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Mar 17, 2026 Daily PIB Summaries

Content River Rejuvenation in India  24 Speed Post’ – Next-Day Guaranteed Delivery River Rejuvenation in India  Introduction & context River rejuvenation involves restoring ecological health, water quality, and flow regimes of rivers through pollution control, habitat restoration, and sustainable water management. CPCB (2025 report) identified 296 Polluted River Stretches (PRSs) on 271 rivers, reflecting persistent pollution challenges despite policy interventions. Reduction from 351 PRSs (2018) to 296 (2025) indicates gradual improvement but highlights need for sustained, integrated river basin management. Relevance GS Paper II: Federalism, Governance, Environmental regulation GS Paper III: Environment & Ecology, Water resources, Pollution control, Infrastructure Practice Question Q1.“River rejuvenation in India requires a shift from fragmented pollution control to integrated river basin management.” Examine. (250 words) Constitutional / legal dimension Water is a State subject (Entry 17, State List), but Centre intervenes via Entry 56 (Inter-state rivers) ensuring coordinated national efforts. Legal framework includes Water (Prevention & Control of Pollution) Act, 1974, Environment Protection Act, 1986, and NGT directives for river conservation. Judicial interventions (e.g., Ganga pollution cases) have expanded right to clean water under Article 21, strengthening environmental governance. Governance / administrative dimension CPCB + State Pollution Control Boards (SPCBs) monitor water quality under National Water Quality Monitoring Programme (NWMP). Monitoring network expanded to 4,922 locations (2,260 on rivers) enabling data-driven decision making. Namami Gange Programme (for Ganga basin) and National River Conservation Plan (NRCP) (other rivers) form core policy pillars. Convergence with schemes like AMRUT, Smart Cities Mission, and MGNREGA (Gramin) ensures multi-sectoral approach. Economic dimension River pollution imposes high economic costs through loss of fisheries, agriculture productivity, and increased health expenditure. Investments in sewerage infrastructure and treatment plants create employment and stimulate local economies. Clean rivers enhance tourism, inland waterways, and ecosystem services valuation, contributing to sustainable growth. Social / ethical dimension River pollution disproportionately affects poor and river-dependent communities, raising issues of environmental justice. Community participation through local restoration, afforestation, desilting under rural schemes strengthens ownership. Cultural significance of rivers (e.g., Ganga) integrates spiritual values with environmental ethics, aiding behavioural change. Environmental dimension 296 PRSs (2025) indicate widespread organic pollution (high BOD levels) due to sewage discharge and industrial effluents. 149 PRSs delisted and 71 showing improvement indicate partial success of interventions. States with high PRSs: Maharashtra (54), Kerala (32), Karnataka (14) indicating regional pollution hotspots. Major stressors: untreated sewage (~70–80% untreated), industrial discharge, agricultural runoff, and reduced ecological flows. Science & technology dimension Use of LiDAR, UAVs, drone-based surveys in Ganga basin improves mapping of pollution sources and river morphology. Drain Dashboard provides geo-tagged mapping of outfalls, enabling real-time monitoring and targeted interventions. Potential for AI-based pollution tracking, IoT sensors, and real-time water quality monitoring systems. Federal / institutional dimension Centre–State coordination challenge due to water being State subject but pollution having inter-state impacts. Role of SPCBs often constrained by capacity and enforcement limitations. Need for river basin authorities for integrated watershed-level governance. Data & evidence 296 PRSs (2025) vs 351 (2018) → declining trend. 149 PRSs delisted; 71 improved. Monitoring: 4,922 stations (2,260 rivers). Highest PRSs: Maharashtra (54), Kerala (32). Challenges / gaps Fragmented governance and lack of basin-level planning. Inadequate sewage treatment capacity; majority wastewater untreated. Weak enforcement of pollution norms by SPCBs. Urbanisation and industrialisation pressures increasing pollution load. Ecological flow neglect due to dams and over-extraction. Way forward Shift to river basin management approach with statutory river basin authorities. Expand sewage treatment infrastructure and ensure utilisation of existing STPs. Strengthen SPCB capacity, monitoring, and enforcement mechanisms. Promote nature-based solutions (wetlands, riparian buffers). Use real-time monitoring, AI, and digital dashboards for proactive governance. Ensure community participation and behavioural change (Mission LiFE). Prelims pointers CPCB under MoEFCC monitors water quality. PRS = Polluted River Stretch based on Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD). Namami Gange – flagship river rejuvenation programme. NRCP – covers rivers other than Ganga. ‘24 Speed Post’ – Next-Day Guaranteed Delivery Introduction & context Department of Posts launched ‘24 Speed Post’ (17 March 2026) providing D+1 (next-day) guaranteed delivery, marking a shift towards time-bound premium logistics services in India. First phase covers six metros—Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, targeting high-volume corridors and enhancing urban logistics efficiency. Complements existing Speed Post ecosystem with 24 (D+1) and 48 (D+2) assured delivery timelines, aligning India Post with global express delivery standards. Relevance GS Paper II: Governance (public service delivery, digital governance, citizen-centric reforms) GS Paper III: Economy (logistics, e-commerce), Infrastructure (postal network), Science & Tech (digital tracking systems) Practice Questions Q1.“India Post is transitioning from a traditional postal service to a logistics and e-commerce enabler.” Analyse in the context of the ‘24 Speed Post’ initiative. (250 words) Constitutional / legal dimension Postal services fall under Union List (Entry 31, Seventh Schedule), giving exclusive legislative competence to Centre, ensuring uniform national postal policy. Service expansion aligns with Article 38 (social order) and Article 39(b) promoting equitable access to infrastructure and distribution systems. Ensures compliance with consumer protection principles through money-back guarantee, strengthening accountability and service standards. Governance / administrative dimension Introduction of dedicated processing windows and priority air transmission improves operational efficiency and reduces delivery lag. End-to-end tracking with SMS alerts enhances transparency and citizen-centric governance, aligning with Digital India initiatives. OTP-based secure delivery strengthens last-mile authentication and reduces fraud or misdelivery risks. API integration and centralized billing enables seamless integration with businesses and e-commerce platforms, improving administrative coordination. Economic dimension Enhances competitiveness of India Post vs private couriers (Blue Dart, DTDC, Delhivery) by offering guaranteed timelines and premium services. Supports e-commerce growth and MSMEs through features like BNPL (Buy Now Pay Later) and free bulk pickup, reducing transaction costs. Improves logistics efficiency, contributing to National Logistics Policy goal of reducing logistics cost (~13–14% of GDP). Facilitates faster movement of documents, pharmaceuticals, high-value goods, boosting trade and service sector efficiency. Social / inclusive dimension Strengthens last-mile connectivity through India Post’s vast network, ensuring even smaller businesses benefit from high-speed logistics. Improves access to time-sensitive services such as legal documents, education forms, medical deliveries. Promotes financial inclusion of small sellers through BNPL and centralized billing mechanisms. Enhances trust in public institutions through reliability and accountability mechanisms (money-back guarantee). Science & technology dimension Integration of real-time tracking systems, SMS alerts, and API-based platforms reflects digital transformation of postal services. Use of priority air logistics networks optimises multimodal transport integration. Potential for future integration with AI-based route optimisation and data analytics for demand forecasting. Infrastructure / logistics dimension Dedicated processing infrastructure and air transmission corridors ensure adherence to strict delivery timelines. Focus on metro-to-metro corridors initially, with scope for expansion to tier-2 and tier-3 cities. Aligns with PM Gati Shakti National Master Plan for integrated infrastructure and logistics efficiency. International comparison / IR dimension Moves India Post closer to global standards like USPS Priority Mail Express and Royal Mail Special Delivery, improving international competitiveness. Enhances India’s logistics ranking and supports global trade facilitation commitments (WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement). Data & key features Launch date: 17 March 2026. Coverage: 6 metro cities. Delivery timelines: 24 Speed Post – D+1 48 Speed Post – D+2 Features: OTP-based secure delivery End-to-end tracking + SMS alerts BNPL facility Free pickup (bulk customers) API integration & centralized billing Money-back guarantee Challenges / gaps Infrastructure constraints in non-metro regions may limit scalability and uniform service quality. Competition from agile private logistics players with advanced supply chains. Operational bottlenecks (sorting delays, workforce capacity) may affect guaranteed timelines. Digital divide may restrict access to advanced features for smaller or rural users. Way forward Expand service to tier-2 and tier-3 cities to ensure equitable logistics access. Invest in automation (sorting hubs), AI-driven logistics optimisation, and capacity building. Strengthen public-private partnerships for logistics integration and efficiency. Integrate with ONDC ecosystem to support small sellers and digital commerce. Enhance last-mile delivery infrastructure using drones and electric mobility solutions. Prelims pointers Postal services under Union List (Entry 31). Speed Post is India Post’s premium express service. D+1 / D+2 = delivery within 1 or 2 days from booking date. BNPL = Buy Now Pay Later facility for business customers.

Mar 17, 2026 Daily Editorials Analysis

Content Neighbourhood diplomacy and its West Asia challenge Belém as a test of a new model of forest finance Neighbourhood diplomacy and its West Asia challenge Context & Strategic Trigger On 4 March 2026, the U.S. sank Iranian warship IRIS Dena near Sri Lanka, extending West Asia conflict (begun 28 Feb 2026) into Indian Ocean Region (IOR) with direct implications for India. Conflict involves U.S.–Israel vs Iran axis, marked by killing of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (86 years), triggering escalation, retaliatory strikes, and disruption of global energy and shipping networks. Incident represents militarisation of sea lanes, shifting conflict geography from land-based West Asia to maritime Indo-Pacific, directly affecting India’s extended neighbourhood doctrine. Relevance GS Paper II: International Relations (West Asia, multilateralism, diaspora diplomacy, neighbourhood policy) GS Paper III: Security (maritime security, energy security), Economy (oil shocks, trade disruptions) Practice Questions Q1.“Militarisation of the Indian Ocean Region marks a new phase in West Asian conflict with direct implications for India.” Analyse. (250 words) Static Background  India–West Asia Linkages West Asia supplies ~60% of India’s crude oil imports and hosts ~10 million Indian diaspora, making it critical for energy security, remittances, and strategic connectivity. India follows “strategic autonomy + multi-alignment”, balancing ties with Israel (defence-tech), Iran (Chabahar, connectivity), and GCC (energy, diaspora). Strait of Hormuz Significance Handles ~20% of global oil trade and ~40% of India’s oil imports, making it a critical chokepoint vulnerable to Iranian coercion. Data & Evidence   ~25 million South Asians in West Asia: 10 million Indians, 5–6 million Bangladeshis, 2 million Nepalis and others. India received $135 billion remittances (202), with ~50% from Gulf region, exposing macroeconomic vulnerability to regional instability. Indians constitute ~15% of global seafarers, increasing exposure to maritime conflict zones (Hormuz, Arabian Sea). Constitutional / Legal Dimensions Article 51 (DPSP) mandates promotion of international peace, respect for international law, requiring India to oppose unilateral military actions. UN Charter principles violated: sovereignty, non-intervention, especially via targeted killing of a head of state/religious leader. UNCLOS (1982) ensures freedom of navigation; attack on warship in high seas raises concerns on maritime law compliance and escalation norms. Governance / Administrative Dimensions Absence of institutionalised diaspora evacuation protocol despite precedents like Operation Rahat (2015) and Vande Bharat Mission (2020) indicates coordination gaps. Need for integrated crisis management architecture involving MEA, Indian Navy, Petroleum Ministry, Civil Aviation for simultaneous evacuation and supply stabilisation. Regional fuel requests from Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Maldives highlight India’s role as first responder under Neighbourhood First policy. Economic Dimensions Oil price spike risks widening Current Account Deficit (CAD) and increasing imported inflation, especially affecting fertilizers, LPG, transport fuels. Disruption in Hormuz shipping lanes increases freight costs, insurance premiums, impacting India’s 90% trade by volume via sea. Labour-intensive exports (textiles, seafood) face external demand shocks + tariff pressures (U.S. Section 301-type actions). Social / Ethical Dimensions Safety risks to 10 million Indian diaspora + 15% global seafarers raise urgent humanitarian concerns. India’s delayed response (5-day gap for condolence diplomacy) contrasts with Pakistan, Bangladesh, Maldives, affecting regional moral leadership. Ethical inconsistency: Condemning Iran’s retaliation without criticising U.S.-Israel strikes undermines value-based diplomacy. Security / Maritime / Strategic Dimensions India’s “Net Security Provider” doctrine (SAGAR vision) challenged by unilateral U.S. strike near its maritime periphery. Weaponisation of Strait of Hormuz by Iran increases risk of blockade, tanker seizures, naval escalation. Need to operationalise platforms: IORA (23 members) for regional coordination IFC-IOR (Gurugram) for maritime domain awareness Colombo Security Conclave for subregional security cooperation India’s Diplomatic Posture  Initial calibrated response and delayed condolence diplomacy may be interpreted as policy caution, though it created perceptions of relative tilt, differing from India’s traditional non-aligned, balanced engagement approach.Contradiction with Quad July 2025 statement opposing unilateral force, as U.S. action violated same norm. India’s outreach to Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian for Hormuz passage shows pragmatic correction but lacks normative clarity. Regional Implications (South Asia) Energy shortages triggered fuel diplomacy requests, testing India’s regional leadership capacity. Repeated crises since 2020 (COVID, LAC tensions, Ukraine war, tariffs) have created economic fragility and youth unrest. Political shifts: Nepal’s Gen-Z government (March 2026) reflect domestic-economic linkages with foreign policy. Global / Institutional Dimensions Quad credibility erosion due to U.S. unilateralism; India must recalibrate leadership as 2026 Quad Chair. BRICS 2026 summit challenge: managing tensions between Iran and UAE, requiring high diplomatic balancing. ASEAN Foreign Ministers’ statement criticised U.S.-Israel actions, reflecting Global South divergence from Western bloc. Key Challenges / Structural Gaps Strategic ambiguity vs credibility deficit: imbalance between rhetoric and actions. Energy import dependence (~85%) exposes India to external shocks. Weak regional institutionalisation: SAARC paralysis, limited economic integration. Diaspora vulnerability: absence of real-time tracking and protection systems. Way Forward Reaffirm strategic autonomy doctrine by explicitly opposing unilateral use of force, irrespective of actor. Build regional energy security grid (fuel reserves, electricity trade, LNG sharing) across South Asia. Institutionalise Diaspora Protection Mechanism (DPM) with digital registry + rapid evacuation protocols. Strengthen maritime coalitions via real-time intelligence sharing (IFC-IOR) and joint patrols. Diversify energy imports: expand sourcing from Africa, Latin America, and accelerate renewables (500 GW target by 2030). Convene urgent Quad Foreign Ministers’ meeting and leverage BRICS platform for Global South consensus-building. Prelims Pointers Strait of Hormuz: Between Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman; world’s most critical oil chokepoint. IFC-IOR: Located at Gurugram, enhances maritime domain awareness. IORA: Established 1997, promotes Indian Ocean cooperation. UNCLOS (1982): Governs high seas freedoms and maritime conduct. Belém as a test of a new model of forest finance Context & Background COP30 (Belém, Brazil, November 2025) spotlighted tropical forest conservation, with launch of Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF), marking shift from pledge-based to finance-driven conservation architecture. TFFF responds to failure of earlier mechanisms (REDD+ limitations) by incentivising “standing forests”, not merely avoided deforestation, aligning with net-zero and biodiversity commitments. Relevance GS Paper II: International Relations (climate finance, Global North–South dynamics, multilateral governance) GS Paper III: Environment (forests, biodiversity, climate change), Economy (green finance), S&T (monitoring platforms) Practice Questions Q1.“Tropical Forest Forever Facility represents a shift from climate pledges to performance-based finance.” Critically examine its potential and limitations. (250 words) Static Background Tropical forests (Amazon, Congo, SE Asia) store ~250 billion tonnes of carbon, acting as global carbon sinks and biodiversity hotspots (80% terrestrial species). Earlier mechanisms like REDD+ under UNFCCC focused on carbon offset markets, criticised for weak community participation and leakage effects. Key Features of TFFF Performance-based finance model: rewards countries for maintaining forest cover, not just reducing deforestation rates. $5.5 billion initial commitments, including $3 billion from Norway, structured as return-generating fund, not pure grant-based aid. Mandates minimum 20% fund allocation to Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs), recognising their role in forest stewardship. Co-designed with 400+ indigenous leaders, introducing participatory governance elements, though lacking voting rights in core decision bodies. Data & Evidence Indigenous territories contain ~36% of intact forests globally (FAO/World Bank estimates), highlighting their critical role in conservation outcomes. Payment rate proposed ~$4 per hectare, significantly undervaluing ecosystem services (carbon sequestration, biodiversity, water regulation). Forest and Land Tenure Pledge (FCLP) commits $1.8 billion (2026–2030) for community land rights. Constitutional / Legal Dimensions Aligns with CBD (Convention on Biological Diversity) and Paris Agreement goals on nature-based solutions and carbon sinks. Raises issues of Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) under UNDRIP (2007) due to limited indigenous decision-making power. Land tenure rights central to environmental justice jurisprudence, including recognition of community forest rights (India’s FRA, 2006 analogy). Governance / Administrative Dimensions Creation of digital access platform (UNDP, FAO, WWF, GATC) aims to improve eligibility navigation, capacity building, and transparency. Governance gap: No voting power for indigenous representatives in core TFFF bodies → risks elite capture and bureaucratic centralisation. Risk of intermediation leakage, where national governments or financial institutions absorb funds, reducing last-mile delivery. Economic Dimensions Introduces market-based conservation finance, blending public + private capital with return expectations, shifting from aid to investment paradigm. Low compensation ($4/hectare) may fail to compete with agribusiness, mining, infrastructure returns, limiting behavioural change incentives. Potential for green financialisation, where forests become commodified assets, raising concerns of “carbon colonialism”. Social / Ethical Dimensions Indigenous communities demand territorial sovereignty, not just financial compensation; protests at COP30 highlight rights-based vs market-based conflict. Ethical concern: treating forests as economic assets vs cultural ecosystems, risking erosion of traditional ecological knowledge systems. Equity gap: despite 20% earmarking, lack of decision-making power undermines procedural justice. Environmental Dimensions TFFF supports standing forest conservation, crucial to prevent Amazon tipping point (~20–25% deforestation threshold). However, does not directly address drivers of deforestation: Agribusiness expansion Oil & mining extraction Infrastructure projects Risk of “offset illusion” where conservation finance coexists with continued ecological destruction elsewhere. Challenges & Criticisms “Colonialistic finance” critique (Global Forest Coalition): benefits intermediaries more than forest communities. Structural flaw: focuses on symptoms (forest loss) rather than drivers (capital-intensive extractive economy). Inadequate pricing of ecosystem services leads to under-incentivisation of conservation. Governance deficit: absence of indigenous voting rights weakens legitimacy and accountability. Power asymmetry persists: global North financiers vs local communities → reinforces historical inequities. Global & Institutional Dimensions Reflects shift towards climate finance architecture beyond UNFCCC, with hybrid funds and multi-stakeholder governance. Complements initiatives like: FCLP ($1.8 billion) Global Biodiversity Framework (Kunming-Montreal 2022) Highlights tension between Global North funding dominance and Global South ecological sovereignty. Way Forward  Ensure full voting rights and co-governance for indigenous communities in TFFF decision-making bodies. Increase compensation beyond $4/hectare, reflecting true ecosystem service valuation (carbon + biodiversity + hydrology). Integrate regulatory controls on deforestation drivers (agribusiness, mining) alongside financial incentives. Strengthen land tenure security frameworks, as evidence shows secure rights → lower deforestation rates. Establish independent accountability mechanisms with community-led monitoring and social audits. Align TFFF with SDG 13 (Climate Action), SDG 15 (Life on Land), SDG 10 (Reduced Inequalities). Prelims Pointers REDD+: UNFCCC mechanism for reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation. FPIC: Principle ensuring indigenous consent before project implementation. FCLP: Forest and Climate Leaders’ Partnership funding $1.8 billion (2026–2030). Amazon tipping point: ~20–25% deforestation threshold beyond which ecosystem collapse risk rises.

Mar 17, 2026 Daily Current Affairs

Content Gynandromorph Crab in Silent Valley India’s First National Report on the Nagoya Protocol (NR1) NavIC Setback: Atomic Clock Failure & India’s GPS Challenge Strait of Hormuz & “Revenge of Geography” Defence Vision 2047 Supreme Court & Chambal Gharial Conservation 60th Jnanpith Award India’s Manuscript Mapping Drive Gynandromorph Crab in Silent Valley Context A rare gynandromorphic freshwater crab (Vela carli) was discovered in Silent Valley National Park (Kerala), showing both male and female biological traits in the same individual. This is the first recorded instance in the family Gecarcinucidae, marking a significant finding in evolutionary biology and biodiversity studies. Relevance GS Paper III: Environment & Ecology (biodiversity, Western Ghats, species diversity), Science & Tech (genetics, developmental biology) Practice Question Q.“Rare biological anomalies like gynandromorphy provide critical insights into evolutionary biology and biodiversity conservation.” Discuss with reference to recent discoveries in India. (250 words) About the Discovery The species Vela carli is an endemic freshwater crab found only in the Central Western Ghats, indicating high regional endemism and ecological specificity. The condition observed is gynandromorphy, where an organism exhibits both male and female reproductive structures, such as male organs alongside female gonopores. The discovery was based on three specimens found in tree holes, suggesting a possible habitat-linked biological phenomenon. Silent Valley National Park  Silent Valley National Park is located in Kerala (Nilgiri Hills, Western Ghats) and is part of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, a UNESCO-recognised biodiversity hotspot region. It protects one of the last remaining tracts of tropical evergreen rainforest in India, with high levels of endemism and species richness. The park is drained by the Kunthipuzha River (tributary of Bharathapuzha), which remains undammed, preserving pristine ecological conditions. Known for flagship species such as Lion-tailed macaque (endemic and endangered), it represents a success of grassroots environmental movements (Silent Valley Movement, 1970s–80s). Declared a National Park in 1984, it is a critical site for in-situ conservation and ecological research in peninsular India. Scientific Significance Gynandromorphy is a rare biological anomaly, more commonly observed in insects and some crustaceans, but not previously reported in Gecarcinucidae family. It provides insights into sex determination mechanisms, genetic mosaicism, and developmental biology, contributing to advanced research in evolutionary genetics. Such findings help in understanding mutation, chromosomal anomalies, and environmental influences on reproduction. Ecological Significance The discovery highlights the ecological richness of the Western Ghats (a UNESCO Biodiversity Hotspot), known for high endemism and species diversity. Freshwater crabs like Vela carli play key roles in nutrient cycling, detritus processing, and maintaining aquatic ecosystem balance. Presence of such rare phenomena indicates healthy yet complex ecosystems, sensitive to environmental changes. Multi-Dimensional Analysis Environmental Dimension Reinforces importance of conserving fragile ecosystems like Silent Valley, which harbour unique and endemic species with unexplored biological traits. Scientific / Technological Dimension Opens avenues for genetic and developmental research, especially in sex differentiation, chromosomal behaviour, and evolutionary adaptation in crustaceans. Governance Dimension Highlights role of institutions like Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) and academic collaborations in advancing biodiversity documentation and conservation science. Ethical Dimension Raises considerations regarding conservation of rare genetic traits and responsible scientific study without disturbing fragile habitats. Data & Facts Species: Vela carli (endemic to Western Ghats) Location: Silent Valley National Park (Kerala) Phenomenon: Gynandromorphy (dual-sex traits) First recorded instance in Gecarcinucidae family Study published in international journal Crustaceana Challenges Limited scientific understanding of rare genetic anomalies like gynandromorphy restricts comprehensive ecological and evolutionary interpretation. Fragile habitats like Western Ghats ecosystems face threats from climate change, habitat fragmentation, and human interference. Lack of extensive long-term monitoring of lesser-known taxa such as freshwater crabs. Way Forward Strengthen biodiversity research and taxonomic studies focusing on lesser-known species and rare biological phenomena. Enhance conservation of Western Ghats ecosystems through stricter protection and community participation. Promote interdisciplinary research integrating genetics, ecology, and environmental science to study such anomalies. Expand role of institutions like ZSI and academic collaborations for systematic biodiversity documentation. Conclusion The discovery of a gynandromorphic crab in Silent Valley underscores the hidden complexity of biodiversity, reinforcing the need for scientific exploration and ecological conservation in safeguarding India’s unique natural heritage. India’s First National Report on the Nagoya Protocol (NR1) Context  India submitted its 1st National Report (NR1) on Nagoya Protocol (2017–2025), highlighting progress in Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). The report reflects India’s efforts in biodiversity governance, community participation, and equitable sharing of genetic resource benefits, positioning India as a global leader in ABS implementation. Relevance GS Paper II: International Relations (multilateral environmental agreements, global governance) GS Paper III: Environment (biodiversity, ABS), Economy (bioeconomy), Governance (decentralisation) Practice Questions Q.“India has emerged as a global leader in Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) under the Nagoya Protocol.” Examine the institutional and legal factors behind this success. (250 words) Institutional Framework India has designated National Focal Point (MoEFCC) and Competent National Authority – National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) for implementation of the Protocol. A three-tier structure operates: NBA (National level) State Biodiversity Boards (SBBs/UTBCs) Biodiversity Management Committees (BMCs) Over 2.76 lakh BMCs established, ensuring decentralised and participatory biodiversity governance. Legal & Policy Framework Core legislation: Biological Diversity Act, 2002 (amended 2023), BD Rules 2024, and ABS Regulations 2025 operationalise Nagoya Protocol in India. Framework mandates Prior Informed Consent (PIC) and Mutually Agreed Terms (MAT) for access to genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge. India ensures transparent procedures, permits, and compliance mechanisms aligned with international ABS standards. Access & Compliance Mechanism Access to genetic resources is subject to mandatory PIC in all cases, with approvals issued as agreements equivalent to permits. India issued 12,830 approvals and generated 3,556 IRCCs, accounting for ~60.24% of global IRCCs, indicating strong compliance leadership. Monitoring is enabled through Section 36A (BD Act) and digital ABS e-filing systems, enhancing traceability. Benefit Sharing (ABS Outcomes) Monetary benefits collected: ~USD 34.6 million, with USD 16.83 million disbursed to local communities, BMCs, and stakeholders. Benefit-sharing rates range between 0.2%–0.6% of ex-factory sale price, ensuring equitable distribution. Over 210 individual benefit claimers and 10,414 BMCs benefited, strengthening community-based conservation models. Community Participation & Equity Local communities recognised as “benefit claimers” under law, ensuring inclusion of traditional knowledge holders and conservers. BMCs and People’s Biodiversity Registers (PBRs) enable identification of resources and knowledge holders, enhancing grassroots governance and equity. Customary rights and practices are protected under Sections 7, 36, and 41 of BD Act, ensuring social justice dimension. Digital Governance & Innovation Implementation supported by ABS e-filing portal, ABS Clearing-House (ABS-CH), and digital traceability systems for transparency. India issued the world’s first IRCC (2015), demonstrating early adoption of global compliance tools. Ongoing development of end-to-end ABS digital platforms aims to streamline procedures and improve monitoring. Global Leadership & Cooperation India contributes significantly to global ABS governance with highest share (~60%) of IRCCs and active participation in CBD frameworks. Collaborations include ASEAN-India projects, GEF, UNDP BIOFIN, Indo-German ABS initiatives, strengthening international cooperation. Engagement in treaties like ITPGRFA and BBNJ Agreement (signed 2024) enhances India’s role in global biodiversity governance. Multi-Dimensional Analysis Environmental Dimension ABS framework promotes in-situ conservation, sustainable use of biodiversity, and reduces biopiracy risks, strengthening ecological resilience. Economic Dimension Monetisation of genetic resources creates bio-economy opportunities, supports livelihoods, and incentivises conservation through benefit-sharing mechanisms. Governance Dimension India’s decentralised, participatory model with BMCs ensures bottom-up governance, transparency, and accountability in biodiversity management. Social / Ethical Dimension Ensures equity and justice by recognising rights of local communities and traditional knowledge holders, aligning with principles of environmental justice. Legal Dimension Strong statutory backing through BD Act, Rules, and Regulations, with enforcement mechanisms including NGT appeal provisions, ensures legal robustness. Challenges Difficulty in tracing origin of biological resources due to market intermediaries weakens benefit-sharing linkages. Limited awareness among users and local communities, along with language barriers, affects effective implementation of PIC and MAT processes. Lack of designated checkpoints and complexity in IRCC documentation slows compliance and monitoring. Emerging issues like Digital Sequence Information (DSI) pose regulatory and governance challenges. Way Forward Strengthen digital traceability systems and designate formal checkpoints for effective monitoring of genetic resource utilisation. Enhance capacity-building and awareness programmes for communities, industries, and researchers to improve compliance. Simplify ABS procedures through integrated digital platforms and standardised documentation formats. Develop clear frameworks for DSI governance and strengthen international cooperation for harmonised ABS implementation. Conclusion India’s NR1 demonstrates a globally leading, community-centric ABS framework, but achieving full effectiveness requires addressing traceability, awareness, and emerging technological challenges, ensuring sustainable and equitable biodiversity governance. NavIC Setback: Atomic Clock Failure & India’s GPS Challenge Context ISRO reported failure of the atomic clock onboard IRNSS-1F (13 March 2026), reducing operational efficiency of NavIC (Navigation with Indian Constellation), India’s regional satellite navigation system. The satellite completed its 10-year design life, but clock failure highlights persistent technical and reliability challenges in achieving independent navigation capability. Relevance GS Paper III: Science & Technology (space tech, navigation systems), Security (strategic autonomy), Economy (logistics, digital infra) GS Paper II: Governance (Digital India, public infrastructure, policy coordination) Interview: Tech sovereignty vs global interdependence Practice Question Q.“Failures in critical components like atomic clocks highlight the technological challenges in achieving space-based strategic autonomy.” Examine with reference to NavIC. (250 words) About NavIC (IRNSS) NavIC (Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System) is India’s indigenous navigation system providing coverage over India and ~1500 km beyond, designed for accurate positioning, timing, and navigation services. It requires a 7-satellite constellation for optimal functioning, offering better signal availability in difficult terrains compared to GPS due to overhead satellite positioning. Role of Atomic Clocks Atomic clocks are critical for precise time measurement, enabling accurate calculation of position, velocity, and timing (PVT) for navigation systems. Failure of onboard clocks directly impacts accuracy, reliability, and continuity of navigation services, affecting sectors like transport, defence, surveying, and infrastructure planning. Key Issues Highlighted The failure of IRNSS-1F atomic clock adds to earlier failures in first-generation satellites, indicating systemic reliability concerns in space hardware. Earlier mission IRNSS-1H (2017) failed to reach orbit, further weakening constellation strength and delaying full operational capability of NavIC. Global Navigation Systems (Comparative Context) Major global systems include GPS (USA), GLONASS (Russia), Galileo (EU), and BeiDou (China), all providing global coverage with robust constellations. NavIC remains regional, limiting its competitiveness, though it offers higher accuracy in Indian region and strategic autonomy advantages. Technological Advancements (Next-Gen NavIC) New-generation satellites (NVS-series) incorporate indigenously developed atomic clocks, reducing dependence on foreign components and improving reliability. Introduction of dual-frequency signals (L1, L5, S-band) enhances interoperability with global systems and enables use in consumer devices like smartphones and wearables. Multi-Dimensional Analysis Strategic / Security Dimension NavIC is critical for strategic autonomy, ensuring independent navigation for military operations, missile guidance, and secure communications, reducing reliance on foreign systems like GPS. Technological Dimension Challenges in atomic clock reliability, satellite longevity, and launch failures highlight gaps in high-end space technology and precision engineering capabilities. Economic Dimension Reliable navigation systems support sectors like transport, logistics, agriculture, disaster management, and infrastructure, contributing to economic efficiency and digital economy growth. Governance Dimension Integration with Digital India, smart cities, and disaster management frameworks depends on robust NavIC infrastructure, requiring policy coordination and sustained investment. Global / Geopolitical Dimension Dependence on foreign systems poses risks during conflicts, as access to GPS signals can be restricted, making NavIC essential for sovereignty in critical technologies. Data & Evidence Coverage: India + ~1500 km beyond Required constellation: 7 satellites Current issue: Failure of IRNSS-1F atomic clock Mission life: 10 years (old), 12 years (new NVS satellites) Challenges Persistent atomic clock failures and satellite degradation reduce system reliability and accuracy. Delays in launching replacement satellites hinder achieving full constellation strength. Limited global coverage and ecosystem adoption compared to established systems like GPS and BeiDou. Way Forward Accelerate deployment of NVS-series satellites with indigenous atomic clocks to ensure reliability and continuity of services. Promote NavIC integration in smartphones, vehicles, and public systems through regulatory mandates and incentives. Enhance R&D in precision timing technologies and strengthen collaboration between ISRO, academia, and private sector. Expand towards global or extended regional coverage and strengthen international partnerships for wider adoption. Strait of Hormuz & “Revenge of Geography” Context The Strait of Hormuz crisis, triggered by Iran blocking a ~20 nautical miles wide chokepoint, has disrupted global oil and gas supplies, highlighting the enduring relevance of geography in geopolitics. The episode reinforces the concept of “revenge of geography”, where physical features continue to constrain human and technological advancements despite globalisation and modern capabilities. Relevance GS Paper I: Geography (physical features, human–environment interaction) GS Paper II: International Relations (West Asia, maritime geopolitics) Practice Questions Q.“The Strait of Hormuz crisis highlights the enduring relevance of geography in geopolitics.” Discuss in the light of the concept of ‘revenge of geography’. (250 words) Core Concept: Revenge of Geography The idea implies that geographical features such as straits, mountains, and rivers continue to shape politics, economy, and security, limiting human ability to completely overcome natural constraints. Despite technological progress, strategic chokepoints and terrain still determine trade routes, conflict outcomes, and power projection, reaffirming geography’s enduring influence. About Strait of Hormuz The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow maritime passage (~20 nautical miles wide) connecting the Persian Gulf to the Gulf of Oman, serving as a critical global energy chokepoint. A significant share of global oil and gas trade passes through it, making disruptions highly consequential for energy security, global markets, and geopolitical stability. Maritime Chokepoints & Global Examples Strategic straits like Malacca, Bab-el-Mandeb, Gibraltar, Bosporus, and Bering Strait function as critical nodes of global trade and military movement, often becoming sites of geopolitical contestation. For instance, Malacca Strait (~82,000 vessels annually) and Bab-el-Mandeb demonstrate how narrow waterways can influence global supply chains and conflict dynamics. Geography–History Linkages Historical events such as the Battle of Tsushima (1905), Umayyad conquest via Gibraltar (711 CE), and control of Bosporus during Ukraine conflict show geography shaping military and political outcomes. Maritime features have historically determined trade dominance, colonial expansion, and strategic advantage, reinforcing geography’s role in shaping civilisation trajectories. Multi-Dimensional Analysis Environmental / Geographical Dimension Physical features like straits, isthmuses, peninsulas, rivers, and plains define resource distribution, connectivity, and ecological systems, shaping human settlement and economic activity patterns. Economic Dimension Global trade remains heavily dependent on maritime chokepoints, with disruptions causing energy crises, inflation, and supply chain shocks, as seen in the Hormuz blockade affecting oil flows. Security / Strategic Dimension Chokepoints act as strategic vulnerabilities, where states can exercise control, coercion, or denial, making them focal points of naval strategy and geopolitical tensions. Governance / Political Dimension Control over strategic geography influences state power, diplomacy, and alliances, with countries investing in naval capabilities and maritime security frameworks to secure trade routes. Social / Civilisational Dimension Early civilisations developed along river valleys (Nile, Indus, Yellow River) and fertile plains, demonstrating geography’s role in shaping human settlement, agriculture, and societal evolution. Human Agency vs Geography Human interventions such as Suez Canal and Panama Canal demonstrate the ability to modify geography, reducing distances and enhancing connectivity for trade and military movement. However, such interventions remain limited and context-specific, as natural constraints like terrain, climate, and chokepoints continue to impose strategic limitations. Key Insights for India India’s energy security is vulnerable due to dependence on West Asian oil passing through Hormuz, necessitating diversification and strategic reserves. Strategic focus on Indian Ocean Region (IOR), including Andaman & Nicobar (near Malacca Strait), enhances India’s ability to leverage geographical advantage in maritime geopolitics. Challenges Overdependence on critical chokepoints creates systemic vulnerabilities in global trade and energy supply chains. Rising geopolitical tensions can lead to weaponisation of geography, disrupting international norms of freedom of navigation. Limited alternatives to maritime routes constrain global resilience against such disruptions. Way Forward Diversify energy sources and strengthen strategic petroleum reserves to mitigate risks from chokepoint disruptions. Enhance maritime domain awareness, naval capabilities, and international cooperation to secure sea lanes and ensure freedom of navigation. Develop alternative trade routes such as International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC) and multimodal logistics networks to reduce dependency on single chokepoints. Conclusion   The Strait of Hormuz crisis reaffirms that while technology enhances human capacity, geography remains a decisive factor in global affairs, necessitating strategies that align national power with geographical realities. Defence Vision 2047 Context Defence Forces Vision 2047, articulated by the Defence Minister, outlines India’s roadmap to build technologically advanced, integrated, multi-domain armed forces, aligning military transformation with the goal of Viksit Bharat by 2047. The vision emerges amid changing nature of warfare—prolonged, technology-driven, and industrial-scale conflicts—as seen in Ukraine, West Asia, and Nagorno-Karabakh, necessitating structural transformation of defence ecosystem. Relevance GS Paper II: Governance (defence reforms, institutional integration), IR (defence partnerships) GS Paper III: Security (military modernisation, emerging warfare), Economy (defence industry), S&T (AI, drones, cyber) Practice Question Q.“Defence Forces Vision 2047 marks a shift from military modernisation to comprehensive national power strategy.” Analyse. (250 words) Core Vision & Pillars The strategy envisages armed forces that are technologically advanced, fully integrated across services, and capable of multi-domain operations including cyber, space, underwater, and electronic warfare domains. It expands beyond military capability to include industrial capacity, technological ecosystems, and economic strength, recognising that national power in the 21st century is multidimensional. Evolution of Defence Reforms The vision builds on earlier reforms such as Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) 2020, creation of Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), push for theatre commands, and defence industrial corridors. Emphasis on Atmanirbhar Bharat in defence manufacturing and increased private sector participation marks a shift from import dependence to domestic capability building. Strategic Rationale  Modern conflicts are protracted, technology-intensive, and industrially sustained, requiring not just precision but mass production of weapons, drones, and electronic systems. Emphasis on cybersecurity, data networks, and information warfare highlights the growing importance of non-kinetic domains in determining conflict outcomes. Economic & Industrial Dimension Defence Vision 2047 integrates security with economic growth, promoting a defence-industrial ecosystem that generates jobs, innovation, and exports. The defence budget (~₹7.85 lakh crore) reflects prioritisation of military modernisation and recognition that industrial base underpins military capability. Self-Reliance vs Import Dependence Despite policy push, India remains the world’s second-largest arms importer, accounting for ~8.2% of global imports (SIPRI 2026), indicating structural dependency. Challenges arise from legacy procurement patterns, long gestation periods, and gaps in high-end manufacturing capabilities such as aerospace and advanced electronics. Technology & R&D Dimension India’s defence R&D spending remains low at around $2.8 billion (~3.35% of defence budget) compared to China (~$44.4 billion, ~15%), indicating a significant capability gap. Overall R&D expenditure <0.7% of GDP is far below major powers, necessitating stronger innovation ecosystems and academia–industry–military collaboration. Global Partnerships & Diplomacy India is diversifying defence cooperation beyond traditional partners like USA, France, Russia, Israel, to include Australia, Japan, Brazil, Indonesia, Gulf countries, for co-production and exports. Strategic partnerships and technology transfers are essential to accelerate domestic capability while integrating into global defence supply chains. Defence Exports & MSME Ecosystem Expanding defence exports requires diplomatic outreach, defence exhibitions, and global marketing, particularly targeting Global South countries seeking affordable and reliable defence partners. MSMEs form the backbone of defence supply chains but require predictable demand, financing, and export opportunities to scale up effectively. Emerging Technologies Focus Increasing focus on drones, artificial intelligence, geospatial systems, and electronic warfare reflects adaptation to future warfare trends where unmanned systems act as force multipliers. Collaborations like General Atomics–L&T drone manufacturing highlight growing public-private and international industrial partnerships. Maritime & Indo-Pacific Dimension With the Indo-Pacific emerging as a strategic hotspot, India must strengthen naval capabilities, underwater warfare, and maritime surveillance to secure sea lanes of communication (SLOCs). The Indian Ocean Region (IOR) is central to India’s strategic interests, requiring sustained focus on maritime infrastructure and naval modernisation. Institutional Integration Push towards theatre commands and joint operational planning reflects the need for integrated military operations across land, air, sea, cyber, and space domains. Enhancing jointness and interoperability is critical for efficient resource utilisation and effective response in multi-domain conflicts. Challenges Persistent import dependence and limited domestic capabilities in high-end technologies hinder full realisation of Atmanirbharta in defence. Low R&D investment, bureaucratic delays, and lack of policy stability constrain innovation and industrial growth in defence sector. Weak industry–academia collaboration and limited scaling of MSMEs affect supply chain resilience and technological advancement. Way Forward Increase defence R&D spending and promote innovation ecosystems involving DRDO, academia, startups, and private sector for advanced technology development. Accelerate theatre command reforms, streamline procurement processes, and reduce bureaucratic bottlenecks to improve operational efficiency. Strengthen defence exports strategy, integrate MSMEs into global supply chains, and leverage strategic partnerships for co-development and co-production. Align defence manufacturing with industrial policy and skilling initiatives, ensuring sustainable growth of defence-industrial ecosystem. Conclusion Defence Vision 2047 represents a shift from military modernisation to comprehensive national power strategy, integrating security, economy, and technology, crucial for India’s aspiration to emerge as a leading global power by 2047. Supreme Court & Chambal Gharial Conservation Context  The Supreme Court took suo motu cognisance of rampant illegal sand mining threatening the National Chambal Sanctuary, a critical habitat for critically endangered gharials, highlighting judicial intervention in environmental governance. Despite earlier actions by the National Green Tribunal (NGT), continued mining by organised sand mafias has worsened ecological degradation, even affecting relocated gharial habitats. Relevance GS Paper II: Governance (judicial activism, federal coordination), Polity (Article 21, NGT) GS Paper III: Environment (river ecology, biodiversity conservation), Security (environmental crime), Economy (resource extraction) Practice Question Q.“Illegal sand mining represents a major threat to riverine ecosystems and governance.” Examine with reference to the National Chambal Sanctuary. (250 words) About National Chambal Sanctuary The National Chambal Sanctuary is a tri-state riverine protected area spanning Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, and Uttar Pradesh, covering nearly 1800 km of the Chambal river system. Around 600 km stretch (out of 960 km) is officially notified as sanctuary, making it India’s only tri-state riverine sanctuary with high ecological and conservation significance. It hosts rich biodiversity including Gharial, Gangetic Dolphin, Indian Skimmer, Red-Crowned Roof Turtle, Smooth-coated Otter, and several endangered aquatic and avian species. About Gharial The Gharial (Gavialis gangeticus) is a critically endangered species (IUCN Red List), endemic to the Indian subcontinent, dependent on clean, flowing river ecosystems (lotic systems). It is highly sensitive to habitat disturbance, particularly sandbank nesting sites, making it a key indicator species for river ecosystem health. Key Issues Highlighted Illegal sand mining has emerged as the biggest threat to the sanctuary, degrading sandbanks, altering river morphology, and reducing water retention capacity. Mining activities are organised, aggressive, and continuous, aided by favourable terrain and weak enforcement, allowing operations even in eco-sensitive zones. The relocation of gharials due to habitat loss, followed by mining even in new areas, indicates systemic governance failure and ecological collapse risks. Multi-Dimensional Analysis Environmental Dimension Sand mining disrupts riverine ecology, destroys breeding habitats, and affects species dependent on sandbanks and water flow dynamics, leading to biodiversity loss and ecosystem imbalance. Governance Dimension Weak enforcement, lack of inter-state coordination, and limited capacity of local authorities enable sand mafia dominance, reflecting governance deficits in environmental regulation and compliance. Legal / Constitutional Dimension The case invokes Article 21 (Right to Life) including environmental protection, and demonstrates the role of judiciary through suo motu action and continuing mandamus in ecological conservation. Social / Ethical Dimension Illegal mining networks create lawlessness, violence against officials, and undermine rule of law, raising ethical concerns regarding resource exploitation versus ecological sustainability. Economic Dimension While sand mining supports construction industry demand, unregulated extraction leads to long-term ecological costs, threatening livelihoods dependent on river ecosystems such as fishing and eco-tourism. Security Dimension Presence of organised sand mafias with aggressive tactics highlights a form of environmental crime, posing challenges to local law enforcement and governance stability. Data & Evidence Sanctuary spans ~1800 km, with 600 km notified protected stretch across three states. Habitat supports critically endangered gharials and multiple endangered species including Gangetic dolphins and Indian skimmers. Reports identify sand mining as the single largest threat to Chambal ecosystem. Challenges Lack of effective monitoring mechanisms and technological surveillance enables continuous illegal mining activities across remote river stretches. Poor inter-state coordination complicates enforcement in a tri-junction geography, allowing offenders to exploit jurisdictional gaps. Limited deterrence due to weak penalties and political–administrative nexus with mining mafias undermines conservation efforts. Way Forward Establish court-monitored enforcement mechanisms with real-time surveillance using drones, GIS mapping, and satellite monitoring to curb illegal mining effectively. Strengthen inter-state coordination frameworks with joint task forces and unified regulatory mechanisms for riverine ecosystem protection. Enhance penalties and ensure strict criminal prosecution of sand mafias, treating illegal mining as a serious environmental and economic offence. Promote sustainable sand alternatives and regulate legal mining through scientific assessments to balance development needs with ecological conservation. Conclusion The Chambal case underscores the need for integrated river ecosystem governance, where judicial intervention, technological enforcement, and cooperative federalism converge to protect fragile biodiversity and uphold environmental rule of law. 60th Jnanpith Award Context  R. Vairamuthu, noted Tamil lyricist and author, has been selected for the 60th Jnanpith Award, India’s highest literary honour, marking a major recognition of Tamil literary contributions. He becomes the third Tamil recipient, after a gap of 24 years, following Akilan and Jayakanthan, highlighting regional literary representation trends. Relevance GS Paper I: Indian Culture (literature, regional diversity) GS Paper II: Governance (cultural policy, national integration) Practice Question Q.“Literature reflects society while also shaping it.” Examine in the context of contemporary Indian literary recognition such as the Jnanpith Award. (250 words) About Jnanpith Award Instituted in 1961 by the Bharatiya Jnanpith organisation, it is India’s highest literary award, recognising outstanding contributions to Indian literature across languages listed in the Eighth Schedule. The award carries a citation, cash prize, and bronze replica of Goddess Saraswati, symbolising knowledge, wisdom, and literary excellence in Indian cultural tradition. About Vairamuthu R. Vairamuthu is a prominent Tamil poet, novelist, and lyricist, known for blending classical Tamil literary traditions with contemporary themes in poetry and film lyrics. He received the Sahitya Akademi Award (2003) for “Kallikattu Ithikasam”, a novel depicting agrarian distress and displacement, reflecting strong social realism in literature. Significance of the Award Cultural Dimension Recognition of Tamil literature, one of the world’s oldest literary traditions, strengthens India’s linguistic diversity and cultural plurality, reinforcing constitutional ideals under Article 29 (cultural rights). Social Dimension Vairamuthu’s works highlight rural distress, migration, and marginalised voices, showcasing literature as a medium for social critique and reform, aligning with ethical dimensions of governance. Political / Governance Dimension National awards like Jnanpith promote inclusive cultural representation, strengthening national integration while respecting regional identities, a key feature of India’s federal cultural framework. Economic / Soft Power Dimension Literary recognition enhances India’s cultural diplomacy and soft power, promoting Indian languages globally and contributing to creative economy sectors such as publishing, cinema, and translation industries. Data & Facts  Jnanpith Award instituted: 1961 First recipient: G. Sankara Kurup (Malayalam) Language eligibility: Eighth Schedule languages Tamil recipients: 3 (including Vairamuthu) Gap since last Tamil award: 24 years Challenges / Criticism Perceived regional imbalance in award distribution across languages and literary traditions raises concerns about equitable representation. Limited public engagement with literary works due to language barriers and declining reading culture reduces the broader societal impact of such recognitions. Need for greater translation and accessibility efforts to ensure wider dissemination of regional literary excellence. Way Forward Promote systematic translation initiatives through institutions like Sahitya Akademi to enhance cross-cultural literary exchange and accessibility. Integrate literary works into education and digital platforms such as National Digital Library to revive reading culture and awareness. Strengthen regional literary ecosystems through funding, awards, and global promotion to ensure balanced representation across Indian languages. India’s Manuscript Mapping Drive Context The Ministry of Culture launched a first-ever nationwide manuscript mapping survey of three months duration, aiming to document India’s vast manuscript wealth and create a unified repository under Gyan Bharatam Mission. The initiative is rooted in the Budget 2025–26 announcement and reflects a strategic shift towards digitisation of cultural heritage and protection against intellectual piracy. Relevance GS Paper I: Indian Culture (manuscripts, knowledge systems, heritage conservation) GS Paper II: Governance (digital governance, cooperative federalism, cultural policy) Practice Question Q.“Digitisation of manuscripts is essential for preserving India’s civilisational heritage while enabling knowledge democratisation.” Examine in the context of the Manuscript Mapping Survey. (250 words) Core Initiative & Features The Manuscript Mapping Survey aims to identify, catalogue, and digitise manuscripts across institutions, private collections, and individual custodians, creating a centralised national database for heritage management. It adopts a bottom-up administrative model, starting from district level surveys and aggregating data at state and national levels, ensuring comprehensive and decentralised coverage of manuscript resources. The initiative also integrates previously digitised manuscripts, estimated at over 10 lakh, into a unified platform, enabling consolidation of scattered cultural data. Objectives The mission seeks to preserve fragile manuscripts, promote standardised digitisation, and enhance research accessibility, thereby strengthening India’s knowledge systems and civilisational continuity. It also aims to curb intellectual piracy, protect traditional knowledge, and position India as a global knowledge hub through systematic documentation and dissemination. Technology Integration Use of geotagging technology enables precise location mapping of manuscripts, facilitating targeted conservation and preservation strategies across regions with varying climatic and infrastructural conditions. The Gyan Bharatam App allows real-time data upload by survey teams, ensuring standardisation, transparency, and efficiency in data collection and digital documentation processes. Adoption of uniform digitisation protocols ensures interoperability and long-term usability of manuscripts within a national digital ecosystem. Policy & Governance Framework The initiative aligns with the New Delhi Declaration (Gyan Bharatam Conference, 2025), which envisions projecting India’s culture, literature, and consciousness globally. Institutional framework includes state-level committees chaired by Chief Secretaries and district-level committees led by District Magistrates, ensuring cooperative federalism and administrative accountability. It reflects a model of data-driven governance, integrating culture with Digital India infrastructure and public policy frameworks. Data & Significance India possesses approximately 1 crore manuscripts, the largest manuscript collection globally, spanning diverse domains such as philosophy, medicine, astronomy, literature, and arts. With only about 10 lakh manuscripts digitised so far, the initiative addresses a significant gap in documentation, accessibility, and preservation of heritage resources. Multi-Dimensional Significance Cultural The initiative safeguards civilisational knowledge systems, preserving intellectual traditions embedded in manuscripts and reinforcing India’s cultural identity and heritage continuity in a rapidly globalising world. Governance It exemplifies digital governance in culture, enabling better policy planning, monitoring, and resource allocation through a comprehensive and standardised national database of manuscripts. Economic Digitised manuscripts can fuel research, innovation, and cultural industries, promoting cultural tourism and contributing to India’s emerging knowledge-based economy. Social / Ethical Promotes democratisation of knowledge access, while addressing ethical concerns related to ownership rights, custodianship, and equitable sharing of traditional knowledge systems. Technology / Security Digital archiving reduces risks of physical degradation, but raises concerns regarding cybersecurity, data protection, and safeguarding of intellectual property rights in digital repositories. Challenges Acute shortage of trained manuscript conservators and experts in ancient scripts and languages hampers effective documentation and digitisation efforts. Linguistic diversity and script variations create challenges in standardisation and digital processing, especially for rare and region-specific manuscripts. Issues of ownership disputes and reluctance of private custodians may limit comprehensive coverage and data sharing. Infrastructural gaps in remote and rural areas and coordination challenges across multiple administrative levels affect effective implementation. Way Forward Establish a comprehensive legal and policy framework for manuscript conservation, clearly defining ownership rights, access protocols, and intellectual property safeguards. Leverage AI and machine learning for script recognition, translation, and metadata generation, enhancing usability and accessibility of digitised manuscripts. Integrate the initiative with platforms like National Digital Library and Bhashini, ensuring multilingual access and wider dissemination of knowledge. Encourage public–private partnerships and incentivise custodians through financial support, recognition, and tax benefits to ensure broader participation.