicial records from name-based search results in specific cases. Justice Sachin Datta delivered a 144-page judgment while hearing 30+ petitions filed by individuals seeking removal of personal information from the digital public domain. Relevance GS II – Judiciary, Fundamental Rights, Digital Governance GS III – Data Protection, Cyber Governance Practice Question The recognition of the Right to be Forgotten marks an important evolution in India’s privacy jurisprudence. Critically examine its implications for judicial transparency, freedom of expression and informational privacy. (250 words) What is the Right to be Forgotten (RTBF)? The Right to be Forgotten allows individuals to seek: removal de-indexing masking of personal information from publicly accessible digital platforms when continued disclosure no longer serves a legitimate public interest. RTBF aims to protect individuals from permanent digital stigma, especially where information relates to: acquitted criminal cases matrimonial disputes quashed proceedings settled matters incidental mentions in judicial records. The judgment clarified that RTBF does not imply complete erasure of judicial records, but limits easy public discoverability through search engines. Constitutional & Legal Dimensions Article 21 and Right to Privacy The High Court held that RTBF flows from Article 21, which guarantees the Right to Life and Personal Liberty, including the right to live with: dignity reputation autonomy informational privacy. The judgment builds upon the landmark Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) verdict where the Supreme Court declared the Right to Privacy a fundamental right. The Court observed that digital permanence can disproportionately harm individuals even after acquittal or settlement, violating the principles of rehabilitation, dignity and social reintegration. Key Features of the Judgment De-indexing Framework The Court directed: search engines legal database platforms digital intermediaries to remove specified judgments from name-based searchability while preserving judicial records within official archives. The judgment distinguished between: public availability of court records and algorithmic amplification through search engines. Case-by-Case Balancing Test The Court emphasised that RTBF is not absolute and must be balanced against: freedom of speech public interest judicial transparency right to information. Courts must assess factors such as: nature of offence time elapsed public role of the individual continuing relevance of disclosure extent of reputational harm. Protection of Reputation The Court recognised that unrestricted online accessibility of judicial records may cause: employment discrimination social exclusion psychological distress reputational damage even after legal exoneration. Digital Governance & Technology Dimensions Problem of Digital Permanence Search engines create a form of perpetual public memory, where even outdated or irrelevant information remains permanently searchable and easily accessible. Unlike physical archives, digital platforms amplify visibility through: indexing algorithms metadata tagging instant searchability creating disproportionate long-term consequences. Rise of Datafication The judgment reflects growing concerns over: surveillance capitalism algorithmic profiling data permanence loss of informational self-determination. Platform Responsibility The ruling increases accountability of: Google-like search engines legal information portals digital intermediaries in balancing privacy with public access. Governance & Policy Dimensions Absence of Comprehensive Law India currently lacks a dedicated statutory framework explicitly recognising RTBF, despite rapid digitalisation and rising privacy disputes. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 provides some rights regarding data correction and erasure, but does not comprehensively codify RTBF in judicial contexts. Judicial Activism Filling Legislative Vacuum The Delhi High Court observed that constitutional courts can enforce RTBF even in absence of legislation where fundamental rights are implicated. Reflects the expanding role of the judiciary in shaping India’s evolving digital constitutionalism. International Comparisons European Union (EU) The RTBF gained global prominence after the Google Spain v. AEPD (2014) judgment, where the EU recognised individuals’ right to request removal of outdated search results. The EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) formally codifies the Right to Erasure under Article 17. Global Trend Countries increasingly recognise privacy rights against excessive digital exposure, though approaches vary depending on: free speech traditions judicial transparency norms data protection laws. Ethical & Social Dimensions Dignity in the Digital Age The judgment reinforces that human dignity includes the ability to move beyond past accusations, mistakes or disputes without permanent digital punishment. Particularly important for: acquitted individuals victims of false accusations survivors of matrimonial conflicts juveniles. Rehabilitation & Reintegration Permanent online stigma may undermine constitutional goals of: rehabilitation restorative justice social reintegration. Chilling Effect Concerns Excessive de-indexing may risk reducing judicial transparency and enabling powerful individuals to suppress legitimate public scrutiny. Challenges & Criticisms Conflict with Open Justice Principle Indian courts traditionally function under the principle of open justice, where judicial proceedings remain publicly accessible to ensure transparency and accountability. Subjectivity in Balancing Test Determining what constitutes “legitimate public interest” or “continuing relevance” may produce inconsistent judicial outcomes. Technical Enforcement Issues Effective de-indexing across multiple search engines, mirror sites and international servers remains technologically complex. Risk of Misuse Politicians, corporations or influential individuals may attempt to misuse RTBF to suppress inconvenient but legitimate public information. Critical Analysis The judgment marks a major step in developing India’s privacy jurisprudence in the age of algorithmic search and digital permanence. It reflects a transition from traditional notions of privacy to informational self-determination, where individuals seek greater control over their digital identities. The ruling attempts to strike a constitutional balance between: privacy and dignity freedom of expression public access to justice. India’s rapidly expanding digital ecosystem requires stronger safeguards against permanent reputational harm while preserving democratic transparency and media freedom. Way Forward India should enact a comprehensive data protection and RTBF framework clearly defining: scope of erasure judicial oversight intermediary obligations public interest exceptions. Standardised judicial guidelines should be developed to ensure uniform application of RTBF across High Courts. Search engines and legal databases should establish transparent grievance redressal systems for RTBF-related requests. Greater public awareness is needed regarding: digital privacy consent online reputation management responsible data sharing. Privacy protections must be balanced carefully with: press freedom judicial transparency citizens’ right to know. Prelims Pointers Article 21 includes the Right to Privacy after the Puttaswamy Judgment (2017). The Right to be Forgotten is not yet explicitly codified in Indian law. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 deals with personal data processing and protection. The EU’s GDPR Article 17 provides the Right to Erasure. The overlooked conflict: Civil war and humanitarian disaster in South Sudan Why in News? Naib Subedar Sujit Kumar Pradhan, killed while serving with the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS), will be posthumously honoured with the Dag Hammarskjöld Medal, awarded to UN peacekeepers who lose their lives during missions. Another Indian peacekeeper, Lance Havildar Harbhajan Singh, who died while serving in Democratic Republic of the Congo, is also being honoured. Relevance GS II – United Nations, Peacekeeping, International Relations GS III – Internal Conflicts, Humanitarian Crises, Security Challenges Practice Question South Sudan illustrates the limitations of post-conflict state-building in fragile societies. Discuss the causes of recurring instability and evaluate the role of UN peacekeeping missions in conflict resolution. (250 words) South Sudan: Background South Sudan became the world’s youngest country in 2011 after separating from Sudan following decades of violent conflict and marginalisation of the southern region. Sudan itself gained independence in 1956 after the end of British-Egyptian colonial rule, but ethnic, political and economic divisions between northern and southern regions persisted. South Sudan’s independence emerged from the struggle led by the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM), whose major leaders included: Salva Kiir Riek Machar. Origins of the Civil War Political rivalry between Salva Kiir and Riek Machar escalated into a full-scale civil war in 2013, only two years after independence, severely destabilising the fragile new state. The conflict quickly acquired an ethnic dimension: Kiir belongs to the Dinka community Machar belongs to the Nuer community leading to mass ethnic mobilisation and retaliatory violence. The civil war resulted in: mass displacement massacres famine conditions destruction of infrastructure severe humanitarian collapse. 2018 Peace Agreement & Renewed Violence After nearly 5 years of fighting, the Revitalised Agreement on the Resolution of the Conflict in South Sudan (2018) sought to establish a power-sharing arrangement and restore peace. Under the agreement, Riek Machar returned as Vice President, but critical provisions remained unimplemented, including: national elections disarmament of militias accountability for war crimes security sector reforms. In March 2025, fresh clashes erupted after the White Army militia, aligned with Machar, fought government forces, triggering renewed political and military escalation. Machar was later placed under house arrest and charged with offences including: murder treason deepening fears of another prolonged civil war. Humanitarian Crisis According to a UN report (April 2026), nearly 56% of South Sudan’s population faces high levels of acute food insecurity between April–July 2026. The report further estimates that around 700,000 children may suffer from severe acute malnutrition, considered the deadliest form of malnutrition. South Sudan’s population is approximately 12 million, yet a large share depends on international food assistance and humanitarian aid for survival. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF/Doctors Without Borders) reported that civilians are surviving on: wild leaves berries fish highlighting extreme food insecurity and state collapse. Attacks on Humanitarian & Medical Infrastructure Both government and rebel groups have allegedly attacked: civilians schools hospitals aid facilities humanitarian convoys violating international humanitarian law. MSF reported that one of its facilities in Lankien was bombed and looted, destroying the only secondary-care medical facility serving nearly 250,000 people in Lankien and Jonglei regions. Such attacks severely restrict humanitarian access and worsen mortality from: disease outbreaks malnutrition untreated injuries maternal health crises. UNMISS: United Nations Mission in South Sudan Establishment United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) was established in July 2011 under UN Security Council Resolution 1996, immediately after South Sudan’s independence. Mandate Under UNSC Resolution 2820 (2026), UNMISS is tasked with: protection of civilians ensuring humanitarian access supporting peace processes preventing political violence monitoring human rights violations. Scale of Operations UNMISS operates one of the world’s largest peacekeeping and humanitarian protection missions due to: persistent civil conflict weak governance widespread displacement ethnic violence. India’s Role in UN Peacekeeping India is the second-largest troop contributor to UNMISS with 4,268 personnel as of 31 March 2026, after Nepal. India has historically been among the largest contributors to UN peacekeeping operations, reflecting its commitment to: multilateralism Global South solidarity international peace and security. Indian peacekeepers in South Sudan perform roles including: civilian protection engineering support medical services humanitarian assistance conflict stabilisation. India has contributed over 2.9 lakh peacekeepers across more than 50 UN missions since independence, one of the largest cumulative contributions globally. International Relations & Geopolitical Dimensions South Sudan occupies strategic importance in the Horn of Africa, a region marked by: fragile states refugee crises ethnic conflicts competition among external powers. Continued instability threatens regional spillover into neighbouring countries such as: Sudan Ethiopia Uganda Kenya. The crisis also reflects broader failures of post-conflict state-building where political independence was not accompanied by strong institutions, inclusive governance or economic stability. Governance & State Failure Dimensions South Sudan exemplifies challenges faced by newly independent states lacking: institutional capacity national integration stable security structures accountable governance. Political power remains heavily personalised around military elites and ethnic loyalties rather than constitutional institutions. Delayed implementation of the 2018 peace agreement reflects weak political commitment and absence of effective enforcement mechanisms. Human Rights & Humanitarian Dimensions The conflict has generated large-scale violations including: ethnic massacres sexual violence child soldier recruitment forced displacement attacks on aid workers. South Sudan remains one of the world’s most severe humanitarian emergencies, with millions internally displaced or dependent on external aid. Repeated attacks on hospitals and humanitarian facilities violate the Geneva Conventions and undermine civilian protection norms. Challenges Facing UN Peacekeeping UN peacekeepers increasingly operate in: fragmented civil wars asymmetric conflicts weak-state environments where traditional ceasefire-monitoring mandates are insufficient. Peacekeeping missions often face: inadequate resources limited political backing difficult terrain attacks from armed groups restricted operational freedom. Absence of durable political settlements limits the effectiveness of even large peacekeeping deployments. Way Forward Full implementation of the 2018 Revitalised Peace Agreement remains critical, including: elections security reforms militia disarmament transitional justice mechanisms. Regional organisations such as the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) and the African Union must intensify diplomatic engagement. Greater international funding is required for: humanitarian relief food security health systems refugee rehabilitation. Protection of medical facilities and humanitarian workers should become a non-negotiable priority under international humanitarian law. UN peacekeeping reforms should strengthen: rapid response capacity civilian protection mandates intelligence coordination accountability mechanisms. Prelims Pointers South Sudan became independent in 2011. United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) was established under UNSC Resolution 1996. India is the second-largest troop contributor to UNMISS in 2026. The Dag Hammarskjöld Medal honours UN peacekeepers killed during missions. Dinka and Nuer are major ethnic groups in South Sudan.