Current Affairs 11 August 2025
Content Fast-Track Courts in Delhi Fail to Deliver Speedy Justice New Rules for Chemically Contaminated Sites in India How Artificial Intelligence is Tackling Mathematical Problem-Solving India Sets an Example in Asiatic Lion Conservation Plastics Treaty Talks – India Opposes Global Phase-Out Gaza War Stalls IMEC, India’s Key Trade Corridor India’s Agricultural Exports on the Rise Fast-track courts in Delhi fail to fulfil promise of providing speedy justice Basics & Legal Framework FTSC Objective: Expedite trials in rape and POCSO (Protection of Children from Sexual Offences) cases. Legal Mandate: Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2018 introduced stricter provisions and faster timelines. Supreme Court (July 2019) directive: Any district with 100+ pending POCSO cases must set up an exclusive special court. Implementation: Central government launched FTSCs in August 2019. 725 FTSCs functional in 30 States/UTs, including 392 exclusive POCSO courts. Relevance : GS 2(Judiciary) Targets & Performance Target disposal rate: 165 cases annually per FTSC. Ground reality: As of June 30, 2025: 1,66,882 rape/POCSO cases instituted. Only 2,718 disposed of → extremely low clearance rate. Delhi example: 16 FTSCs (11 for POCSO) still face backlog. Structural Challenges Overloaded Dockets: Fast-tracking one case often delays others due to resource constraints. Insufficient Infrastructure: Lack of adequate judges, prosecutors, and trained staff. Underutilisation of Provisions: Despite legal timelines (2 months for certain cases), delays persist due to procedural bottlenecks. Criticisms Advocate Rebecca John: Calls FTSCs a “political gimmick” — no real capacity to handle volume. Limited benefit when the judiciary is overburdened as a whole. Advocate Shilpi Jain: Notes avoidable delays — many cases could conclude quickly due to fewer witnesses. Victim Impact: Delays prolong trauma and weaken deterrence value of the law. Policy-Level Concerns Justice Delivery Paradox: Speed in select cases may harm balance across the judicial system. Need for Systemic Reform: Increase overall judicial capacity, not just create parallel fast-track mechanisms. Strengthen witness protection, digital evidence handling, and pre-trial processes. What are the new rules on chemically contaminated sites? Background & Context Legislative framework: Notified under the Environment Protection Act, 1986 to fill the legal gap in remediation of chemically contaminated sites. Previous status: India had identification and guidance documents (post-2010), but no binding legal procedure for cleanup of contaminated sites. Scale of the problem: 103 sites identified across India by the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB). Only 7 sites have ongoing remediation work. Many sites date back to periods without hazardous waste management regulations. Relevance : GS 2(Health), GS 3(Environment and Ecology , Science and Technology) Definition of Contaminated Sites As per CPCB: Locations where hazardous and other wastes were historically dumped, causing soil, groundwater, and/or surface water contamination. Health & environmental risk: Exposure can lead to cancer, organ damage, reproductive issues, biodiversity loss, and ecosystem degradation. Typical examples: Old landfills and dumps Waste storage/treatment sites Spill sites (industrial accidents) Chemical waste handling/storage facilities Causes & Challenges Historical dumping: Before hazardous waste rules existed (notably before Hazardous Waste Management Rules, 1989). Polluters shut down: Many responsible entities have closed operations or lack financial capacity for cleanup. Complex contamination: Requires expensive, technologically advanced remediation (soil washing, bioremediation, pump-and-treat systems). Evolution of the Legal Framework 2010: Capacity Building Program for Industrial Pollution Management Project launched. Tasks: Inventory of probable contaminated sites – Completed. Guidance document for site assessment and remediation – Completed. Legal, institutional, and financial framework – Pending till 2025. July 25, 2025: Rules notified to operationalise Step 3. Key Provisions of the Rules (2025) a. Identification & Reporting District administration: Prepares half-yearly reports on “suspected contaminated sites.” State Pollution Control Board (SPCB) or reference organisation: Conducts preliminary assessment within 90 days. Conducts detailed survey within next 90 days to confirm contamination. b. Assessment Process Measures levels of 189 hazardous chemicals (as per Hazardous & Other Wastes Rules, 2016). If exceeding safe levels: Public notification of location. Restrictions on access to the site. c. Remediation Reference organisation: Drafts a remediation plan. SPCB: Identifies polluter within 90 days. Polluter pays principle: Responsible parties bear cleanup cost. If no polluter or inability to pay → Centre/State fund remediation. d. Liability Civil liability: Cost recovery from polluter. Criminal liability: If contamination caused death/injury → Punishable under Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023. Exemptions from the Rules Radioactive waste contamination → governed by Atomic Energy Act, 1962. Mining-related contamination → covered under Mines & Minerals (Development & Regulation) Act, 1957. Marine oil pollution → under Merchant Shipping Act, 1958. Solid waste from dump sites → regulated under Solid Waste Management Rules, 2016. Notable Omissions & Limitations No fixed remediation timeline: Risk of indefinite delays after identification. Funding ambiguity: No dedicated national remediation fund announced. Technology readiness gap: India’s remediation industry is underdeveloped; dependence on foreign expertise likely. Overlap with other laws: Potential jurisdictional conflicts with waste, mining, and maritime laws. Broader Significance Environmental governance milestone: First structured, legalised process for contaminated site remediation in India. Public health protection: Addresses cancer-causing and toxic chemical exposures. Polluter pays enforcement: Strengthens liability culture in environmental law. Alignment with global norms: Moves India closer to US Superfund model (Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act – CERCLA). How artificial intelligence is tackling mathematical problem-solving Background – The International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) Nature of IMO Prestigious, annual, global mathematical problem-solving competition for high school students. Consists of 6 original problems over two consecutive days, each with a 3-hour limit per session (total 9 hours). Problems test creativity, logical reasoning, and problem-solving skills rather than advanced formal mathematics. Problems are new and unique — never published before in literature or online. Medal Criteria Gold: Score typically equivalent to solving ~5/6 problems correctly. Silver/Bronze: Lower score thresholds. Grading is strict — a single logical or calculation error invalidates the solution. Relevance : GS 3(Science and Technology) AI’s Entry into IMO 2025 OpenAI’s Announcement Used a general-purpose reasoning model, not specialized or trained for IMO. Achieved Gold medal-level performance under the same time limits as humans. Solutions graded by former IMO medalists hired by OpenAI (led to some disputes over grading accuracy). Announcement made before the competition concluded, which some felt overshadowed human participants. Google DeepMind’s Attempt Used Gemini Deep Think (advanced reasoning model). Participated officially with IMO organisers’ permission. Scored 35/42 points — a confirmed Gold medal score. Solutions praised by IMO graders for clarity, precision, and ease of understanding. Stages of AI Mathematical Capability Development Initial Challenges (ChatGPT launch phase) Frequent hallucinations (fabricated facts). Basic arithmetic mistakes and flawed reasoning. Incapable of reliably solving even moderate-level math problems. First Major Improvement – Agents Models given ability to: Search the web for accurate info. Use Python interpreters to perform calculations and verify reasoning. Result: Dramatic increase in accuracy on moderately hard problems. Second Breakthrough – Reasoning Models Examples: OpenAI o3, Gemini-2.5-pro. Operate like internal monologue models: Consider multiple approaches before deciding. Revisit and refine intermediate reasoning. Restart if necessary. Aim for a logically consistent final answer. Proof Verification Systems Integration with formal proof checkers like the Lean prover. Used to formally verify mathematical proofs for correctness. Example: AlphaProof (Google DeepMind, 2024) — Silver medal equivalent (but took 2 days). Reinforcement Learning with Synthetic Data Models generate and test vast quantities of synthetic problems. Similar to how AI mastered chess by self-play starting only from rules. Broader Implications Research and innovation acceleration: AI can assist in generating approaches, identifying related problems, and verifying solutions at high speed. Formal proof integration can prevent errors in complex, long-term projects. Shift in intellectual benchmarks: Human-only benchmarks like IMO may no longer remain exclusive to humans. Potential need for redefining measures of human achievement. From problem-solving to sustained research: Short-term creativity ≠ long-term research reliability. Research requires sustained error-free progress over months or years — AI integration with proof systems is a step toward this. Ethical & Governance Challenges Timing of announcements: Premature disclosures risk overshadowing human achievements. Fairness in evaluation: Company-appointed graders create conflict-of-interest perceptions. Need for independent verification standards for AI competition results. Motivational impact: Risk of diminishing incentive for human participation if AI dominance becomes the norm. Originality concerns: AI combines known ideas but its capacity for truly novel insights remains debated. India has set an example in lion conservation Background – Asiatic Lion & Its Significance Species: Panthera leo persica – subspecies of the lion, genetically distinct from African lions. Distribution: Once spread across Southwest Asia to eastern India; now confined to Gujarat (Gir National Park & surrounding areas). Conservation Status: IUCN Red List: Endangered. Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972: Schedule I (highest protection). Ecological Role: Apex predator, keystone species maintaining prey population balance in semi-arid ecosystems. Cultural Importance: Symbol of strength in Indian mythology, national emblem inspiration. Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology) Key 2025 Census Findings Population: 2020 Census: 674 individuals. 2025 Census: 891 individuals (+32% growth in 5 years). Historical Context: 1880s: Fewer than 20 lions survived in Gir due to hunting. Strict protection since 20th century led to steady recovery. Habitat Expansion: Gir → Girnar, Girnar–Barda corridor, Mitiyala, and now Barda Wildlife Sanctuary. Factors Behind Growth Strict Legal Protection: Wildlife (Protection) Act enforcement, anti-poaching patrols. Habitat Management: Grassland restoration, prey base improvement. Community Involvement: Maldhari pastoralists allowed to live in Gir; model of coexistence with lions. Compensation for livestock depredation reduces retaliation killings. Political Will: PM’s directive (2024) to boost lion population and develop Barda as new habitat fulfilled. Conservation Challenges Genetic Bottleneck: Single population increases vulnerability to disease outbreaks (e.g., Canine Distemper Virus in 2018). Habitat Saturation: Growing numbers risk human-lion conflict outside protected areas. Climate Change Impacts: Heavy rains, cyclones in Saurashtra affecting prey base and habitat. Infrastructure Development: Road, rail, and mining projects fragment corridors. Strategic Measures Mentioned by the Minister Habitat Diversification: Development of Barda Wildlife Sanctuary as alternative habitat. Global Alliances: International Big Cat Alliance – covers 7 big cat species across 97 countries. Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI) – addresses climate-induced threats. International Solar Alliance – promotes renewable energy in conservation landscapes. Flagship Species Projects: Project Lion, Project Tiger, Project Elephant, Project Dolphin, Project Great Indian Bustard. Comparative Context – Other Big Cats in India Tigers: 58 tiger reserves (up from 47), hosting ~70% of global tiger population. Snow Leopards: Population ~714 in India; conservation ongoing. Cheetahs: African cheetah reintroduction in Kuno NP (Madhya Pradesh). Global Species: Jaguars & pumas in Latin America; emphasis on international cooperation for all big cat species. Governance & Policy Linkages Wildlife Corridors: National Wildlife Action Plan (2017–2031) focuses on landscape-level conservation. Species Recovery Programmes: Centrally Sponsored Scheme for Development of Wildlife Habitats funds Project Lion. Community-Based Models: Eco-development projects (₹189 crore launched) – safari park, interpretation centre, etc., linking livelihoods to conservation. Plastics Treaty Talks – India Opposes Phase-Out Background – What is the Global Plastics Treaty? Origin: Negotiations under the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) to create the world’s first legally binding plastics treaty, addressing plastic pollution across its life cycle. Mandate: Agreed in 2022 by UN member states to finalise the treaty by end-2024; current Geneva round is in its second and final week before the next meeting in Busan (Nov–Dec 2025). Scope: Covers measures on: Plastic production limits. Phase-out of harmful/single-use products. Waste management improvements. Financing, technology transfer, and international cooperation. Relevance : GS 3(Environment and Ecology) India’s Stance in Geneva Aligned With: Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iran — largely oil/petrochemical producers. Opposed Provisions: Mandatory phase-out or supply restrictions on primary polymer production. Annexed global product phase-out lists with fixed deadlines (Annex Y). Any article duplicating or overlapping with other international bodies (WTO, WHO). Demanded: No global lists/dates for product bans in the main treaty text. Focus on national discretion and flexibility. Stronger emphasis on finance, technical assistance, and technology transfer to help developing countries meet obligations. Annex Y – Controversial List Contents: Items proposed for global phase-out such as: Single-use plastic bags. Straws, cutlery. Balloon sticks. Microbead-containing cosmetics. India’s Position: Even if domestically some items are already banned, opposes binding global bans as they may limit policy flexibility and ignore local socio-economic contexts. Reasons for India’s Opposition to Global Phase-Out Developmental Concerns: Binding global limits can constrain industrial growth and petrochemical sectors. Economic Impact: Threat to jobs and export competitiveness in plastics/petrochemicals. Technology Gaps: Lack of affordable, scalable alternatives for all banned products. Trade Law Issues: Risk of WTO disputes if treaty obligations conflict with trade rules. Policy Sovereignty: Preference for voluntary/ nationally determined actions over one-size-fits-all mandates. Broader Negotiation Dynamics Pro-Phase-Out Bloc: EU, Mexico, Australia, many African nations – pushing for: “High ambition” treaty. Production caps, life-cycle controls, chemical use restrictions. Opposition Bloc: Major oil/plastics producers – focus on waste management, recycling, and downstream solutions instead of production cuts. Like-Minded Developing Countries (LMDC): India among those calling for flexibility and national circumstances to dictate timelines. Practical Realities of Porting Global Bans Implementation Challenges: Infrastructure for waste collection and recycling is uneven globally. High transition costs without assured financing. Risk of Non-Compliance: If bans are too rigid, countries may simply fail to implement, undermining treaty credibility. Financing Needs: Grants/loans for waste management systems. R&D support for biodegradable and alternative materials. Technology transfer without prohibitive IP barriers. Implications for India Short Term: Maintains flexibility in domestic policy. Protects economic interests of plastics and petrochemical industries. Medium to Long Term: If the global market shifts towards reduced plastic use, India may face trade barriers on plastic exports. Will eventually need to scale up alternatives and recycling capacity to remain competitive. Environmental Trade-Off: Slower global phase-out means continued plastic leakage risks. India’s domestic bans and EPR policies still play a key role in mitigation. Way Forward – Balanced Approach India’s Negotiation Levers: Advocate phased targets tied to finance & tech transfer. Support capacity-building commitments before imposing production caps. Push for differentiated obligations for developed vs. developing countries (CBDR principle). Domestic Strategy: Strengthen enforcement of current single-use bans. Incentivise industry shift to sustainable alternatives. Enhance recycling infrastructure under Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR). Gaza War Stalls IMEC, India’s Key Trade Corridor IMEC Overview Announced at G20 2023 to connect India–Middle East–Europe via two corridors (Eastern maritime + rail, Western maritime + European rail). Aims to cut India–Europe transit time by ~40% vs Red Sea route. Includes trade, digital, electricity, hydrogen links; tariff & insurance standardisation; job creation; emission reduction. Relevance : GS 3(Infrastructure) Structure Eastern leg: India’s west coast → UAE ports → freight rail across UAE–Saudi–Jordan → Haifa (Israel). Western leg: Haifa → Greece/Italy ports → European rail network. Pre-war Political Window Arab–Israel normalisation (Saudi expected to join). Geo-economic gains took precedence over Palestine issue. Enabled multi-state cooperation with EU, Gulf, and India. Gaza War Impact 61,000 killed in Gaza; deepened Arab public opposition to Israel. Saudi–Israel normalisation stalled; Jordan–Israel ties at historic low. Political legitimacy for Israel-linked corridor collapsed. Red Sea attacks disrupted shipping, raising insurance and freight costs. Operational Constraints Post-war Western leg politically blocked; transit rights unavailable. Higher marine insurance premiums in conflict zone. Delay in tariff harmonisation, financing, and customs integration. Investor confidence weakened. Current Feasibility Eastern leg viable due to India–UAE–Saudi ties (e.g., UPI integration). Western leg uncertain until Middle East stability restored. Corridor now a “day-after” plan, contingent on political resolution. Strategic Stakes for India Diversifies away from Suez chokepoint. Strengthens Gulf–India–EU value chains. Enhances India’s role in global connectivity diplomacy. Policy Priorities for India Fast-track Eastern leg with binding UAE/Saudi agreements. Create multilateral corridor insurance pool. Keep technical work alive for Western leg without political linkage. Upgrade west-coast ports & logistics for immediate readiness. Maintain backchannel diplomacy with Israel, Jordan, EU. Risks Political: Prolonged conflict freezes Western leg. Economic: Security costs make IMEC uncompetitive. Technical: Fragmented standards slow interoperability. Mitigation Modular implementation; risk-sharing finance models. Early standard-setting; customs digitalisation. Security cooperation in Red Sea & Arabian Sea. India’s Agricultural Exports on the Rise Context & Background India’s trade composition: Merchandise exports are currently flat or declining, but agricultural exports are showing resilience and growth. Significance: Agriculture trade surplus is one of the few areas where India consistently exports more than it imports, contributing positively to the trade balance. Relevance : GS 3(Indian Economy , Agriculture) Current Performance FY 2024–25 (Apr–Jun): Agri exports: $13.44 billion (up 5.84% YoY from $12.69 billion). Agri imports: $9.12 billion. Trade surplus in agriculture: $4.32 billion. Full FY 2023–24: $43.74 billion exports, slightly higher than $43.71 billion in FY 2022–23. Key Drivers of Growth Strong segments: Marine products, coffee, fruits & vegetables, basmati rice, and buffalo meat. Falling segments: Oilseeds, non-basmati rice, oilmeals, wheat. Government policy impact: Ban/restrictions on exports of certain commodities (rice, wheat, sugar) to manage domestic inflation and food security. Removal of such restrictions can directly impact export volumes. Trade Composition Top 5 export items (Apr–Jun 2024–25):Marine products – $4.05B (24.05% share).Basmati rice – $1.94B (14.45% share).Non-basmati rice – $1.63B.Spices – $1.45B.Buffalo meat – $0.79B. High growth items: Fruits & vegetables (+13.79%), spices (+9.49%), marine products (+19.45%). Declining items: Oilmeals (-12.25%), oilseeds (-8.57%), processed fruits & vegetables (-2.96%). Global Market Dynamics Global food price trends: UN FAO Food Price Index shows a decline from 2019–20 highs, reducing export value growth rates. Geopolitics & tariffs: US presidential trade policy (especially potential Trump return) could impose a 50% tariff on marine products, affecting $3.5B worth of exports. Brazil and other competitors could capture Indian market share in key commodities like frozen shrimp. Competition: Vietnam, Ecuador, and Indonesia are strengthening positions in seafood exports; Brazil in agri commodities. Domestic Factors Affecting Exports Inflation control measures: Export bans/restrictions on rice, wheat, sugar reduced outward shipments. Production trends: Shift in cropping patterns and yields affect exportable surplus. Logistics & port capacity: Growth in marine exports is tied to port infrastructure efficiency. Trade Surplus Trends Agriculture trade surplus decline: From $27.7B in FY 2013–14 to ~$5.9B in FY 2023–24 due to faster growth in imports. Rising imports of vegetable oils, pulses, and fruits are eroding the surplus. Import pressures: Dependence on edible oils (palm, soybean, sunflower) remains high. Seasonal fruit imports (apples, pears, citrus) and pulses (lentils, chickpeas) fill domestic supply gaps. Risks Ahead US tariff uncertainty: Could hit $3.5B marine exports heavily. Global demand slowdown: Economic weakness in importing nations may reduce demand. Commodity price volatility: Weather events (El Niño, monsoon variability) can affect yields and prices. Policy unpredictability: Sudden export bans hurt long-term buyer trust. Strategic Implications for India Need for diversification: Reduce dependence on a few commodities like marine products and basmati rice. Value addition: Increase processed and branded food exports to capture higher margins. Trade agreements: Secure preferential market access with major buyers to counter tariff threats. Import substitution: Focus on domestic oilseed and pulse production to reduce import dependency. Sustainability: Align exports with climate-resilient farming to maintain long-term competitiveness.