Content
Early Delimitation & Women’s Reservation
Rejection Rate of Right to Information Applications in 2024–25
Assam Rifles Celebrates 191st Raising Day
India’s Longest-Serving Head of Government
Hope Builds for Nations to Save Bird that Flies 30,000 km
Anti-Dumping Probe on Ethyl Chloroformate
“Smog-Eating” Photocatalytic Coatings
Early Delimitation & Women’s Reservation
Why in News ?
The Union Government has indicated early delimitation based on Census 2011 to implement the Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 (106th Constitutional Amendment) before the 2029 Lok Sabha elections.
Proposal includes increasing Lok Sabha strength from 543 → ~816 seats, with ~273 seats (≈33%) reserved for women, ensuring no displacement of sitting MPs.
The move attempts to balance women’s representation with federal concerns, especially Southern States’ fear of losing seats due to population control success.
Relevance
GS II (Polity & Governance): Representation, delimitation, federalism, electoral reforms
GS IV (Ethics): Gender justice, substantive equality
Essay: Representation vs equity; federal balance
Practice Question
Q. “The proposed early delimitation to implement women’s reservation reflects a trade-off between gender justice and federal equity.” Critically examine.(250 Words)
Basics
Delimitation
Delimitation is the process of redrawing boundaries of electoral constituencies to ensure equal representation based on population.
Conducted by Delimitation Commission (independent statutory body) under:
Article 82 (Lok Sabha)
Article 170 (State Assemblies)
Last delimitation exercise based on 2001 Census (2008 order); next scheduled after 2026 Census (freeze under 84th Amendment, 2001).
Women’s Reservation Act, 2023 (106th Amendment)
Provides 1/3rd reservation for women in Lok Sabha, State Assemblies, and Delhi Assembly.
Key provisions:
Article 330A → Women reservation in Lok Sabha
Article 332A → Women reservation in State Assemblies
Article 239AA amendment → Delhi Assembly inclusion
Article 334A → Implementation post-delimitation + 15-year sunset clause
Implementation conditional upon:
Census + Delimitation exercise completion
What is the 2026 “Strategic Shift”?
Government proposes delinking implementation from upcoming Census (2024–25) and instead using Census 2011, enabling faster rollout before 2029 elections.
Suggests ~50% increase in seats (543 → 816), ensuring:
No existing constituency is removed
Women’s quota implemented through expansion, not displacement
Pro-rata seat distribution among states to maintain current state-wise representation ratios, addressing federal imbalance concerns.
Constitutional & Legal Implications
Requires amendment under Article 368 (special majority) to:
Modify condition of “post next Census” in Article 334A
Interacts with:
84th Amendment (2001) → Freeze on seat redistribution till post-2026 Census
87th Amendment (2003) → Allowed delimitation without altering number of seats
Raises issue of whether delimitation using older Census (2011) aligns with constitutional spirit of equal representation.
Data & Evidence
Current Lok Sabha strength: 543 seats
Proposed strength: ~816 seats (≈50% increase)
Women’s reservation: ~273 seats (33%)
Current women representation (17th LS): ~14.4% (78 MPs) → significant jump post-implementation
India ranks ~140th globally in women parliamentary representation (IPU data) → highlights urgency of reform
Key Issues & Challenges
Federal Concerns (North–South Divide)
States like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Karnataka fear loss of representation if population-based redistribution occurs, due to successful family planning policies.
Northern states (UP, Bihar) could gain disproportionately under pure population-based delimitation, altering political balance of power.
Constitutional & Democratic Concerns
Using 2011 Census data instead of latest population data may dilute principle of “one person, one vote, one value”.
Raises question of temporary political expediency vs long-term representational justice.
Design Issues in Women’s Reservation
Rotation of seats may:
Disrupt constituency linkages
Reduce accountability of elected representatives
Risk of proxy representation (Sarpanch Pati phenomenon) where male relatives exercise actual power.
Political Economy Concerns
Expansion of Lok Sabha to 816:
Requires new Parliament infrastructure (already expanded building)
May affect legislative efficiency and debate quality
Potential political resistance from incumbents and parties due to seat reconfiguration.
Case Studies
Panchayati Raj (73rd–74th Amendments):
Women’s reservation (33% → 50% in many states) led to:
Increased female political participation
Improved outcomes in health, education, sanitation (Esther Duflo studies)
Rwanda (Global Example):
Highest women representation (>60% Parliament) due to reservation → improved gender-sensitive policymaking
Way Forward
Build political consensus through all-party consultations, ensuring cooperative federalism in delimitation decisions.
Develop transparent delimitation formula balancing population + equity considerations, avoiding regional imbalance.
Complement reservation with:
Capacity building of women leaders
Political financing support
Consider sub-quotas for OBC women to ensure intersectional representation.
Ensure gradual and evidence-based implementation, avoiding abrupt structural disruptions.
Prelims Pointers
Delimitation Commission: Independent statutory body
Articles: 82, 170 (delimitation), 330A, 332A, 334A (women reservation)
106th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2023 → Women’s reservation
84th Amendment (2001): Freeze on seat redistribution till post-2026 Census
Rejection rate of Right to Information applications in 2024-25
Why in News ?
Government informed Parliament that RTI rejection rate has declined to 3.26% in 2024–25 from 7.21% in 2013–14, indicating improvement in transparency and information access mechanisms.
Central Information Commission (CIC) annual reports show enhanced compliance, along with third-party transparency audits of suo motu disclosures (Section 4) being monitored by the Centre.
Relevance
GS II: Transparency, accountability, RTI regime
GS IV: Ethics in governance, citizen empowerment
Practice Question
Q. “Declining RTI rejection rates indicate improved transparency, yet systemic challenges persist.” Analyse.(250 Words)
Basics
RTI Act, 2005
A landmark legislation enabling citizens to access information held by public authorities, thereby strengthening transparency, accountability, and participatory democracy.
Rooted in Article 19(1)(a) (Freedom of Speech & Expression) → interpreted by Supreme Court as including Right to Know (Raj Narain case, 1976).
Applies to:
All public authorities (government bodies, PSUs, bodies substantially financed by government)
Timeline:
30 days → normal cases
48 hours → life & liberty cases
Key Provisions
Section 3: Every citizen has the right to information without giving reasons.
Section 4: Mandatory proactive disclosure of information (budgets, decisions, functions) to reduce RTI burden.
Section 6: Simple application procedure (written/electronic).
Section 7: Time-bound disposal (30 days).
Section 8: Exemptions (national security, privacy, cabinet papers, etc.).
Section 19: Two-tier appeal:
First Appeal → Departmental authority
Second Appeal → CIC/SIC
Penalty: Up to ₹25,000 on PIO for delay/denial.
Institutional Framework
Central Information Commission (CIC)
Apex appellate body under RTI Act.
Composition:
Chief Information Commissioner + up to 10 Commissioners
Appointment:
By President on recommendation of PM, LoP, and Cabinet Minister committee
Functions:
Adjudicate appeals, enforce transparency, monitor compliance, publish annual reports
Data & Evidence
Rejection rate declined: 7.21% (2013–14) → 3.26% (2024–25) → indicates improved disclosure practices and administrative responsiveness.
India files ~60–70 lakh RTI applications annually, making it the largest transparency regime globally.
However, pendency remains high (lakhs of appeals in CIC/SICs) → delays undermine effectiveness.
Evolution & Judicial Backing
Raj Narain v. State of UP (1976): RTI recognised as part of Fundamental Rights.
CBSE v. Aditya Bandopadhyay (2011): Students can access answer sheets.
RBI v. Jayantilal Mistry (2015): Financial regulatory transparency upheld.
CJI under RTI (2019): Judiciary included under RTI → strengthens accountability.
Key Challenges
Institutional & Governance Issues
High pendency and backlog in CIC/SICs, leading to delayed justice (often 1–2 years for appeals).
Vacancies and understaffing weaken enforcement capacity.
Weak Enforcement
Penalties imposed in very few cases (~2%), reducing deterrence against PIO non-compliance.
Increasing tendency of bureaucratic resistance and delays.
Legal Dilution Concerns
RTI Amendment Act, 2019:
Gave Centre power over tenure and salary of CIC/SIC
Raised concerns about reduced autonomy and independence
Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023:
Expanded “personal information” exemption, limiting public interest disclosures
Transparency Deficit
Poor implementation of Section 4 (proactive disclosure) → citizens forced to file RTIs unnecessarily.
Weak record management and digitisation, especially at local levels.
Social & Ethical Concerns
Threats, harassment, and even killings of RTI activists, especially in corruption-related cases.
Low awareness among rural and marginalised groups, limiting inclusivity of RTI regime.
Case Studies
MKSS Movement (Rajasthan):
Grassroots demand for wage transparency → led to birth of RTI movement in India.
RTI exposing scams (2G, Adarsh Housing, PDS leakages):
Demonstrates RTI’s role in anti-corruption and accountability mechanisms.
Recent Government Measures
Third-party transparency audits of proactive disclosures, monitored by CIC, to ensure Section 4 compliance.
Promotion of online RTI portals and digital filing, improving ease of access and efficiency.
Continuous assessment of RTI framework effectiveness, as stated in Parliament.
Way Forward
Fill vacancies and strengthen CIC/SIC capacity to reduce pendency and ensure timely justice.
Strictly enforce penalty provisions on PIOs, enhancing accountability.
Strengthen Section 4 proactive disclosures, reducing need for RTI applications.
Ensure balance between privacy (DPDP Act) and transparency, protecting public interest disclosures.
Provide legal protection for RTI activists, including whistleblower safeguards.
Accelerate digitisation and record management reforms, especially at grassroots level.
Prelims Pointers
RTI rooted in Article 19(1)(a)
Time limits: 30 days / 48 hours
Penalty: ₹25,000
Appeal: First → FAA, Second → CIC/SIC
Section 8 & 24 → Exemptions
Assam Rifles celebrates 191st Raising Day
Why in News ?
Assam Rifles celebrated its 191st Raising Day (March 24, 2026), with homage paid at the war memorial in Shillong, highlighting its legacy as India’s oldest paramilitary force.
Renewed focus due to:
Ongoing counter-insurgency operations in Northeast India
Policy discussions such as relocation of Assam Rifles battalions (e.g., Mizoram)
Reinforces its role as “Sentinels of the Northeast”, critical for internal security and border management.
Relevance
GS III: Internal security, border management
GS II: Federal security architecture
Practice Question
Q. “Assam Rifles plays a unique role in India’s internal security architecture, but institutional challenges limit its effectiveness.” Discuss.(250 Words)
Basics
What is Assam Rifles?
Assam Rifles is the oldest Central Armed Police Force (CAPF), functioning under Ministry of Home Affairs (administrative control) but with operational control of the Indian Army.
Unique dual structure:
Administrative → MHA
Operational → Indian Army (Lt General rank officer as DG)
Headquarters: Shillong (Meghalaya), unlike other CAPFs headquartered in Delhi.
Historical Evolution
Originated in 1835 as “Cachar Levy” to protect British tea estates from tribal raids, later evolving into a frontier security force.
Renamed Assam Rifles in 1917, and contributed troops in World War I (Europe & West Asia).
Post-independence:
Played role in 1962 Sino-India War
Participated in IPKF (Sri Lanka, 1987)
Expanded from 17 battalions (1960) → ~46 battalions today
Core Functions & Mandate
Conducts counter-insurgency operations in Northeast India, tackling groups in states like Manipur, Nagaland, Assam.
Guards Indo-Myanmar border (~1,643 km), crucial for:
Preventing insurgency spillover
Checking smuggling, illegal migration, arms trafficking
Provides:
Internal security support
Civic action programmes (medical camps, infrastructure support)
Acts as link force between military and civil administration in remote regions.
Strategic Importance
Northeast India shares ~5,300 km international borders with 5 countries (China, Myanmar, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal) → high strategic sensitivity.
Indo-Myanmar border is porous and unfenced, making Assam Rifles crucial for:
Act East Policy connectivity
Countering cross-border insurgency networks
Region hosts multiple insurgent groups (NSCN, ULFA factions, PLA-Manipur) → requires sustained low-intensity conflict management.
Institutional & Governance Context
Assam Rifles is part of CAPFs (6 forces):
CRPF, BSF, ITBP, CISF, SSB, Assam Rifles
Unique model:
Combines military discipline (Army control) with policing functions (MHA)
Falls within:
Union List (Defence, Armed Forces, Border Security)
Key Challenges
Operational Challenges
Difficult terrain (hills, forests, remote borders) limits surveillance and rapid deployment.
Porous Indo-Myanmar border facilitates:
Insurgent movement
Drug trafficking (Golden Triangle proximity)
Institutional Issues
Dual control (MHA vs Army) leads to:
Coordination challenges
Administrative ambiguities (pay, service conditions)
Human Security Issues
Allegations under AFSPA (Armed Forces Special Powers Act) raise concerns about:
Human rights violations
Civil-military trust deficit
Geopolitical Concerns
Increasing China’s influence in Myanmar and Northeast region heightens strategic importance of Assam Rifles.
Border instability impacts Act East Policy and regional integration efforts.
Case Studies
Counter-insurgency success in Mizoram (1980s–90s):
Assam Rifles played key role in peace accord and stabilisation
Civic Action Programmes:
Infrastructure, healthcare, and education support in remote villages → winning “hearts and minds” strategy
Way Forward
Resolve dual control issue through clearer institutional framework ensuring operational efficiency and administrative clarity.
Strengthen border infrastructure (fencing, smart surveillance, drones) along Indo-Myanmar border.
Enhance civil-military engagement and accountability mechanisms to address human rights concerns.
Integrate Assam Rifles role with Act East Policy, improving connectivity and regional security cooperation.
Prelims Pointers
Oldest CAPF (1835 origin)
HQ: Shillong
Administrative control: MHA; Operational control: Indian Army
Guards Indo-Myanmar border
Known as “Sentinels of the Northeast”
India’s Longest-Serving Head of Government
Why in News ?
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has become India’s longest-serving head of an elected government, completing 8,931 days in office, surpassing Pawan Chamling (former Sikkim CM: 8,930 days).
The milestone reflects ~25 years of continuous executive leadership (Gujarat CM + PM) and comes after three consecutive Lok Sabha victories (2014, 2019, 2024), highlighting political continuity and sustained mandate.
Relevance
GS II: Parliamentary system, executive dominance
GS IV: Ethics of power, institutional balance
Practice Question
Q. “Long tenure of executive leadership strengthens policy continuity but may raise concerns for democratic balance.” Examine.(250 Words)
Basics
Head of Government vs Head of State
Head of Government → Prime Minister (real executive authority under Article 74–75)
Head of State → President (constitutional head under Article 52)
PM exercises:
Policy leadership
Council of Ministers control
Executive decision-making authority
Tenure of Prime Minister
No fixed tenure; governed by:
Article 75(3) → Collective responsibility to Lok Sabha
Continues as long as:
Enjoys majority support in Lok Sabha
Hence, long tenure reflects:
Electoral success + political stability + party dominance
Key Facts & Records
Total tenure: 8,931+ days (~24.5 years)
Gujarat CM: 2001–2014 (~13 years)
PM: 2014–present (~12 years)
First PM:
Born after Independence (1950)
With longest prior CM experience before becoming PM
Electoral record:
Led party to 3 consecutive majority mandates (2014, 2019, 2024)
Global comparison:
Among longest-serving democratic leaders in contemporary politics
Constitutional & Political Significance
Demonstrates stability of parliamentary democracy, where leadership continuity depends on popular mandate rather than fixed tenure.
Reflects shift toward dominant-party system, contrasting earlier coalition-era politics (1989–2014).
Raises debate on:
Centralisation of executive power
Balance between strong leadership vs institutional autonomy
Critical Issues & Debates
Democratic Concerns
Long tenure may lead to:
Centralisation of power in executive
Weakening of institutional checks and balances
Debate on:
Role of Parliament vs executive dominance
Federal Concerns
Strong central leadership may affect:
Centre–State relations
Perception of cooperative vs competitive federalism
Electoral & Political Concerns
Dominant-party system may:
Reduce effective opposition space
Impact pluralism and deliberative democracy
Comparative Perspective
Jawaharlal Nehru: ~17 years as PM (longest PM tenure)
Indira Gandhi: ~15+ years
However, Modi’s record is unique because:
Combines state + central executive leadership
Represents continuous uninterrupted governance across levels
Way Forward
Strengthen institutional checks (Parliamentary committees, judiciary independence) to balance strong executive leadership.
Promote intra-party democracy and leadership diversity to sustain democratic vitality.
Enhance federal consultation mechanisms (Inter-State Council, GST Council) for cooperative governance.
Prelims Pointers
PM tenure: No fixed term, depends on Lok Sabha majority
Article 75 → Council of Ministers responsible to Lok Sabha
Longest-serving PM (only PM tenure): Jawaharlal Nehru
Longest-serving head of government (combined): Narendra Modi
Hope builds for nations to save bird that flies 30,000 km
Why in News ?
At the UN Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species (CMS) meeting in Brazil (March 2026), Hudsonian godwit and 42 migratory species have been proposed for international protection due to rapid population decline.
The godwit’s population has declined by ~95% over four decades, highlighting a global biodiversity crisis driven by climate change and habitat disruption across borders.
Relevance
GS III: Environment, biodiversity, climate change
GS II: International environmental governance
Practice Question
Q. “Decline of migratory species reflects systemic ecological stress requiring global governance solutions.” Discuss.(250 Words)
Basics
Hudsonian Godwit (Limosa haemastica)
A long-distance migratory shorebird, breeding in the Arctic and wintering in Patagonia (South America).
Undertakes:
~30,000 km annual migration
Non-stop flights up to ~11,000 km, among the longest in the animal kingdom
Depends on precise ecological timing (“geological clock”) and predictable food availability across multiple ecosystems.
Convention on Migratory Species (CMS)
Also called Bonn Convention (1979) under UNEP.
Objective:
Conserve migratory species across international borders
Key obligations for member countries:
Protect endangered migratory species (Appendix I)
Promote international cooperation (Appendix II)
Conserve habitats and remove migration barriers
Key Data & Evidence
49% of CMS-listed migratory species are declining (2024 report) → worsening from 44% earlier, indicating accelerating biodiversity loss.
Migratory birds show steepest decline among taxa, signalling ecosystem-level stress.
Hudsonian godwit population:
~95% decline in 40 years, making it a flagship indicator species for climate and habitat disruption.
Ecological Significance of Migratory Species
Maintain ecosystem connectivity across continents, linking Arctic, temperate, and tropical ecosystems.
Provide critical services:
Pollination and pest control
Nutrient transport across ecosystems (marine–terrestrial linkages)
Serve as bio-indicators of climate change and environmental health.
Major Threats
Climate Change Impacts
Phenological mismatch:
Arctic warming shifts insect emergence timing, while birds’ migration timing remains fixed → food shortage for chicks.
Altered migration cues, evidenced by godwits migrating ~6 days later than a decade ago.
Habitat Loss Across Flyways
Chile (Patagonia):
Expansion of salmon and oyster farming disrupting intertidal feeding grounds.
USA:
Agricultural changes reducing wetlands and shallow water habitats.
Demonstrates “multiple stressors across migration routes” → cumulative ecological collapse.
Anthropogenic Disturbances
Infrastructure development in coastal zones and wetlands
Increased human presence in feeding areas, disturbing critical stopover sites
Systemic Ecological Stress
Species can adapt to single stressor, but not simultaneous multi-factor disruptions (climate + habitat + human activity) → leading to rapid collapse.
Governance & Institutional Issues
Migratory species conservation suffers from:
Fragmented governance across countries (flyway problem)
Lack of binding enforcement mechanisms under CMS
Requires multi-country coordination, unlike national conservation efforts
Case Studies
Hudsonian Godwit → indicator of flyway collapse, showing how disruptions across continents affect a single species.
Snowy Owl & Hammerhead Shark (also under CMS list):
Highlight cross-ecosystem vulnerability (Arctic + marine ecosystems)
Pantanal (Brazil meeting site):
One of world’s largest wetlands → crucial for migratory biodiversity conservation
India Context
India lies on Central Asian Flyway (CAF) → supports ~370 migratory bird species.
Threats in India:
Wetland loss (urbanisation, pollution)
Hunting and disturbance
Initiatives:
National Action Plan for Migratory Birds (2018)
Ramsar Convention wetlands protection (75+ sites)
Way Forward
Strengthen international cooperation under CMS, including data sharing, joint conservation strategies, and funding mechanisms.
Protect critical habitats across flyways (wetlands, intertidal zones, Arctic breeding grounds) through ecosystem-based approach.
Integrate climate adaptation into biodiversity policies, addressing phenological mismatches and habitat shifts.
Promote nature-based solutions and sustainable coastal management, balancing economic activities with conservation.
Enhance monitoring using satellite tracking, AI, and ecological modelling for better migration mapping.
Prelims Pointers
Hudsonian Godwit: Migratory shorebird (~30,000 km migration)
CMS (Bonn Convention): 1979, UNEP treaty
Appendix I → endangered species; Appendix II → cooperation required
India part of Central Asian Flyway
Anti-Dumping Probe on Ethyl Chloroformate
Why in News ?
India has initiated an anti-dumping investigation into imports of ethyl chloroformate from China, following a complaint by Paushak Ltd., alleging price undercutting and material injury to domestic industry.
The probe is being conducted by the Directorate General of Trade Remedies (DGTR), signalling tightening scrutiny on cheap imports amid rising trade tensions and push for domestic manufacturing.
Relevance
GS III: Economy, trade policy, WTO
GS II: International relations (trade tensions)
Practice Question
Q. “Anti-dumping measures protect domestic industry but may create downstream inefficiencies.” Analyse.(250 Words)
Basics
What is Anti-Dumping?
Dumping occurs when a country exports goods at prices lower than normal value (domestic price or cost of production), leading to unfair competition and injury to domestic industry.
Governed by:
WTO Anti-Dumping Agreement (GATT Article VI)
India imposes anti-dumping duty (ADD) to:
Level the playing field (not protectionism)
Offset price distortion caused by dumping
DGTR (Directorate General of Trade Remedies)
Apex body under Ministry of Commerce & Industry dealing with:
Anti-dumping, countervailing, and safeguard measures
Functions:
Investigates dumping margin, injury, and causal link
Recommends duties → final decision by Ministry of Finance
Ethyl Chloroformate
A chemical intermediate used in:
Pharmaceutical manufacturing (drug synthesis)
Agrochemicals (pesticides, crop protection chemicals)
Strategic importance:
Critical input for India’s pharma industry (global generic leader)
Key Facts from the Case
Investigation period: Oct 2024 – Sept 2025
Domestic producer:
Paushak claims to be sole manufacturer in India
DGTR preliminary findings:
Dumping margin above de minimis threshold → indicates significant price undercutting
Parallel probe:
Hexamine imports from China, Russia, UAE → indicates broader scrutiny of chemical sector imports
Legal & Trade Framework
Conditions for imposing anti-dumping duty:
Existence of dumping
Material injury to domestic industry
Causal link between dumping and injury
De minimis rule:
If dumping margin < 2%, no duty imposed
Time-bound process:
Investigation → provisional duty → final duty (usually for 5 years)
Economic Implications
Positive (Domestic Industry)
Protects infant/single domestic producers from predatory pricing
Supports Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India in chemical sector
Prevents market capture by foreign exporters
Negative (Downstream Impact)
Higher costs for:
Pharmaceutical companies
Agrochemical manufacturers
May increase:
Drug prices (indirectly)
Input cost inflation in agriculture sector
Broader Trade Context
India increasingly using trade remedy measures against China, especially in:
Steel (11–13% duty in 2025)
Chemicals and intermediates
Reflects:
Concerns over Chinese overcapacity and dumping practices
Strategic shift toward supply chain resilience and domestic capability building
Key Challenges
Trade-Off Dilemma
Balancing:
Protection of domestic industry vs
Cost competitiveness of downstream sectors
WTO Compliance Issues
Risk of:
Retaliation or disputes at WTO if duties seen as excessive or unjustified
Industrial Structure Issues
Over-reliance on:
Single domestic producer (Paushak) → raises concerns about:
Monopoly pricing
Supply constraints
Input Dependency
India still dependent on China for bulk chemicals and APIs, making:
Complete decoupling difficult
Case Study
API (Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients) dependence on China:
COVID-19 exposed vulnerability → led to PLI schemes for domestic pharma manufacturing
Similar pattern seen in:
Chemical intermediates sector → triggering anti-dumping measures
Way Forward
Combine trade remedies with industrial policy (PLI schemes, R&D support) to build competitive domestic capacity.
Ensure time-bound and evidence-based anti-dumping duties, avoiding long-term inefficiencies.
Promote diversification of import sources, reducing over-dependence on a single country.
Balance consumer interest and industry protection, especially in critical sectors like pharma.
Strengthen global trade diplomacy to avoid retaliatory measures and disputes.
Prelims Pointers
DGTR → Anti-dumping investigations body
Dumping margin >2% → actionable
Anti-dumping duty ≠ protectionism (WTO-compliant corrective measure)
Ethyl chloroformate → pharma & agrochemical intermediate
“Smog-Eating” Photocatalytic Coatings
Why in News ?
Delhi Government + IIT Madras (March 2026) launched a 6-month pilot project to test “smog-eating” photocatalytic coatings on roads, pavements, and tiles to reduce NO₂ and VOCs, key contributors to urban air pollution.
The project will begin with laboratory simulation of Delhi air conditions, followed by field trials, reflecting a shift toward technology-driven urban air pollution mitigation strategies.
Relevance
GS III: Environment, pollution control, technology
GS III: Science & Tech (nanotechnology)
Practice Question
Q. “Technological solutions like photocatalytic coatings can complement but not replace structural pollution control measures.” Critically analyse.(250 Words)
Basics
What are Photocatalytic “Smog-Eating” Coatings?
These are coatings (often using Titanium Dioxide – TiO₂ nanoparticles) that, under sunlight (UV radiation), trigger photocatalysis, breaking down pollutants.
Mechanism:
Sunlight activates catalyst → generates reactive oxygen species (ROS)
ROS convert:
NO₂ → nitrates (less harmful)
VOCs → CO₂ + water
Can be applied on:
Roads, pavements, buildings, tiles
Urban Air Pollution Context
Delhi is among the most polluted cities globally (PM2.5 levels often 5–10 times WHO limits).
Major pollutants:
PM2.5/PM10, NO₂, SO₂, VOCs, ozone
Sources:
Vehicular emissions (~30–40%)
Construction dust, industries, biomass burning, stubble burning
Health impact:
Air pollution causes ~16–17 lakh deaths annually in India (Lancet estimates)
Scientific & Technological Significance
Represents nature-based + tech-enabled solution, combining:
Nanotechnology
Environmental chemistry
Already tested globally:
Italy, Netherlands, Mexico → showed 5–30% reduction in NOx levels locally
Advantage:
Works passively (no energy input beyond sunlight)
Can be integrated into urban infrastructure
Policy & Governance Context
Aligns with:
National Clean Air Programme (NCAP) → target 20–30% PM reduction by 2024 (extended timeline)
GRAP (Graded Response Action Plan) in Delhi-NCR
Reflects shift toward:
Innovative, decentralised pollution control methods beyond traditional regulation
Potential Benefits
Localized pollution reduction, especially along:
High-traffic corridors
Low maintenance and scalable, if proven effective
Supports smart city infrastructure integration
Can complement:
EV transition, emission control norms (BS-VI)
Challenges & Limitations
Scientific Limitations
Works primarily on:
NOx and VOCs, not directly on PM2.5 (major pollutant in Delhi)
Efficiency depends on:
Sunlight availability (reduced in winter smog conditions)
Risk of:
Secondary pollutants (nitrates accumulation)
Implementation Challenges
Durability of coatings under:
Traffic load
Dust accumulation
Need for periodic reapplication and maintenance
Limited real-world evidence in Indian conditions (dust-heavy environment)
Policy Concerns
Risk of over-reliance on techno-fixes, ignoring:
Root causes like vehicular emissions, industrial pollution
Cost-effectiveness compared to:
Emission reduction policies
Case Studies
Italy (Milan roads):
TiO₂ coatings reduced NOx levels by ~20% in localized zones
Mexico City buildings:
Photocatalytic surfaces equivalent to removing thousands of vehicles’ emissions annually (symbolic impact)
India-Specific Relevance
Suitable for:
Urban hotspots (Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru)
Needs adaptation for:
High dust load and tropical climate conditions
Can complement:
Urban planning reforms (green buffers, dust control measures)
Way Forward
Conduct rigorous field trials with real-time air quality monitoring, ensuring evidence-based scaling.
Integrate with holistic pollution control strategy:
Vehicular emission reduction
Dust management
Clean energy transition
Develop Indian standards and certification for photocatalytic materials.
Encourage public-private partnerships and urban innovation labs for scaling.
Prelims Pointers
Photocatalysis: Light-driven chemical reaction using catalysts
TiO₂ (Titanium Dioxide): Common photocatalyst
Targets NOx and VOCs (not PM directly)
Linked to NCAP and urban air quality management