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Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 27 March 2026

Content India’s Resilient Production Systems in Agriculture One Station One Product: Bringing India’s Local Heritage to Railway Platforms India’s Resilient Production Systems in Agriculture Introduction India’s agriculture contributes ~18–20% of GVA, employs 46.1% workforce, and supports ~55% population, making it central to food security, livelihoods, and macroeconomic stability. Record production of 357.73 MMT foodgrains and 362.08 MT horticulture (2024–25) reflects structural transition towards diversified, high-value, and resilient agricultural systems. Agricultural growth averaged ~4.4% (last 5 years), driven by improved seeds, irrigation expansion, mechanisation, and policy-led resilience strategies integrating production with markets. Relevance GS Paper III (Economy / Agriculture / Environment) Agricultural productivity, diversification, and value addition Food security and nutritional security Climate-resilient agriculture and sustainability Agricultural marketing reforms, exports, and value chains Digital agriculture (AgriStack, e-NAM) Practice Questions  Q1.“India’s agricultural resilience is increasingly shaped by diversification, technology, and institutional support rather than mere production expansion.”Critically examine.(250 Words) Static Background Post-Green Revolution, India ensured cereal self-sufficiency, but current policy focus has shifted towards diversification, income enhancement, climate resilience, and global value chain integration. Structural features include 86% small and marginal farmers, ~45% rainfed area, and regional specialisation, influencing productivity, vulnerability, and targeted policy design. Constitutional Dimensions Agriculture is a State subject (Entry 14), while Centre intervenes via Entry 33 (Concurrent List), MSP, trade regulation, and centrally sponsored schemes under cooperative federalism. National Food Security Act, 2013 ensures subsidised foodgrain to 81.35 crore beneficiaries, linking agricultural production systems with rights-based food security framework. Absence of statutory MSP creates policy uncertainty, while reform attempts highlight tensions between market liberalisation and federal autonomy in agricultural governance. Governance Dimension Mission-mode interventions like NFSNM, NMEO, and Aatmanirbharta in Pulses (2025–31) aim at productivity enhancement, import substitution, and crop diversification. 25.55 crore Soil Health Cards issued covering 12 parameters, enabling scientific nutrient management, improved soil fertility, and balanced fertiliser usage. Irrigation coverage increased to 55.8% gross cropped area under PMKSY, promoting micro-irrigation, water-use efficiency, and climate resilience. Institutional credit reached ₹28.67 lakh crore (2024–25) with 7.72 crore KCC accounts, enhancing formal credit penetration and reducing dependence on moneylenders. Economic Dimension India produced 150.18 MT rice and 117.94 MT wheat (2024–25), maintaining its position as second-largest global producer, ensuring food security and export strength. Pulses production reached 25.68 MT and millets 18.59 MT, reflecting emphasis on protein security, climate-resilient crops, and import substitution strategies. Horticulture output rose to 362 MT, surpassing foodgrain production, indicating structural shift towards high-value crops, diversification, and income-enhancing agriculture. Agricultural exports increased from $34.5 billion (FY20) to $51.1 billion (FY25) with 8.2% CAGR, reflecting improved global competitiveness and export diversification. Processed food share rose from 14.9% (FY18) to 20.4% (FY25), indicating gradual transition from raw commodity exports to value-added agri-products. Social Dimension PM-KISAN disbursed ₹4.27 lakh crore in 22 instalments, providing ₹6,000 annual income support, stabilising rural consumption and reducing distress. MSP (≥1.5× cost) ensures price assurance for 22 crops, but cereal bias raises concerns about crop diversification and long-term sustainability. PMFBY insured 4.19 crore farmers covering 6.2 crore hectares, with claims exceeding ₹1.90 lakh crore, strengthening climate risk mitigation. ONORC achieved 99.8% Aadhaar seeding, covering 81.35 crore beneficiaries, enhancing portability, inclusion, and leak-proof food distribution. Environmental Dimensions Natural farming expanded to 6.39 lakh hectares with 15.79 lakh farmers, reducing chemical inputs and promoting sustainable, low-cost agriculture practices. Millets (Shree Anna) promoted as climate-resilient crops due to low water requirement, supporting nutrition security and climate adaptation goals. Ethanol blending programme saved ₹1.44 lakh crore forex, linking agriculture with energy security and diversified farmer income streams. e-NAM platform integrates 1.8 crore farmers and 1,656 mandis, enabling transparent price discovery, inter-state trade, and digital agriculture ecosystem. Market And Value Chain Dimension 49,796 storage projects and 25,009 marketing infrastructure projects received subsidies exceeding ₹7,000 crore, strengthening post-harvest management and reducing wastage. 10,000 FPOs registered (2026) improve collective bargaining, scale economies, and market access, especially for small and marginal farmers. Food processing contributes 12.91% of organised manufacturing employment, with PMKSY and PLISFI boosting infrastructure, investments, and export competitiveness. PMFME scheme supported 4.04 lakh applications, promoting micro-enterprises, women SHGs, and decentralised value addition in rural areas. Global And Strategic Dimension India ranks 1st in pulses, millets, spices and 2nd in rice, wheat, fruits, vegetables, strengthening its role as a global food security anchor. Rice exports reached $12.95 billion, highlighting dominance in global cereal markets, while diversification into processed food enhances export resilience and stability. India’s agricultural system supports South-South cooperation, contributing to global food supply stability and climate-resilient crop promotion (millets). Challenges And Gaps 86% small landholdings limit mechanisation, productivity gains, and economies of scale, constraining income growth despite policy support and technological interventions. Regional imbalance persists with Green Revolution states dominating cereals, while rainfed regions lag in productivity, infrastructure, and income levels. Environmental stress includes groundwater depletion, soil degradation, and N:P:K imbalance, threatening long-term sustainability of intensive agriculture. Market inefficiencies in APMC system, price volatility in perishables, and low processing share (~20%) limit farmer income realisation and export potential. Governance issues include scheme fragmentation, weak extension services, and last-mile delivery gaps, particularly affecting small and marginal farmers. Way Forward Reorient MSP towards pulses, oilseeds, millets to promote diversification, reduce import dependence, and ensure sustainable cropping aligned with agro-climatic conditions. Scale climate-smart agriculture through micro-irrigation, agroforestry, and weather-based advisories integrating traditional knowledge with modern technology. Strengthen FPOs with credit, capacity building, and market linkages to transform smallholders into competitive market participants. Expand cold chains, logistics, and agro-processing clusters to reduce post-harvest losses and increase farmer share in consumer prices. Promote digital agriculture (AgriStack, AI advisories, precision farming) to enhance productivity, reduce input costs, and improve decision-making efficiency. Prelims Pointers Foodgrain production (2024–25): 357.73 MMT; Horticulture: 362 MT PMFBY launched: 2016; MSP covers 22 crops NFSA beneficiaries: 81.35 crore e-NAM mandis: 1,656 India largest producer: pulses, millets, spices One Station One Product: Bringing India’s Local Heritage to Railway Platforms Introduction One Station One Product (OSOP) launched in Union Budget 2022–23 aims to promote indigenous products, local artisans, and regional identity through dedicated retail outlets at railway stations. As of January 2026, OSOP covers 2,000+ railway stations with 2,326 outlets, benefiting over 1.32 lakh individuals, demonstrating integration of public infrastructure with livelihood generation. Concept aligns with “Vocal for Local”, transforming railway stations into marketplaces for local goods, bridging gaps between production centres and consumer markets. Relevance   GS II (Governance / Polity) Innovative governance using public infrastructure Cooperative federalism (Railways–States–SHGs coordination) Directive Principles (Article 43 – promotion of cottage industries) GS Paper III (Economy / MSME / Inclusive Growth) MSME development and rural non-farm employment Market access, value chains, and local product promotion Infrastructure-led economic development Local-to-global economic strategy Practice Question  Q1.“One Station One Product (OSOP) reflects a paradigm shift in using infrastructure for inclusive economic development.” Discuss.(250 Words) Static Background Inspired by “One Village One Product (OVOP)” (Japan), focusing on local specialisation, branding, and decentralised economic development models. India adapted the model to the railway ecosystem, leveraging Indian Railways’ ~8 billion annual passengers (pre-COVID) to ensure mass-scale market access for local products. Constitutional And Legal Dimension Linked to Directive Principles (Article 43) promoting cottage industries and rural livelihoods through decentralised and community-based production systems. Supports Article 19(1)(g) by enabling artisans, SHGs, and MSMEs to access formal markets, economic opportunities, and entrepreneurial activities. Operates under an executive policy framework, implemented by Indian Railways in coordination with states, MSMEs, and SHGs, reflecting cooperative federalism. Governance And Administrative Dimension Launched on 25 March 2022, initially piloted across 19 stations for 15 days, and later scaled nationwide through structured and phased implementation. OSOP stalls are allotted on a rotational basis at nominal fees, ensuring inclusive participation and equitable access for artisans, SHGs, and MSMEs. Implementation involves Railway divisions, State agencies, SHGs, and MSMEs, ensuring institutional convergence, coordination, and operational efficiency. Economic Dimension Provides direct market access to local producers, reducing middlemen dependence, improving price realisation, income stability, and profitability. Enhances rural non-farm employment by promoting handicrafts, handlooms, agro-products, and processed goods at high-footfall railway stations. Supports MSME sector, contributing ~30% of GDP and ~45% of exports, strengthening grassroots entrepreneurship and economic diversification. Converts railway stations into commercial hubs, improving economic utilisation of public infrastructure and stimulating local economic ecosystems. Social And Ethical Dimension Prioritises women-led SHGs, artisans, weavers, and farmers, promoting inclusive growth, gender empowerment, and social equity in rural and semi-urban regions. Benefits over 1.32 lakh individuals, enhancing income security, dignity of labour, and community-level socio-economic empowerment. Encourages preservation of traditional crafts (Madhubani, Sanganeri prints, cane work), safeguarding intangible cultural heritage and local knowledge systems. Enhances consumer awareness, enabling travellers to engage with authentic local products, traditions, and cultural narratives. Environmental And Sustainability Dimension Promotes local production and consumption, reducing carbon footprint associated with long-distance logistics and supply chains. Encourages eco-friendly products such as handlooms, natural dyes, and handicrafts, which have lower environmental impact compared to industrial goods. Supports sustainable livelihoods, reducing pressure on agriculture and enabling diversification into non-farm and low-carbon economic activities. Market And Value Chain Dimension Integrates local producers into national market networks, improving visibility, branding, demand generation, and price discovery for regional products. Acts as a last-mile market linkage, complementing initiatives like e-NAM, ODOP, and PMFME in strengthening agricultural and rural value chains. Rotational stall allocation ensures product diversity, inclusivity, and wider participation, preventing monopolisation and ensuring equitable access. Enhances tourism-linked consumption, where passengers act as buyers of regional crafts and souvenirs, boosting local economies. Cultural And Heritage Dimension Showcases region-specific products such as Madhubani paintings (Bihar), Sanganeri textiles (Rajasthan), cane products (Tamil Nadu), reflecting India’s diversity. Transforms railway stations into cultural spaces, where commerce intersects with heritage, identity, and storytelling traditions. Strengthens domestic cultural diplomacy, promoting awareness of India’s diverse traditions, crafts, and regional identities among citizens and tourists. Challenges And Gaps Limited branding, packaging, and standardisation affects competitiveness against organised retail and e-commerce platforms. Inconsistent quality control across stations can reduce consumer trust, repeat demand, and brand reliability. Dependence on footfall-based physical sales limits scalability compared to digital and online marketplaces. Institutional coordination challenges between Railways, states, and SHGs may affect implementation efficiency and uniformity. Lack of digital integration and online sales channels restricts long-term market expansion and sustained income growth. Way Forward Integrate OSOP with digital platforms (e-commerce, ONDC) to expand market access, scalability, and national/global outreach. Develop standardised branding, packaging, and GI tagging to enhance product quality, recognition, and export competitiveness. Provide capacity building and skill development for artisans in design, marketing, and quality assurance systems. Converge with schemes like ODOP, PMFME, and National Handicrafts Mission for holistic value chain development and synergy. Introduce QR-based traceability and digital payments, improving transparency, consumer confidence, and digital inclusion. Prelims Pointers OSOP launched: 2022 (Union Budget) Coverage: 2,000+ stations; 2,326 outlets Beneficiaries: 1.32 lakh individuals Inspired by: OVOP (Japan) Focus: local products, SHGs, MSMEs

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 27 March 2026

Content The key to India’s multi-domain deterrence, capabilities Should men get paternity leave in India? The key to India’s multi-domain deterrence, capabilities Introduction China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) poses a systemic military challenge to India, with widening gaps in technology, scale, and industrial capacity, necessitating a robust defence-industrial strategy. Rapid evolution of military technologies (AI, drones, cyber, space) outpaces doctrinal adaptation, making capability prioritisation and procurement choices increasingly complex and uncertain. India faces critical decisions on “what to buy vs what to build”, balancing strategic autonomy, cost efficiency, and deterrence effectiveness against a technologically superior adversary. Relevance GS II (Polity / Governance / IR) National security governance and institutional coordination (MoD, DRDO, armed forces) India–China relations and border management Defence reforms, procurement policies (DAP 2020) Role of executive in defence planning (Union List – Entry 1) GS III (Security / Economy / S&T) Defence preparedness and deterrence strategy Defence industrial base, indigenisation, Atmanirbhar Bharat Emerging technologies: AI, drones, cyber, space warfare Internal security linkage: multi-domain warfare readiness Economic aspects: defence budget, R&D, industrial capacity Practice Question Q1.“India’s deterrence against China depends more on industrial capacity and multi-domain integration than on individual platforms.” Examine.(250 Words) Static Background China’s military modernisation driven by civil-military fusion and large-scale industrial capacity enables rapid production of missiles, drones, and advanced platforms at scale. India’s defence ecosystem historically dominated by public sector undertakings (DPSUs) faces constraints in speed, innovation, and scale, limiting its response to evolving threats. Constitutional And Legal Dimension Defence falls under Union List (Entry 1), giving Centre exclusive authority over armed forces, procurement, and national security policy. Policy frameworks like Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP 2020) and Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence aim to enhance indigenisation and private sector participation. Lack of clear long-term defence industrial legislation leads to fragmented planning and weak alignment between military doctrine and industrial policy. Governance And Administrative Dimension India faces three strategic options: bold technological leap, conservative integration, or middle-path hybrid approach, each involving trade-offs in risk, cost, and deterrence capability. Current procurement systems are often slow, bureaucratic, and risk-averse, limiting the military’s ability to adapt to rapidly evolving operational requirements. Need for institutional convergence between military, DRDO, private sector, and policymakers to create a unified deterrence vision and execution framework. Economic Dimension China’s defence budget (~$225+ billion) far exceeds India’s (~$75 billion), creating disparities in R&D investment, industrial output, and technological capabilities. India’s defence-industrial base lacks scale and surge capacity, particularly in missiles, munitions, drones, and advanced electronics, creating vulnerabilities in prolonged conflicts. Increased defence spending must focus on efficiency and prioritisation, rather than incremental expansion, to maximise deterrence per rupee spent. Security And Strategic Dimension India lacks a decisive “exquisite capability”, making deterrence dependent on layered capabilities rather than singular technological superiority. Strengthening deterrence requires altering China’s risk perception and military confidence, preventing assumptions of quick or decisive victory. Nuclear deterrence remains critical, especially given China’s nuclear capabilities, but cannot substitute for credible conventional deterrence. Technology And Military Dimension  Strategic Approaches Bold approach: Invest in next-generation technologies (AI, hypersonics, autonomous systems), but high risk of implementation failure and capability gaps. Conservative approach: Upgrade existing systems with digital integration, cyber, and electronic warfare, but limited impact on long-term balance of power. Middle path (optimal): Combine legacy platforms with enabling layers, enabling gradual transition towards multi-domain operations (MDO). Enabling Layers For Deterrence C4ISR systems (Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance) are critical; dominance ensures information superiority and battlefield awareness. Need for low-cost, expendable ISR platforms (drones, satellites) to maintain surveillance despite losses, ensuring operational continuity in conflict scenarios. Integration of missiles, aircraft, and drones forms a deep-strike layer capable of disrupting adversary logistics and command structures. Close-battle layer involving tanks, artillery, and infantry remains essential for territorial defence and frontline engagements. Robust logistics and infrastructure layer critical for sustaining long-duration conflicts, especially in high-altitude terrains like Ladakh sector. Industrial Dimension India’s key constraint lies not in technological capability, but in industrial capacity to produce at speed and scale, particularly in wartime scenarios. Urgent investments required in missiles, munitions, drones, C4ISR networks, and modernisation of legacy platforms. Greater role for private sector participation needed, as private firms often offer efficiency, innovation, and faster delivery timelines compared to DPSUs. Challenges And Gaps Weak alignment between military requirements and industrial output, leading to delays, inefficiencies, and capability gaps. Lack of long-term contracts and budget stability discourages private investment and limits industrial scaling. Bureaucratic procurement processes constrain innovation, flexibility, and rapid adaptation to emerging technologies. China’s advantage in mass production and inventory depth (missiles, drones) creates asymmetry in prolonged conflict scenarios. Limited integration of cyber, space, and electronic warfare capabilities weakens India’s ability to operate in modern multi-domain battlefields. Way Forward Prioritise development of enabling layers (C4ISR, strike systems, logistics) rather than focusing solely on platform-centric acquisitions. Expand defence-industrial base with private sector participation, supported by long-term contracts, policy stability, and reduced regulatory barriers. Adopt middle-path strategy, combining legacy systems with emerging technologies for gradual transition to multi-domain warfare capability. Increase investment in cyber, space, and electronic warfare, ensuring dominance in information and digital battlespaces. Reform procurement by emphasising speed, flexibility, and outcome-based planning, aligning acquisitions with evolving doctrinal needs. Prelims Pointers C4ISR: Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance DAP 2020: Defence procurement framework PLA: China’s armed forces India defence budget: ~$75 billion vs China ~$225 billion Focus areas: drones, missiles, cyber, space warfare Note: The views expressed are those of the newspaper editorial author and do not necessarily reflect the views of Legacy IAS Academy. Should men get paternity leave in India? Introduction The Supreme Court, in Hamsaanandini Nanduri case (2026), urged the Union government to examine a formal paternity leave law, recognising shared parenting as essential for child welfare. The Court highlighted that parenthood is not a solitary function, and excluding fathers from early childcare constitutes “a kind of injustice”, reinforcing gendered caregiving roles. Debate centres on balancing child development, gender equality, labour market realities, and economic feasibility within India’s predominantly informal workforce structure. Relevance GS Paper I (Indian Society) Gender roles, patriarchy, and division of unpaid work Changing family structures and urbanisation Women’s labour force participation GS Paper II (Polity / Governance / Social Justice) Labour laws and social security framework Welfare policies: Maternity Benefit Act, parental leave debate Role of state in promoting gender equality (DPSP, Fundamental Rights) Practice Question Q1.“Paternity leave is not merely a labour policy issue but a tool for gender equality.” Discuss.(250 Words) Static Background India currently lacks a statutory paternity leave law, though Central government employees receive ~15 days leave, and some private firms offer up to 3 months. Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (amended 2017) provides 26 weeks paid leave, but applies mainly to the formal sector (~10% workforce). Global models like Sweden’s 480 days parental leave (with 90 days non-transferable for each parent) highlight progressive gender-equal frameworks. Constitutional And Legal Dimension Linked to Article 14 (equality) and Article 15(3) enabling special provisions for women and children, extending logically to shared parental responsibilities. Supports Article 21 (right to life and dignity), including child’s right to care, development, and parental presence during formative years. Absence of statutory paternity leave reflects legal asymmetry, reinforcing gender stereotypes in caregiving roles and labour participation. Governance And Administrative Dimension Implementation challenges arise due to labour market dualism, with 90% workforce in informal sector lacking access to statutory benefits. Small enterprise structure (90% firms employ 1–10 workers) limits feasibility of long leave policies due to operational and cost constraints. Labour Codes (2020) aim at formalisation, but transition remains gradual, delaying universal applicability of parental leave frameworks. Economic Dimension Women’s labour force participation remains low (~20–25%), partly due to disproportionate childcare burden and lack of support systems. Time Use Survey shows women spend ~10 times more hours on unpaid domestic work than men, affecting productivity and economic inclusion. Employers may perceive maternity benefits as a cost burden, leading to hiring discrimination and “motherhood penalty” in wages and promotions. Extending parental leave without structural reforms may increase compliance costs for MSMEs, affecting employment generation and firm viability. Social And Ethical Dimension Reinforces need to challenge patriarchal norms, where caregiving is seen as women’s responsibility and men as primary earners. Promotes shared parenting, improving child development outcomes and reducing gender bias in early socialisation. Addresses gender inequality in unpaid care work, enabling women greater participation in education, employment, and decision-making. However, risk exists that without behavioural change, leave may be underutilised or misused, failing to achieve intended social outcomes. Labour And Structural Dimension Informal sector dominance (~90% workforce) limits reach of any statutory leave policy, excluding the most vulnerable workers from benefits. Gig economy workers face absence of social security and leave entitlements, leading to labour force exit during childbirth or caregiving phases. Small firm size and fragmented labour markets create structural barriers to universal parental leave implementation. Comparative Perspective Scandinavian countries show that non-transferable paternity quotas increase male participation in childcare and improve female labour force participation. Evidence indicates positive correlation between paternity leave and gender equality, but contextual adaptation is necessary for India’s economic structure. Challenges And Gaps Absence of universal legal framework for paternity leave creates inequality across sectors and employment types. Risk of reinforcing discrimination against women, as employers may avoid hiring women due to perceived higher costs of parental benefits. Cultural resistance due to deep-rooted patriarchal norms limits acceptance and effective utilisation of paternity leave. Economic constraints in MSMEs and informal sector make implementation financially and operationally difficult. Monitoring issues: subtle discrimination (promotion delays, role downgrading) difficult to prove under existing legal frameworks. Way Forward Shift from maternity leave to gender-neutral parental leave, with non-transferable quota for fathers to ensure actual participation. Introduce phased implementation, starting with formal sector and gradually expanding through labour formalisation and social security frameworks. Provide government incentives/subsidies to MSMEs to offset cost burden and encourage compliance with parental leave policies. Promote behavioural change campaigns to address patriarchal norms and normalise shared caregiving responsibilities. Extend coverage to gig and informal workers through universal social security schemes and maternity benefit expansion models. Prelims Pointers Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 (amended 2017): 26 weeks leave Informal workforce: ~90% of total employment Central govt paternity leave: ~15 days Sweden parental leave: 480 days (90 days reserved for each parent) Time Use Survey: women do ~10× unpaid work

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 27 March 2026

Content Pink Bollworm, Cotton Crisis And Implications For India Gold Price Fall During Crisis – Changing Safe Haven Dynamics India Exploring Local Currency Trade For Oil Imports Living Will And End-of-Life Care In India UDAN Scheme Revamp – Regional Connectivity And Viability Concerns Punjab–Rajasthan Water Dispute – ₹1.44 Lakh Crore Claim WTO Dispute Settlement Crisis And India’s Position Pink Bollworm, Cotton Crisis And Implications For India Introduction The resurgence of pink bollworm (Pectinophora gossypiella) has triggered a cotton productivity crisis in India, especially in north-western states like Haryana, Punjab, and Rajasthan. Once controlled by Bt cotton (early 2000s), the pest has developed resistance since ~2010s, leading to sharp yield decline and farmer losses. Relevance   GS I (Geography / Society) Cropping patterns and regional shifts (cotton → paddy in NW India) Agrarian distress and rural livelihood patterns Impact on women labour and migration GS III (Agriculture / Economy / Environment) Agricultural productivity decline and pest resistance GM crops (Bt cotton) and technological limitations Climate-unsuitable cropping and groundwater depletion Agri-value chains and textile industry linkages Practice Question “The pink bollworm crisis highlights structural weaknesses in India’s cotton economy.” Analyse.(250 Words) Cotton In India – Key Facts India is among the largest cotton producers globally, but productivity remains low compared to countries like USA, China, Brazil. Cotton contributes to: Textile industry (~45 million jobs) Export earnings (~$12–15 billion annually) Livelihoods of ~6 million farmers Production declined from 36.07 million bales (2019–20) to 29.72 million bales (2024–25) (~14.84% fall). Pink Bollworm – Nature Of Crisis Pink bollworm is a major cotton pest that damages bolls internally, reducing yield and fibre quality. Bt cotton initially effective due to Bacillus thuringiensis toxin, but pest developed genetic resistance, reducing effectiveness. Yield impact: Earlier: 10–12 quintals/acre Current: ~3–4 quintals/acre in affected regions Continuous monocropping of Bt cotton and lack of refuge crops accelerated resistance development. Impact On Farmers Cost of cultivation: ~₹40,000 per acre vs returns ~₹25,000, resulting in losses ~₹15,000 per acre. Market price often ₹1,000–₹1,600 below MSP, due to quality issues and weak procurement. Farmers face triple burden: Pest infestation Rising input costs Price realisation failure Regional Evidence (Haryana Case) Cotton area declined from 0.72 million ha (2019–20) to 0.40 million ha (2024–25). District-level losses up to ₹17,500 per acre reported (CCSHAU study). Yield volatility: 714 kg/ha (2019) → 264 kg/ha (2022) → ~534 kg/ha (2024). Cropping Pattern Shift Farmers shifting from cotton to paddy, despite ecological unsuitability. Example: Sirsa district saw 55.18% increase in paddy area (2020–2024). This shift worsens groundwater depletion in already water-stressed regions of north-west India. Policy And Institutional Issues MSP exists but procurement is weak, forcing farmers into distress sales. Crop insurance (PMFBY) suffers from delayed or denied payouts, reducing effectiveness. Incentives like: ₹3,000/acre (desi cotton) ₹8,000/acre (Mera Pani-Meri Virasat) have low uptake due to market and seed constraints. Labour And Social Impact Cotton is labour-intensive, especially for manual picking, supporting rural employment. Decline in cotton reduces employment for women labourers, with seasonal income loss of ₹10,000–₹15,000. Shift to paddy increases reliance on migrant labour, displacing local workers and increasing distress migration. Structural Issues In Cotton Economy Overdependence on single technology (Bt cotton) without continuous innovation. Weak R&D ecosystem for developing next-generation pest-resistant varieties. Lack of value chain integration (ginning, textiles, exports) reduces farmer share in final price. Limited availability of desi cotton seeds despite better resilience. Broader Implications Threat to textile industry supply chain, increasing reliance on cotton imports. Undermines crop diversification and sustainability goals, especially in water-stressed regions. Reflects larger agrarian issue of price-cost imbalance and technological stagnation. Indicates limits of genetically modified crops without integrated pest management. Way Forward Develop next-generation pest-resistant cotton varieties and strengthen public sector seed research. Promote Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and enforce refuge policy to delay resistance development. Strengthen MSP procurement mechanisms and ensure better price realisation. Improve insurance delivery (PMFBY) with timely payouts and transparency. Promote diversified cropping systems with assured markets to reduce monoculture risks. Expand cotton value chain (processing, textiles) to enhance farmer income share. Prelims Pointers Pink bollworm: major cotton pest; affects bolls internally Bt cotton: introduced early 2000s using Bacillus thuringiensis Cotton production: 36.07 → 29.72 million bales Haryana cotton area: 0.72 → 0.40 million ha Scheme: Mera Pani-Meri Virasat (₹8,000/acre) Gold Price Fall During Crisis – Changing Safe Haven Dynamics Introduction Contrary to historical trends, gold prices fell sharply during the West Asian conflict (Feb 2026), declining from ~₹1.9 lakh to ~₹1.3 lakh per 10 grams in India. Traditionally a safe haven asset, gold usually rises during crises (e.g., 2008 crisis, COVID-19, Ukraine war 2022), but current behaviour reflects changing macro-financial dynamics. Relevance GS II (IR) Impact of global conflicts (West Asia) on financial markets Role of US dollar dominance in global economy GS Paper III (Economy) Monetary policy: interest rates, inflation, bond markets Safe haven assets (gold, dollar, US Treasuries) External sector dynamics and capital flows Commodity price behaviour under crisis Practice Question Why did gold fail to act as a safe haven during recent global crises? Analyse.(250 Words) How Gold Typically Behaves In Crises ? Gold acts as a store of value when uncertainty rises, especially when financial markets, currencies, or institutions are unstable. It becomes attractive when interest rates fall, as gold does not yield returns, reducing its opportunity cost relative to bonds. A weak US dollar boosts gold demand globally, as gold becomes cheaper for non-dollar buyers, increasing prices. What Changed In Current Crisis ? The West Asian conflict triggered a sharp rise in crude oil prices (> $120/barrel), creating inflationary pressures globally. Markets now expect interest rates to remain higher for longer, reversing earlier expectations of rate cuts by central banks. Higher expected interest rates increase returns on US Treasury bonds, making gold (a non-yielding asset) less attractive. Role Of Dollar And Interest Rates Rising interest rate expectations led to capital inflows into US bonds, strengthening the US dollar. A stronger dollar makes gold more expensive globally, reducing demand and putting downward pressure on prices. Thus, key drivers of gold rallies (low rates + weak dollar) moved in the opposite direction simultaneously. Liquidity And Market Dynamics Gold had already reached record highs (~₹1.8–1.9 lakh per 10 grams; >$5,000/ounce globally) before the conflict, creating scope for correction. Falling prices triggered automatic sell orders (stop-loss), causing a chain reaction of selling and accelerating price decline. Investors facing losses in equities sold gold to book profits and meet liquidity needs, reinforcing downward pressure. Shift In Safe Haven Preference In the short run, the US dollar has re-emerged as the primary safe haven, especially during inflation-driven crises. Oil price rise increases global demand for dollars (since oil is dollar-denominated), further strengthening the currency. Despite diversification trends (dollar share in reserves: ~71% → <60%), the dollar remains dominant in global trade and reserves. Why Gold Still Retains Importance ? Central banks continue to accumulate gold reserves, reflecting long-term confidence as a sanction-proof asset. After Russia asset freeze (2022), countries increased gold holdings as it is immune to financial sanctions. Gold ETF inflows in India remained positive for 10 consecutive months, indicating sustained investment demand. Indian Context Gold imports fell 38% month-on-month (Feb 2026) but remained ~80% higher year-on-year, indicating underlying demand strength. Physical jewellery demand softened due to high prices, but investment demand via ETFs remained resilient. Gold continues to play a key role in household savings, inflation hedge, and cultural asset in India. Key Economic Insight Current episode highlights that gold behaves differently depending on type of crisis: Financial crisis → gold rises Inflation + high interest rates → gold may fall Indicates shift from “uncertainty-driven demand” to “interest rate-driven valuation” in global financial markets. What Lies Ahead ? If oil prices stabilise, inflation concerns may ease, leading to rate cuts → favourable for gold. If conflict intensifies and inflation persists, stagflation scenario may emerge, which historically supports gold prices. Long-term outlook remains bullish, with corrections seen as part of cyclical market adjustments. Prelims Pointers Gold priced in US dollars globally Relationship: Interest rates ↑ → Gold ↓ Dollar ↑ → Gold ↓ Safe haven assets: Gold, US dollar, US Treasury bonds Stagflation: High inflation + low growth India Exploring Local Currency Trade For Oil Imports Introduction India is exploring local currency trade with GCC countries to reduce dependence on the US dollar for oil imports, which constitute nearly 80% of total crude imports. The move is driven by surging oil prices ($69 → $123/barrel) and rupee depreciation (₹91.3 → ₹94.1/$), increasing India’s import burden. Relevance GS II (IR) India–GCC relations and energy diplomacy De-dollarisation and global financial geopolitics Strategic balancing between US and emerging blocs GS Paper III (Economy) Current Account Deficit (CAD) and exchange rate External sector vulnerability and forex management Rupee internationalisation Trade settlement mechanisms and currency risks Practice Question Analyse the implications of local currency trade for India’s energy security and external stability.(250 Words) Key Context And Data GCC countries account for ~49% of India’s oil imports, while Russia contributes ~30.4% (Apr 2025–Jan 2026). India’s crude basket price rose to $123.15/barrel, significantly increasing import bills and widening current account deficit pressures. Each currency conversion costs ~1–2% per transaction, leading to cumulative costs of ~5–6% in multi-stage conversions. Why India Is Moving Towards Local Currency Trade ? Rupee depreciation increases cost of dollar-denominated imports, making oil more expensive and worsening inflation and fiscal pressures. High oil prices amplify import costs, creating a double shock: price effect + exchange rate effect. Local currency trade reduces transaction costs, exchange rate risks, and dependency on dollar liquidity. Economic Implications Potential savings of 5–6% on high-value oil transactions can significantly reduce India’s import bill and fiscal stress. Helps stabilise current account deficit (CAD) by lowering outflow of foreign exchange reserves. Reduces exposure to currency volatility, improving predictability in trade payments. Strategic And Geopolitical Implications Indicates gradual move towards de-dollarisation in trade, aligning with global trends of currency diversification. Strengthens economic ties with GCC countries, which are India’s key energy partners. However, may attract US pressure, as the US has historically opposed alternatives to the dollar in global trade. Existing Precedents India already uses local currencies and dirham-based payments for Russian oil imports. Similar arrangements have been explored with countries like UAE (rupee-dirham trade mechanism). Benefits Of Local Currency Mechanism Reduces currency conversion costs (1–2% per stage), especially in multi-currency transactions. Enhances trade settlement efficiency and speed, avoiding multiple intermediary conversions. Promotes internationalisation of the rupee and strengthens India’s financial sovereignty. Challenges And Risks Limited acceptance of rupee internationally, especially among oil-exporting nations with dollar-linked economies. Risk of geopolitical backlash, particularly from the US, including potential tariff or trade pressures. Currency volatility and lack of deep financial markets for rupee settlement may limit scalability. GCC economies are heavily dollar-pegged, making transition to alternative currencies complex. Way Forward Develop bilateral currency swap agreements and settlement mechanisms with GCC countries. Strengthen rupee internationalisation through trade invoicing, financial markets, and reserve currency usage. Build robust payment infrastructure (like UPI cross-border, digital currency frameworks) for seamless transactions. Maintain a balanced approach, ensuring diversification without disrupting strategic ties with the US. Prelims Pointers India imports ~85% of crude oil needs GCC share: ~49%; Russia: ~30.4% Oil priced in US dollars globally Indian crude basket: $123.15/barrel (2026) Currency conversion cost: ~1–2% per stage Living Will And End-of-Life Care In India  Introduction A living will (advance directive) is a legal document specifying an individual’s preferences regarding life-sustaining treatment in terminal or irreversible conditions, ensuring dignity in end-of-life care. Recognised by the Supreme Court in Common Cause vs Union of India (2018), it upholds patient autonomy and right to die with dignity under Article 21. Relevance   GS Paper I (Society) Changing attitudes towards death, dignity, and autonomy Family structures and decision-making GS Paper II (Polity / Governance) Article 21: Right to life with dignity Supreme Court judgments (Common Cause case) Healthcare governance and palliative care policy GS Paper III (Social Sector) Healthcare infrastructure and palliative care systems Cost of healthcare and end-of-life expenditure Practice Question Discuss the ethical and legal dimensions of living wills in India.(250 Words) What Is A Living Will ? It allows individuals to decide in advance whether to accept or refuse life-support interventions such as ventilators, CPR, artificial feeding, or ICU care in irreversible conditions. Applies only when a person is terminally ill or in irreversible states (e.g., persistent vegetative state, metastatic cancer), not for routine or curable illnesses. Requires signature of the individual, two witnesses, and attestation by a notary/gazetted officer, with recent simplification removing magistrate requirement. Why It Is Important ? Prevents unnecessary prolongation of suffering, especially in cases with no hope of recovery. Reduces emotional burden on families, who otherwise face difficult decisions amid conflict, guilt, and uncertainty. Ensures doctors respect patient preferences, rather than defaulting to aggressive life-prolonging treatments. Studies show it does not affect survival, but reduces unnecessary interventions and healthcare costs. Current Reality In India Most end-of-life decisions are family-driven or doctor-driven, often leading to continued ICU care even in terminal cases. Lack of awareness leads to patients spending final days on life support, disconnected from family, with poor quality of life. Palliative care access remains limited, despite guidelines by Indian Association of Palliative Care (IAPC) and Indian Society of Critical Care Medicine (ISCCM). Ethical And Social Issues Reflects tension between sanctity of life vs quality of life in medical ethics. Challenges patriarchal and family-centric decision-making, shifting focus to individual autonomy. Cultural reluctance to discuss death leads to lack of preparedness and planning. Risk of misuse or misunderstanding if clear guidelines and safeguards are not followed. Key Judicial Developments Common Cause (2018): Legalised passive euthanasia and recognised living wills. Recent SC rulings (e.g., Harish Rana case 2026) clarified that withdrawal of artificial feeding/medical support can be allowed under medical supervision. Simplified procedure: removed requirement of judicial magistrate approval, making implementation easier. Practical Aspects Living will can specify preferences such as: No ventilator support No artificial feeding No CPR Preference for palliative/comfort care It is flexible and revisable, allowing individuals to update preferences over time. Requires prior discussion with family members and treating doctors to avoid future disputes. Challenges Low awareness and social taboo around death planning. Limited integration into hospital protocols and medical practice. Absence of strong palliative care infrastructure, especially in rural India. Fear among doctors of legal liability and ethical dilemmas. Way Forward Increase public awareness campaigns on living wills and end-of-life planning. Integrate advance directives into digital health records (Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission). Strengthen palliative care services and include them in primary healthcare. Provide legal clarity and standardised templates for easy adoption. Train healthcare professionals in end-of-life communication and ethical decision-making. Prelims Pointers Living will = Advance directive Recognised in 2018 SC judgment (Common Cause case) Applies only to terminal/irreversible conditions Requires 2 witnesses + notary/gazetted officer Linked to Article 21 (right to dignity) UDAN Scheme Revamp – Regional Connectivity And Viability Concerns Introduction The government has revamped the UDAN (Ude Desh ka Aam Nagrik) scheme with an outlay of ₹28,840 crore, marking a ~6-fold increase from the earlier ₹4,500 crore allocation (2017). The reform aims to address low route viability and high discontinuation rates, shifting focus from infrastructure creation to sustained operational support. Relevance GS II (Governance) Public policy design and subsidy frameworks Role of government in regional development Centre–state coordination in infrastructure GS III (Economy / Infrastructure) Aviation sector development Viability Gap Funding (VGF) Infrastructure financing and regional growth Tourism and logistics connectivity Practice Question Critically evaluate the performance of UDAN scheme and recent reforms.(250 Words) Key Changes In UDAN Revamp Subsidy period extended from 3 years to 5 years for regional routes to improve long-term sustainability. Funding mechanism shifted from RCS levy (airfare-based) to direct budgetary support (exchequer-funded), reducing burden on passengers. ₹10,043 crore allocated specifically for Viability Gap Funding (VGF) to airlines over 10 years. Performance Of Earlier UDAN Scheme Out of 663 routes launched (since 2017), 327 routes discontinued (~49%), indicating poor sustainability. Only 7–10% of routes remained viable after subsidy withdrawal (CAG findings). Of 95 revived airports, 15 became non-operational, highlighting underutilisation of infrastructure. Infrastructure And Expansion Plans 100 airports to be redeveloped from unused airstrips with ₹12,159 crore outlay over 8 years. Support for operations and maintenance (O&M): ₹3.06 crore per airport ₹90 lakh per heliport/water aerodrome Total ₹2,577 crore for ~441 aerodromes Development of 200 helipads at ₹15 crore each (total ₹3,661 crore) to improve last-mile connectivity in remote areas. Operational Mechanism Airlines bid for routes under UDAN; selected airlines receive VGF subsidy. In return, airlines must cap fares at ₹2,500 per hour of flight for 50% of seats, ensuring affordability. Key Issues Highlighted Commercial unviability of Tier-2 and Tier-3 routes due to low passenger demand and high operational costs. Over-reliance on short-term subsidies (earlier 3 years) failed to create self-sustaining routes. Infrastructure created without adequate traffic demand assessment led to idle airports. Economic Implications Higher subsidy burden shifts cost to government finances, increasing fiscal expenditure. However, improved connectivity can boost regional economies, tourism, trade, and employment generation. Reduces regional imbalance in aviation access, aligning with inclusive growth objectives. Governance And Policy Shift Transition from infrastructure-centric approach → viability-centric approach. Recognition that regional aviation requires long-term state support, not short-term market correction. Direct exchequer funding improves transparency and predictability compared to indirect levy mechanism. Strategic Importance Enhances connectivity to remote, hilly, and underserved regions, improving national integration. Supports multi-modal connectivity vision under PM Gati Shakti. Boosts defence and emergency access in border and strategic areas via helipads and small airports. Challenges Risk of continued dependency on subsidies, without achieving long-term route viability. Potential inefficiencies in route selection and demand forecasting. Limited airline participation due to thin profit margins in regional aviation. High operational costs (fuel, maintenance) may still deter sustainability despite extended subsidies. Way Forward Improve route selection using data-driven demand forecasting to ensure viability. Encourage smaller aircraft and regional carriers suited for low-demand routes. Integrate UDAN with tourism circuits, cargo logistics, and regional economic planning. Strengthen state government participation and incentives for last-mile connectivity. Gradually move towards hybrid funding models combining public support and private viability. Prelims Pointers UDAN launched: 2017 Fare cap: ₹2,500 per hour (50% seats) Revamp outlay: ₹28,840 crore Routes launched: 663; ~327 discontinued Subsidy: Viability Gap Funding (VGF) Punjab–Rajasthan Water Dispute – ₹1.44 Lakh Crore Claim Introduction Punjab CM has demanded ₹1.44 lakh crore from Rajasthan for use of ~18,000 cusecs water since 1960, reviving a long-standing dispute over Ravi-Beas river waters. Issue combines colonial-era agreements, post-Independence allocations, and present water scarcity, making it a complex inter-state dispute. Relevance GS I (Geography) River systems (Ravi–Beas) and water distribution Water scarcity and regional imbalances GS II (Polity / Governance) Inter-state water disputes (Article 131) Federalism and river water sharing Role of tribunals and Supreme Court Practice Question Analyse the legal and constitutional dimensions of inter-state water disputes in India.(250 Words) Historical Background 1920s Agreement (Bikaner–Punjab): Maharaja Ganga Singh secured water from Sutlej (Gang Canal). Rajasthan (Bikaner) paid royalty/usage charges linked to irrigated land. Payments continued till ~1960, after which the system was discontinued. Post-Independence Shift Indus Waters Treaty (1960): India got full control over Ravi, Beas, Sutlej (Eastern rivers). Water reallocation became an internal matter, not commercial. Development of Harike Barrage + Rajasthan Canal (Indira Gandhi Canal) enabled large-scale diversion to Rajasthan. Royalty-based payment system ended; water treated as inter-state allocation. 1981 Water Sharing Agreement Tripartite agreement (Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan) fixed total availability at 17.17 MAF. Allocation: Rajasthan: 8.6 MAF (largest share) Punjab & Haryana shared remaining Rajasthan’s entitlement formalised despite being a non-riparian state. Origin, Course And Features Beas River originates from Beas Kund near Rohtang Pass (Himachal Pradesh, ~4,000 m) and flows through Himachal Pradesh and Punjab, joining Sutlej at Harike Barrage. Ravi River originates in Chamba (Himachal Pradesh) near Rohtang region, flows through Punjab, and enters Pakistan to join Chenab. Both are part of the Indus River System and classified as Eastern Rivers under Indus Waters Treaty (1960), giving India full usage rights. Legal Developments Punjab Termination of Agreements Act (2004) attempted to scrap water-sharing agreements. However, it protected “existing utilisation”, so Rajasthan’s supply continued. Supreme Court (2016) ruled that a state cannot unilaterally terminate inter-state agreements, restoring legal validity of earlier arrangements. Punjab’s Current Argument Based on riparian principle: States through which rivers flow should have primary rights over water. Rajasthan is a non-riparian state (not in Ravi-Beas basin), yet has largest share. Punjab argues that historical diversion has imposed economic and ecological cost, now quantified as ₹1.44 lakh crore. Changing Ground Realities Water availability assumptions (“surplus waters”) used in 1981 have weakened due to: Climate variability Increased demand Over-extraction Punjab groundwater extraction: 156.36% of annual recharge (highest in India) vs national average ~60.63%. Canal irrigation in Punjab increased from ~26.5% (2022) to ~78% (2025), indicating rising internal demand. Rajasthan’s Position Relies on Indira Gandhi Canal system for irrigation in Thar desert region. Water supports agriculture, livelihoods, and desert development, making reallocation politically and economically sensitive. Key Issues Conflict between riparian rights vs national redistribution for regional equity. Historical allocations remain fixed despite changing hydrological realities. Lack of updated basin-level water assessment and adaptive allocation mechanism. Political dimension: water disputes linked to federal tensions and regional identity. Why Issue Has Resurfaced Now ? Severe groundwater depletion in Punjab and sustainability concerns. Increasing focus on water security and river basin management at national level. Quantifying claim (₹1.44 lakh crore) converts political grievance into negotiation leverage. Possible Legal And Institutional Routes Punjab may approach Supreme Court (Article 131 – inter-state disputes). Issue can be revisited through Ravi-Beas Tribunal (pending for decades). Any resolution requires Centre-mediated negotiation among states. Challenges Revisiting allocations may trigger chain reaction of inter-state disputes across India. Balancing equity (desert irrigation) vs rights (riparian states) is politically sensitive. Lack of consensus on actual water availability (MAF estimates outdated). Way Forward Conduct fresh basin-level hydrological assessment based on current data. Move towards dynamic allocation mechanisms, not fixed historical quotas. Strengthen river basin authorities for integrated water management. Promote water-use efficiency (micro-irrigation, crop diversification) in both states. Encourage cooperative federalism through negotiated settlements rather than litigation. Prelims Pointers Indus Waters Treaty (1960): Eastern rivers to India Ravi-Beas allocation (1981): Total 17.17 MAF Rajasthan share: 8.6 MAF Punjab groundwater extraction: 156.36% Article 131: SC jurisdiction in inter-state disputes WTO Dispute Settlement Crisis And India’s Position Introduction India has called for restoring a fully functional WTO dispute settlement system, highlighting paralysis since 2019 due to US blocking Appellate Body appointments. The issue was raised at the 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14), Cameroon (2026), reflecting a deep crisis in global trade governance. Relevance   GS II (IR) WTO crisis and multilateralism India as voice of Global South Trade diplomacy and negotiations GS III (Economy) Global trade governance Dispute settlement mechanism Digital trade and e-commerce issues Impact on developing economies Practice Question Discuss the implications of WTO dispute settlement crisis on global trade governance.(250 Words) Background Of The Crisis WTO’s dispute settlement system (DSS) was a two-tier mechanism: Panel stage Appellate Body (final authority) Since December 2019, the Appellate Body is non-functional due to insufficient judges (<3 required). Trigger: US opposition, citing concerns over judicial overreach and delays. India’s Core Position Calls for automatic and binding dispute settlement restoration, ensuring predictability and rule-based trade order. Opposes “dysfunctional system” depriving members of effective redressal. Advocates reforms that preserve core WTO principles: Non-discrimination Consensus-based decision-making Equity and inclusiveness Key Reform Concerns Developed countries pushing for plurilateral agreements (outside consensus), risking fragmentation of WTO. India supports multilateral, consensus-driven approach, resisting dilution of developing country interests. Debate over moratorium on customs duties on e-commerce: In place since 1998 Renewed every 2 years India’s Stand On E-Commerce Moratorium India (with South Africa, Indonesia) seeks reconsideration/ending of moratorium. Argument: Loss of tariff revenue Constraint on policy space for digital industrialisation UNCTAD estimate: Developing countries may lose ~$10 billion annually in tariff revenue. By 2025, digital services projected to form ~56% of global services exports, amplifying revenue loss concerns. Economic Implications Weak dispute system reduces trust in global trade rules, increasing unilateralism. Benefits powerful economies, while developing countries lose enforcement capability. Digital trade rules without tariffs may deepen digital divide and limit domestic industry growth. Strategic Dimensions Crisis reflects shift from multilateralism → power-based trade order. India positioning itself as voice of Global South, advocating fair rules. Aligns with broader push for reformed multilateral institutions (WTO, IMF, World Bank). Challenges US resistance remains a major obstacle to restoring Appellate Body. Divergence between developed vs developing countries on digital trade, subsidies, and transparency. Rise of regional trade agreements (RTAs) reducing WTO centrality. Way Forward Restore Appellate Body with reformed procedures addressing US concerns (timelines, mandate clarity). Strengthen consensus-based multilateralism, avoiding fragmentation via plurilaterals. Revisit e-commerce moratorium with balanced approach ensuring revenue + innovation. Enhance capacity of developing countries in dispute settlement and digital trade negotiations. Prelims Pointers WTO Appellate Body non-functional since 2019 MC14 held in Cameroon (2026) E-commerce moratorium: since 1998 DSS requires minimum 3 judges India + South Africa oppose continuation of moratorium

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 26 March 2026

Content 9th PharmaMed 2026 to be held at New Delhi Cabinet approves India’s Nationally Determined Contribution (2031-2035) to be communicated to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 9th PharmaMed 2026 to be held at New Delhi Issue in Brief 9th PharmaMed 2026 in New Delhi convenes policymakers, regulators, and industry leaders to deliberate India’s pharmaceutical transition towards innovation-driven, equitable, and globally competitive healthcare ecosystem aligned with Viksit Bharat 2047 vision. Conference emphasises regulatory harmonisation, quality assurance, innovation, and last-mile access, reflecting India’s dual challenge of sustaining global generic leadership while ensuring affordable medicines for its 1.4 billion population. Relevance GS II (Governance & Health): Drug regulation (Central Drugs Standard Control Organization), affordability (National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority), Right to Health (Art. 21). Role of schemes like PM Bhartiya Janaushadhi Pariyojana in Universal Health Coverage. GS III (Economy & S&T): Pharma industry growth (~USD 50B → USD 130B by 2030), global generics leadership. API dependence (~65% imports) → supply chain vulnerability. Innovation gap (R&D 8–10% vs global 15–20%). Practice Question Q1.“India’s pharmaceutical sector faces a paradox of global scale but limited innovation.” Analyse the structural constraints and suggest policy reforms. (250 words) Institutional Background India’s pharma sector regulated under Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940, with Central Drugs Standard Control Organization ensuring drug safety, efficacy, and quality through approvals, licensing, and post-marketing surveillance mechanisms. National Pharmaceutical Policy, 2012 and Drug Price Control Order (DPCO) operationalised via National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority ensure affordability, covering 800+ essential drugs under price control to promote healthcare equity. India is 3rd largest pharma producer by volume and 14th by value, supplying 20% of global generics and 60% of vaccines, indicating strong scale but limited value addition. Multi-Dimensional Analysis Constitutional / Legal Article 21 (Right to Life) includes right to health and access to medicines, reinforced in Paschim Banga case, obligating state to ensure timely and affordable healthcare delivery. India’s TRIPS compliance balances patent protection and public health, using compulsory licensing to ensure availability of essential medicines in public interest, especially during health emergencies. Governance / Administrative Regulatory fragmentation between CDSCO and State Drug Controllers leads to uneven enforcement capacity, necessitating harmonised digital regulatory architecture for uniform drug quality standards. PLI Schemes for APIs and bulk drugs aim to reduce ~65% import dependence on China, strengthening supply chain resilience and advancing Atmanirbhar Bharat objectives. Economic Indian pharma industry valued at ~USD 50 billion (2023), projected to reach ~USD 130 billion by 2030, driven by exports, generics demand, and emerging biologics and biosimilars segments. Low-margin generic dominance limits profitability; India spends only 8–10% of revenue on R&D compared to 15–20% globally, constraining shift towards innovation-led value chain. Social / Ethical Out-of-pocket expenditure ~48% of total health spending (National Health Accounts), making affordable medicines critical to reduce catastrophic expenditure and achieve Universal Health Coverage (UHC). Persistent urban-rural disparities in access, with rural areas lacking pharmacies and logistics, requiring expansion of Jan Aushadhi Kendras and digital health platforms for last-mile delivery. Environment / Security / Tech API manufacturing contributes to chemical pollution, requiring stricter environmental compliance and green chemistry practices for sustainable pharmaceutical growth. Counterfeit drugs (~3–5% of market) pose serious public health risks; adoption of blockchain, QR-based track-and-trace systems essential for supply chain integrity. Growth of e-pharmacies and telemedicine under Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM) enhances access but raises concerns on data privacy, cybersecurity, and ethical governance.  Data & Evidence India exports medicines to 200+ countries, with exports worth ~USD 27 billion (2023), reinforcing its role as “Pharmacy of the World” (Economic Survey). PM Bhartiya Janaushadhi Pariyojana (PMBJP) operates 18,000+ stores, offering medicines at 50–90% lower prices, significantly improving affordability for economically weaker sections.  Challenges / Criticism Regulatory capacity gaps and uneven enforcement affect drug quality perception, leading to compliance issues with stringent regulators like USFDA and EMA. High API import dependence (~65%) exposes India to geopolitical risks and supply disruptions, as seen during COVID-19 pandemic. Weak innovation ecosystem due to low R&D investment, limited industry-academia collaboration, and regulatory delays hampers growth in high-value segments like biologics. Ethical concerns such as aggressive pharma marketing, prescription bias, and data misuse undermine patient trust and transparency in healthcare delivery. Way Forward Establish “One Nation–One Drug Regulator” through digital integration of CDSCO and state regulators for uniform standards, faster approvals, and improved compliance monitoring. Boost R&D investment via ICMR, BIRAC funding, tax incentives, and innovation clusters, focusing on biologics, vaccines, and precision medicine. Expand PM Jan Aushadhi network and integrate with ABDM to ensure affordable, accessible medicines through digital prescriptions and last-mile delivery. Strengthen API self-reliance through expanded PLI schemes, bulk drug parks, and strategic reserves of critical inputs. Implement end-to-end drug traceability (QR/blockchain) to curb counterfeit medicines and ensure global compliance standards. Enforce Uniform Code of Pharmaceutical Marketing Practices (UCPMP) strictly to ensure ethical governance and transparency in doctor-industry interactions. Prelims Pointers CDSCO functions under Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, not Chemicals and Fertilizers. NPPA implements DPCO, not CDSCO. India is 3rd by volume, 14th by value in pharma production globally. PMBJP provides generic medicines at subsidised rates through government-supported outlets. Cabinet approves India’s Nationally Determined Contribution (2031-2035) to be communicated to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Why in News ? Union Cabinet approval on 25 March 2026 for India’s NDC (2031–2035) to be submitted to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, marking next cycle of Paris Agreement commitments. India enhanced targets to 47% emissions intensity reduction, 60% non-fossil capacity, and 3.5–4 billion tonnes carbon sink by 2035, signalling post-2030 ambition escalation beyond earlier commitments. Relevance GS II (International Relations): India’s commitments under Paris Agreement via UNFCCC. Climate justice, CBDR-RC principle. GS III (Environment & Economy): Targets: 47% emission intensity reduction, 60% non-fossil capacity, 3.5–4 billion tonnes carbon sink. Renewable transition, green hydrogen, carbon markets. GS III (Internal Security / Energy): Reduced fossil dependence → energy security. Practice Question Q1.India’s updated Nationally Determined Contributions reflect a balance between development and climate responsibility. Critically analyse. (250 words) Issue in Brief India commits to 47% reduction in emissions intensity of GDP by 2035 (base year: 2005), compared to earlier 45% target for 2030 (updated NDC 2022). New targets include 60% installed electricity capacity from non-fossil sources by 2035 and 3.5–4 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent carbon sink, strengthening pathway to Net-Zero by 2070. Institutional Background NDCs are submitted under Paris Agreement (2015), operationalised through UNFCCC, based on principle of CBDR-RC (equity + differentiated responsibility). India’s original NDC (2015): 33–35% emissions intensity reduction by 2030 40% non-fossil capacity 2.5–3 billion tonnes carbon sink Updated NDC (Aug 2022) raised ambition to: 45% emissions intensity reduction by 2030 50% non-fossil capacity by 2030 Data-Based Progress (Before New NDC) Emission intensity already reduced by ~33% (2005–2019) and further to ~36% by 2020, indicating early progress towards targets. India achieved 50% non-fossil installed capacity in June 2025, 5 years ahead of 2030 target, demonstrating accelerated clean energy transition. Non-fossil capacity reached 52.57% (Feb 2026), exceeding earlier commitments and justifying upward revision of targets. Multi-Dimensional Analysis  Constitutional / Legal Article 48A and 51A(g) provide constitutional mandate for environmental protection, forming legal basis for India’s enhanced climate commitments and sustainable development trajectory. India’s NDC reflects climate justice approach, ensuring development space while contributing to global mitigation under Paris Agreement obligations without legally binding emission caps. Governance / Administrative NDC prepared through 10 sectoral working groups under NITI Aayog, ensuring whole-of-government and stakeholder consultation approach across energy, transport, agriculture, and industry sectors. Implemented via NAPCC + SAPCCs + flagship schemes, ensuring vertical and horizontal policy convergence across Union and State levels for climate governance. Economic Transition to 60% non-fossil capacity by 2035 requires massive investments in renewables, storage, green hydrogen, and grid infrastructure, driving green growth and employment. India demonstrates decoupling of GDP growth from emissions, as economy expands while emission intensity declines, reinforcing sustainable development model. Social / Ethical Focus on just transition ensures protection of coal-dependent regions, farmers, and vulnerable populations, aligning climate action with equity and livelihood security. Behavioural initiatives like Mission LiFE transform climate action into mass movement, integrating sustainability into everyday consumption patterns. Environment / Security / Tech Expansion of renewables reduces fossil fuel import dependence, enhancing energy security and reducing current account pressures. Adaptation measures include mangrove restoration, glacier monitoring, Heat Action Plans, and early warning systems, addressing rising climate risks like heatwaves and floods. Deployment of green hydrogen, CCUS, battery storage, and nuclear energy strengthens low-carbon industrial ecosystem and technological competitiveness. Data & Evidence India created 2.29 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent carbon sink by 2021, progressing towards enhanced 3.5–4 billion tonnes target by 2035. Ranked 3rd globally in net forest area gain (FAO), reflecting success of afforestation and ecosystem restoration initiatives. Challenges / Criticism Energy mix still dominated by coal (~70% electricity generation), making deep decarbonisation structurally difficult while ensuring energy security. Climate finance gap persists, with developed countries failing to fully deliver $100 billion/year commitment, affecting developing countries’ transition capacity. Technological limitations in storage, CCUS, and green hydrogen scalability constrain pace of achieving ambitious non-fossil targets. Balancing development priorities (poverty alleviation, infrastructure expansion) with climate commitments raises concerns of equity and implementation feasibility. Way Forward Accelerate renewable capacity addition with storage integration and modernise grid infrastructure to ensure reliability of 60% non-fossil energy target. Leverage international platforms like ISA, CDRI, GBA to secure climate finance, technology transfer, and global partnerships. Expand nature-based solutions (afforestation, mangroves, ecosystem restoration) to achieve carbon sink targets while enhancing biodiversity and livelihoods. Develop domestic carbon markets and pricing frameworks to incentivise industries for emission reductions and energy efficiency improvements. Strengthen urban climate planning, water management, and agriculture resilience to integrate adaptation into development planning. Institutionalise Mission LiFE for behavioural change, ensuring citizen-led sustainability transition. Prelims Pointers NDCs are voluntary national commitments, not legally binding emission targets under Paris Agreement. CBDR-RC principle = differentiated responsibility based on historical emissions and capacity. India’s Net-Zero target: 2070, not 2050. Updated NDC 2022 targets: 45% emissions intensity + 50% non-fossil capacity by 2030.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 26 March 2026

Content Amid troubled times, legal framework must insulate data centres against risks Let’s not forget, jail is exception, bail is norm Amid troubled times, legal framework must insulate data centres against risks  Why in News ? Debate triggered by policy push for AI infrastructure and data centres, including 21-year tax holiday (announced Budget 2025–26) to attract foreign investment in India’s data centre ecosystem. Concerns raised after AI Summit (Feb 2026) where ~$240 billion investment pledges were announced, alongside emerging geopolitical, legal, and environmental risks. Relevance GS II (Governance & Polity): Data protection under Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023. Right to Privacy (K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017)). Taxation issues: Significant Economic Presence (SEP), treaty disputes (Tiger Global case (2024)). GS III (Economy & S&T): AI infrastructure, cloud economy, $240 billion investment potential. Strategic digital infrastructure, supply chain and sanctions risks. GS III (Environment): Water-energy intensive data centres → sustainability concerns. Practice Question Q1.India’s push to become a global AI data centre hub raises critical legal and strategic concerns. Examine. (250 words)  Issue in Brief India aims to become global AI infrastructure hub, incentivising foreign companies to establish data centres (cloud, AI processing facilities) through tax exemptions and regulatory facilitation. However, policy gaps exist in data sovereignty, environmental sustainability, sanctions exposure, and lack of technology transfer, potentially limiting India to low-value infrastructure role in AI ecosystem. Institutional Background Data governance governed by Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDPA), regulating processing of personal data within India and cross-border data flows. Taxation governed by concept of Significant Economic Presence (SEP) under Income Tax Act, triggering tax liability even without physical presence. Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) mitigate cross-border taxation, but scrutiny increased after Tiger Global case (SC, 2024) questioning treaty abuse. Dimensions Constitutional / Legal Data protection linked to Right to Privacy (Puttaswamy judgment, 2017) under Article 21, requiring strong safeguards for data stored in domestic data centres. Ambiguity in DPDPA Section 17 exemption may exclude foreign data from protection, creating regulatory vacuum in case of data breaches and accountability gaps. Governance / Administrative Policy mandates “Indian-owned data centres” (>50% domestic ownership) and routing of sales via Indian resellers, reflecting concerns of data sovereignty and regulatory control. Absence of technology transfer conditions weakens domestic capability building, limiting benefits of foreign investment to infrastructure creation rather than innovation ecosystem. Economic 21-year tax holiday aims to prevent double taxation and attract global players, catalysing $240 billion AI data centre investment pledges (2026). However, asymmetry exists as Indian companies are excluded from tax benefits, potentially distorting competition and discouraging domestic industry growth. Risk of India remaining in “infrastructure layer” rather than “capability layer” of AI value chain due to dependence on imported hardware and foreign technology. Social / Ethical Data centres handle sensitive personal and behavioural data, raising concerns about privacy, surveillance, and misuse, especially if governed by foreign jurisdictions. Ethical concerns over data localisation vs global data flows impact citizens’ rights and trust in digital ecosystem. Environment / Security / Tech Data centres are energy- and water-intensive; India faces water stress (18% global population, 4% water resources), making sustainability critical. Reports indicate ~50 data centres located in high water-stress zones (WRI, Down to Earth), raising risks of ecological strain and urban sustainability challenges. Geopolitical risks highlighted by Iran targeting AWS data centres (UAE, Bahrain), showing vulnerability of data centres as strategic infrastructure. Exposure to extraterritorial laws (e.g., US CLOUD Act) allows foreign governments to access data stored abroad, undermining data sovereignty. Data & Evidence India attracted ~$240 billion AI data centre investment commitments (AI Summit, Feb 2026) due to fiscal incentives. India has 18% of world population but only 4% freshwater resources, intensifying sustainability concerns for water-intensive data infrastructure. Challenges / Criticism Lack of clear legal framework for foreign data under DPDPA creates ambiguity in liability, breach notification, and user protection. Sanctions risk: even Indian entities can be affected due to foreign ownership links (e.g., Nayara Energy–SAP case, Delhi HC 2025), exposing vulnerability of data infrastructure. Absence of technology transfer mandates restricts domestic innovation and long-term competitiveness in AI ecosystem. Environmental externalities (water, energy consumption) not adequately regulated, risking ecological degradation and resource conflicts. Way Forward Clarify DPDPA applicability for foreign data stored in India, ensuring uniform standards of data protection, breach reporting, and accountability. Introduce mandatory technology transfer and local R&D incentives to shift India from infrastructure hub to innovation hub in AI value chain. Extend fiscal incentives to domestic companies to ensure level playing field and promote indigenous data centre ecosystem. Establish environmental regulations for data centres, including water usage caps, renewable energy mandates, and location zoning norms. Develop legal safeguards against extraterritorial sanctions and data access laws, ensuring sovereign control over critical digital infrastructure. Promote trusted global partnerships with safeguards for data security and localisation, balancing openness with sovereignty. Prelims Pointers DPDPA, 2023 governs personal data processing in India; Section 17 provides exemptions for foreign data under contracts. Significant Economic Presence (SEP) triggers tax liability without physical presence. US CLOUD Act allows US authorities access to overseas data held by US companies. Let’s not forget, jail is exception, bail is norm Why in News ? Debate triggered by Indian Express report (17–18 March 2026) on bail orders by Allahabad HC judge, followed by Supreme Court criticism of bail adjudication practices and systemic delays. Issue highlights tension between judicial discretion in bail, media scrutiny, and structural crisis of pendency and vacancies in High Courts. Relevance GS II (Polity & Judiciary): Article 21 → personal liberty. Bail principle from State of Rajasthan v. Balchand (1977). Judicial vacancies, pendency crisis. GS II (Governance): Justice delivery, undertrial reforms, prison administration. Practice Questions Q1.“Bail is the rule and jail is the exception, yet Indian prisons are overcrowded with undertrials.” Critically analyse. (250 words) Issue in Brief Controversy over judge granting bail in 508 out of 510 dowry death cases, raising concerns of “mechanical justice” vs principle of liberty and judicial consistency. Contextual reality: Allahabad High Court pendency of 12,23,849 cases (as on 1 Feb 2026) with 51 vacancies out of sanctioned 160 judges, indicating severe judicial burden. Constitutional Background Article 21 (Right to Life and Personal Liberty) guarantees that deprivation of liberty must follow “procedure established by law”, forming constitutional basis of bail jurisprudence. Supreme Court jurisprudence (e.g., State of Rajasthan v. Balchand, 1977) establishes principle: “Bail is the rule, jail the exception”, ensuring liberty unless compelling reasons exist. Under Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), Section 80, no reverse burden of proof exists, unlike Section 29 of POCSO Act, which presumes guilt of accused. Dimensions Constitutional / Legal Bail reflects presumption of innocence, a core criminal law principle, ensuring accused is not punished before conviction, aligning with due process under Article 21. Supreme Court has repeatedly criticised routine denial of bail and emphasised need for reasoned judicial discretion, not mechanical or arbitrary decisions. Governance / Administrative Severe judicial vacancies (51/160 ≈ 32%) and massive pendency (12.23 lakh cases) overburden judges, affecting quality and depth of bail adjudication. Judges handle multiple rosters (civil, criminal, writs) beyond bail matters, leading to reliance on standardised formats and time-efficient disposal mechanisms. Economic Prolonged pre-trial detention increases prison overcrowding (~130% occupancy, NCRB) and imposes fiscal burden on state exchequer for maintenance of undertrial prisoners. Delayed justice reduces economic productivity as undertrials, often from poor backgrounds, remain incarcerated, impacting labour participation and household incomes. Social / Ethical Bail jurisprudence balances individual liberty vs societal interest, especially in serious offences like dowry death, requiring careful judicial calibration. Media narratives labelling decisions as “mechanical” risk undermining judicial independence and public trust, while lack of transparency raises accountability concerns. Security / Justice System Undertrial prisoners constitute ~75% of prison population (NCRB 2022), indicating systemic over-reliance on incarceration rather than bail. Delays in investigation and trial force accused to approach Supreme Court for bail, which has criticised such systemic inefficiencies in suo motu cases on criminal justice reform. Data & Evidence Allahabad HC pendency: 12,23,849 cases (Feb 2026) with ~32% vacancy, among highest in India, reflecting structural judicial crisis. India’s prison occupancy rate exceeds 130%, with majority being undertrials, highlighting urgency of bail reforms and speedy trial mechanisms. Challenges / Criticism Risk of mechanical bail orders due to workload may undermine case-specific judicial reasoning, affecting fairness and justice delivery. Public perception of leniency in serious crimes may weaken deterrence and victim confidence in criminal justice system. Lack of uniform bail guidelines leads to inconsistency across courts, increasing litigation and appeals burden. Media scrutiny without full legal context may distort debate, affecting judicial morale and independence. Way Forward Fill judicial vacancies through time-bound collegium-government coordination, ensuring optimal judge strength and reducing pendency burden. Develop standardised but flexible bail guidelines (as suggested by SC) ensuring balance between efficiency and case-specific reasoning. Expand use of technology (e-courts, AI-assisted case management) to streamline bail hearings and reduce delays. Promote undertrial review committees and legal aid mechanisms to ensure timely bail for eligible prisoners, especially marginalised groups. Strengthen police investigation and prosecution quality to reduce unnecessary arrests and improve conviction rates. Encourage responsible media reporting respecting judicial ethics (Restatement of Judicial Values, 1997) and institutional boundaries. Prelims Pointers “Bail is rule, jail exception” principle originates from SC judgment (Balchand case, 1977). Section 80 BNS does not create reverse burden of proof, unlike Section 29 POCSO Act. Restatement of Values of Judicial Life (1997) restricts judges from engaging with media.  

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 26 March 2026

Content Cauvery Basin Drying Trend till 2050 India’s 60% Non-Fossil Energy Target by 2035 Vande Mataram Advisory and Freedom of Expression Debate WTO MC14 and Crisis of Multilateral Trade Order Women’s Reservation and Delimitation Constitutional Challenge Extension of IVFRT for Immigration Governance FCRA Amendment 2026 and Regulation of Foreign Funding Cauvery basin to face dry spell until 2050, says study Why in news ? IIT Gandhinagar study (Earth’s Future, March 2026) projects ~3.5% decline in Cauvery streamflow (2026–2050), contrasting sharply with increasing flows in major basins like Indus, Ganga, Krishna. Issue in brief Despite projected increase in monsoon rainfall, Cauvery basin exhibits declining effective water availability, highlighting regional asymmetry of climate change impacts and decoupling of rainfall–runoff relationship in peninsular rivers. Historical data shows ~28% decline in streamflow (1951–2012) at Kollegal, indicating structural drying trend, not short-term variability, reinforcing concerns of long-term hydrological stress in the basin. Relevance GS I (Geography): River regimes, monsoon variability, climate change impacts on peninsular rivers. GS III (Environment): Climate change, water stress, river basin management. GS II (Inter-State Relations): Cauvery dispute, federal water governance (CWDT, SC judgment). Practice Questions Q1. Climate change is altering river hydrology in India with regional asymmetries. Examine with reference to the Cauvery basin. (250 words) Static background – Cauvery river Origin at Talakaveri in Brahmagiri Hills, river length ~800 km, draining into Bay of Bengal, covering states of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Puducherry. Major tributaries include Kabini, Hemavati, Bhavani, Harangi, supporting extensive irrigation networks and dense population, making basin highly sensitive to hydrological and climatic fluctuations. River depends on both South-West and North-East monsoons, increasing vulnerability to temporal variability and climate shifts, unlike Himalayan rivers with relatively stable glacial and snow-fed contributions. Water sharing framework Cauvery Water Disputes Tribunal (CWDT) allocated 740 TMC ft, notified in 2013, later modified by Supreme Court of India (2018) adjusting shares between Tamil Nadu and Karnataka. Methodological nuance – constrained vs unconstrained models Unconstrained CMIP6 models project ~5% increase in streamflow, but fail to capture Indian monsoon seasonality, leading to potentially misleading conclusions for regional water policy formulation. Constrained models (Chuphal & Mishra) filter only skillful models (8/22) matching historical observations (1951–2012), reversing projection to ~3.5% decline, enhancing policy reliability and scientific robustness. Demonstrates limitation of global climate models, emphasizing need for region-specific downscaling and validation, especially for monsoon-dependent basins like Cauvery with complex hydrological behaviour. Human vs Natural dimension Study assesses naturalized flows (without human extraction), isolating pure climate impact, but real-world scenario includes intensive anthropogenic pressures significantly worsening water stress beyond projected decline. Around 80% water used in agriculture, coupled with rapid urbanisation (Bengaluru ~20 million by 2030), amplifies scarcity, making climate-induced decline a lower-bound estimate of actual stress. Why Cauvery is drying ? Rising temperatures increase evapotranspiration, reducing effective runoff even with higher rainfall, altering hydrological balance and decreasing sustained river flows across seasons. Erratic rainfall patterns, with high-intensity short-duration events, reduce groundwater recharge and infiltration, leading to lower base flows and increased surface runoff losses. Dependence on dual monsoon system (SW + NE) increases exposure to inter-annual variability, making Cauvery more vulnerable compared to single-monsoon dependent basins. Anthropogenic drivers Catchment degradation due to deforestation and land-use change reduces soil moisture retention and infiltration capacity, weakening natural water storage mechanisms. Urbanisation and infrastructure expansion lead to impervious surfaces, disrupting hydrological cycles and reducing groundwater recharge in upper catchment regions. Excessive groundwater extraction diminishes base flows, creating surface-groundwater disconnect, exacerbating seasonal drying and long-term decline in river discharge. Constitutional / legal dimension Article 262 empowers Parliament to adjudicate inter-state river disputes, operationalised through Inter-State River Water Disputes Act, 1956, forming basis of tribunal-based resolution mechanism. Increasing judicial intervention by Supreme Court reflects shift from tribunalisation to judicialisation, raising concerns about institutional overlap and federal tensions. Fixed allocations under CWDT face challenge from dynamic climate realities, necessitating evolution towards adaptive and flexible legal frameworks for water sharing. Governance / Federal dimension Cauvery Water Management Authority tasked with implementation and regulation, but suffers from limited enforcement powers, data opacity, and political non-compliance among basin states. Climate stress intensifies competitive federalism, where upstream–downstream conflicts escalate due to shrinking resource base and rigid allocation mechanisms. Case study – Mekedatu dispute (2025–26) Karnataka proposes ₹9000 crore balancing reservoir for Bengaluru drinking water, while Tamil Nadu fears flow regulation and violation of riparian rights, escalating dispute. Supreme Court of India termed Tamil Nadu’s challenge “premature”, allowing Karnataka to proceed with revised DPR, highlighting legal ambiguity in anticipatory water disputes. Economic dimension Cauvery delta serves as “rice bowl of Tamil Nadu”, and declining flows threaten agricultural productivity, farmer incomes, and food security in already water-stressed regions. Reduced flows impact hydropower generation reliability, increasing dependence on thermal energy, with implications for energy security and emissions. Urban water crises, especially in Bengaluru, can disrupt industrial productivity, investment climate, and service sector growth, affecting regional economic stability. Environmental dimension Declining environmental flows threaten aquatic biodiversity, wetland ecosystems, and deltaic stability, particularly in ecologically fragile Cauvery delta region. Reduced flows increase salinity intrusion in coastal Tamil Nadu, degrading agricultural land and freshwater resources, impacting long-term sustainability. Strategic project linkages Proposed Godavari–Cauvery interlinking aims to address scarcity, but raises concerns of ecological feasibility, financial cost, and interstate consensus challenges. Cauvery–Vaigai–Gundar link canal (Tamil Nadu) faces legal challenge from Karnataka, indicating shift from inter-state to intra-state water conflicts under scarcity conditions. Challenges / criticisms Static tribunal awards incompatible with dynamic hydrological variability under climate change, leading to frequent disputes and governance challenges. Lack of transparent, real-time data sharing undermines trust between states and weakens effectiveness of institutional mechanisms like CWMA. Over-reliance on supply-side solutions (dams, links) neglects demand-side management and ecological sustainability considerations. Limited accuracy of regional climate projections introduces uncertainty in long-term water planning and policy decisions. Way forward Transition to adaptive water-sharing frameworks based on real-time hydrological data and climate projections, ensuring flexibility and resilience in allocation mechanisms. Strengthen CWMA with statutory enforcement powers and transparent data systems, improving compliance, coordination, and trust among basin states. Promote water-use efficiency through micro-irrigation, crop diversification (millets), and pricing reforms, reducing excessive agricultural demand. Enhance urban water resilience via recycling, rainwater harvesting, wastewater reuse, reducing dependency on river systems for growing cities. Invest in indigenous climate modelling and basin-level planning, integrating IMD, IITs, and global datasets for accurate, policy-relevant projections. Restore catchment ecosystems through afforestation and wetland conservation, improving natural recharge, base flows, and long-term hydrological sustainability. Prelims pointers Cauvery originates at Talakaveri (Karnataka) and drains into Bay of Bengal, covering four states including Puducherry (UT). CWDT established in 1990, final award notified in 2013, later modified by Supreme Court (2018). CMIP6 models represent latest generation of global climate projections, widely used in IPCC assessments. India aiming for 60% non-fossil fuel power sources by 2035 Why in News ? Union Cabinet approved India’s updated NDC on 25 March 2026 for submission to United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change under the Paris Agreement cycle (post-2030 targets). India’s third NDC submission comes ahead of global climate negotiations after COP29–30 cycle, signalling enhanced ambition and Global South leadership. Issue in Brief India commits to: 47% reduction in emissions intensity of GDP (from 2005 levels) by 2035 60% installed power capacity from non-fossil sources by 2035 3.5–4 billion tonnes CO₂ equivalent carbon sink Targets build upon earlier commitments (2022 NDC) and align with Net-Zero target of 2070 and Viksit Bharat 2047 vision. Relevance GS III (Environment & Economy): Energy transition, climate commitments, NDCs. GS II (IR): Global climate negotiations, CBDR-RC principle. GS III (Energy Security): Renewable energy, decarbonisation. Practice Questions Q1. India’s updated NDC reflects a balance between development and climate responsibility. Critically analyse. (250 words) Static Background  NDC (Nationally Determined Contribution): Voluntary national climate targets under Paris Agreement (2015) to reduce emissions and adapt to climate change. Guided by principle of CBDR-RC (Common But Differentiated Responsibilities) balancing development needs with climate responsibility. Reviewed every 5 years, based on Global Stocktake (GST, first completed in 2023) assessing global progress toward 1.5°C goal. Comparison with Previous Targets 2015 NDC (Original) 33–35% emissions intensity reduction by 2030 40% non-fossil capacity 2.5–3 billion tonnes carbon sink 2022 Updated NDC 45% emissions intensity reduction by 2030 50% non-fossil capacity by 2030 2026 Updated NDC (2031–35) 47% emissions intensity reduction by 2035 60% non-fossil capacity by 2035 3.5–4 billion tonnes carbon sink India’s Current Progress  ~36% emissions intensity reduction achieved (2005–2020), close to 2030 target well in advance. ~52% installed power capacity from non-fossil sources (2025–26), exceeding earlier 50% target ahead of deadline. ~2.3 billion tonnes CO₂ carbon sink created (2005–2019), nearing lower bound of earlier NDC target. Forest and tree cover increased from ~21% (2005) to ~24.6% (2021), though below 33% national target. Key Analysis  1. Energy Transition & Power Sector Moving to 60% non-fossil capacity by 2035 driven by solar, wind, hydro, nuclear, biomass, along with battery storage and green hydrogen. However, only ~25% of actual electricity generation is non-fossil, indicating capacity vs generation gap due to intermittency and coal dependence. 2. Emissions Intensity Reduction Target of 47% reduction by 2035 reflects incremental ambition beyond 45% (2030), but remains moderate given India’s current trajectory and growth constraints. Indicates focus on energy efficiency + structural economic shift, not absolute emission cuts. 3. Carbon Sink Expansion Target of 3.5–4 billion tonnes CO₂ sink requires large-scale afforestation and ecosystem restoration, beyond current ~2.3 billion tonnes achievement. Forest cover still ~24.6% vs 33% policy goal, indicating significant gap in land and ecological capacity. 4. Strategic Positioning India’s NDC reflects balance between climate ambition and energy security, especially amid global energy shocks and fossil fuel volatility (West Asia conflicts). Positions India as leader of Global South, especially as developed countries show policy rollback and slow progress. Challenges / Criticism Coal dependency (~70% electricity generation) likely to continue till 2035, limiting deep decarbonisation despite rising renewable capacity. 60% non-fossil target seen as conservative, given projections of ~70% capacity by 2035–36 (CEA estimates). Climate finance gap and technology dependence constrain faster transition, especially in storage, green hydrogen, and industrial decarbonisation. Global context of weak climate ambition by developed countries undermines collective progress towards 1.5°C pathway. Way Forward Accelerate renewable energy + storage integration to bridge capacity vs generation gap. Scale up green hydrogen, electrification (transport, industry) to reduce fossil dependence structurally. Expand afforestation and nature-based solutions to meet enhanced carbon sink targets. Strengthen domestic manufacturing (solar, batteries) to reduce import dependence and enhance energy security. Leverage platforms like ISA, BRICS, G20 to secure climate finance and technology transfer. Prelims Pointers NDCs are voluntary commitments, not legally binding emission targets. CBDR-RC principle recognises differentiated responsibilities of developed vs developing countries. India’s Net-Zero target year: 2070. ‘Vande Mataram advisory not a threat to conform’ Why in News ? Supreme Court (March 2026) upheld Union Home Ministry advisory dated 28 January 2026 on playing Vande Mataram, clarifying it is non-binding and not enforceable by law. Petition challenged advisory as coercive and violative of individual conscience, but Court termed it “premature” and based on vague apprehensions. Issue in Brief Advisory prescribes protocol for playing National Song at public/ceremonial events, including suggestion for community singing in schools, but uses non-mandatory language (“may”). Core debate: Whether such advisories create indirect coercion (“social burden”) violating freedom of expression and conscience under Constitution. Relevance GS II (Polity): Fundamental Rights (Art. 19, 21), Fundamental Duties (Art. 51A), executive vs law. GS IV (Ethics): Constitutional patriotism vs coercive nationalism. Practice Questions Q1. “Patriotism cannot be enforced by law.” Examine in light of recent debates on national symbols. (250 words) Static Background National Anthem: Jana Gana Mana (adopted 24 January 1950). National Song: Vande Mataram (given equal cultural status but no constitutional/legal equivalence with Anthem). Article 51A(a) (Fundamental Duty): Respect for National Flag and National Anthem, but no mention of National Song. Key case: Bijoe Emmanuel v. State of Kerala (1986) → SC held students cannot be compelled to sing National Anthem if it violates conscience. Key Legal Analysis  1. Advisory vs Mandatory Law SC clarified advisory is “only protocol, not enforceable”, hence no penal consequences or legal sanction for non-compliance. Distinction: Executive advisory ≠ statutory mandate, thus does not violate Article 19(1)(a) or Article 21 unless coercion is proven. 2. Individual Conscience & Liberty Petition argued “social pressure = indirect coercion”, burdening individuals who refuse to sing National Song. SC held absence of legal penalty or discrimination evidence weakens claim; liberty violation must show clear nexus with state action. 3. Anthem vs National Song (Legal Status) Constitution recognises only National Anthem under Article 51A, giving it higher legal sanctity than National Song. Historical clarification by Rajendra Prasad (1950) settled dual status but without equal enforceability in law. 4. Judicial Approach Court emphasised “prematurity doctrine” → no adjudication without actual violation or discrimination case. Left open remedy: Individuals can approach SC if future coercive implementation or discrimination occurs. Implications Reinforces principle that patriotism cannot be legally compelled, unless backed by clear statutory mandate. Protects executive flexibility to issue cultural advisories while safeguarding constitutional freedoms. Highlights evolving tension between symbolic nationalism vs individual liberty in public spaces. Challenges / Concerns Even without legal sanction, advisories may create informal social pressure, especially in institutions like schools. Lack of clarity may lead to over-enthusiastic enforcement by local authorities, risking misuse. Blurring distinction between “voluntary respect” and “enforced conformity” may create future constitutional disputes. Way Forward  Clearly define legal vs advisory nature of such circulars to prevent misinterpretation at institutional level. Issue guidelines safeguarding individual conscience, especially in educational institutions. Promote constitutional patriotism (voluntary respect) rather than coercive or symbolic nationalism. Prelims Pointers Article 51A(a) → Fundamental duty to respect National Flag and National Anthem only. Bijoe Emmanuel case (1986) → Right not to sing Anthem protected under freedom of conscience. National Song has no statutory backing, unlike provisions related to National Anthem (Prevention of Insults Act, 1971). What is at stake at the WTO’s MC14? Why in News ? 14th WTO Ministerial Conference (MC14) scheduled from 26–29 March 2026 in Yaoundé, Cameroon, amid deep crisis in global trade governance and weakening multilateralism. Occurs in backdrop of U.S. tariff actions, Appellate Body paralysis, and rise of unilateral trade measures, threatening the rules-based global trading system. Issue in Brief MC14 to deliberate on WTO reforms, dispute settlement restoration, plurilateral agreements, and e-commerce moratorium, which are critical for future of global trade governance. Developing countries, including India, seek to preserve core WTO principles (MFN, SDT), while developed countries push for flexibility and rule changes. Relevance GS II (IR): WTO crisis, global trade governance, India’s position. GS III (Economy): Trade rules, tariffs, digital trade, globalisation. Practice Questions Q1. The WTO faces a crisis of relevance in the era of unilateralism. Critically analyse. (250 words) Static Background  World Trade Organization established in 1995; currently has 166 member countries. Ministerial Conference (MC) is highest decision-making body, meeting every 2 years, empowered to amend WTO rules. Core principles: Most Favoured Nation (MFN) → non-discrimination in trade Bound tariffs → no tariffs beyond agreed limits Consensus-based decision-making Context: Why WTO is in Crisis ? 1. Rise of Unilateralism U.S. imposing arbitrary tariffs and trade restrictions, violating MFN principle and tariff bindings, undermining WTO credibility. Shift towards bilateral coercive trade agreements, bypassing multilateral rules. 2. U.S.–China Rivalry WTO increasingly shaped by strategic competition between U.S. and China, especially over state subsidies and industrial policy. U.S. dissatisfaction due to China’s rise despite WTO membership, questioning effectiveness of rules-based system. 3. Dispute Settlement Paralysis Appellate Body non-functional since 2019, due to U.S. blocking appointments, crippling WTO’s enforcement mechanism. Weakens rule-based adjudication, leading to power-based trade relations. 4. Stagnation in Rule-Making WTO has delivered only 2 major agreements in 30 years: Trade Facilitation Agreement (2013) Fisheries Subsidies Agreement (2022) Consensus requirement among 166 members leads to policy paralysis, pushing countries towards FTAs and regional blocs. Key Issues at MC14  1. Plurilateral Agreements Agreements like Investment Facilitation (120+ countries) and E-commerce Agreement involve subset of members. Debate: Proponents: Faster rule-making Opponents (India): Risk of fragmentation and erosion of multilateralism 2. E-Commerce Moratorium (1998–2026) Temporary ban on custom duties on electronic transmissions, expiring 31 March 2026. Issue: Developed countries → want permanent extension Developing countries → fear loss of tariff revenue amid rising digital trade 3. Special & Differential Treatment (SDT) Provides flexibilities to developing and least-developed countries. U.S. pushing to deny SDT benefits to large economies (India, China, Brazil), challenging development-based differentiation. 4. Dispute Settlement Reform Demand for restoration of Appellate Body to revive WTO’s judicial function. Proposals include alternative mechanisms (voting-based appointments) due to consensus deadlock. Implications Failure of MC14 could accelerate shift from rule-based to power-based global trade system, disadvantaging developing countries. Weakening WTO may lead to fragmented global trade architecture dominated by FTAs and regional blocs. Digital trade rules (e-commerce) will shape future global economic order and taxation rights. India’s Position   Supports multilateralism and preservation of WTO principles (MFN, SDT). Opposes plurilateral agreements within WTO framework due to risk of two-tier system. Concerned about e-commerce moratorium reducing fiscal space and digital sovereignty. Expected to act as voice of Global South, building coalitions with developing countries. Challenges / Criticism WTO’s consensus-based model increasingly ineffective with 166 members and divergent interests. Developed countries shifting towards unilateralism and protectionism, weakening collective framework. Developing countries face dilemma between integration into global trade vs safeguarding policy space. Way Forward  Restore Appellate Body to revive credibility of dispute settlement system. Reform decision-making (e.g., qualified majority or flexible consensus) to overcome deadlock. Balance plurilateral flexibility with multilateral inclusivity to avoid fragmentation. Safeguard SDT provisions while ensuring fair participation of developing countries. Develop equitable digital trade rules protecting fiscal interests of developing economies. Prelims Pointers WTO established in 1995, successor to GATT (1947). Appellate Body = highest dispute settlement authority (currently non-functional). MFN principle ensures equal treatment to all WTO members. Women quota: Govt plan to expand LS, State constitutional hurdles Why in News ? Government considering expansion of Lok Sabha seats (~543 → ~816, ~50% increase) to implement Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (Women’s Reservation Act, 2023) after delimitation. Proposal raises constitutional issues on delimitation, equality (Article 14), and “one person, one vote” principle under Article 81. Issue in Brief Women’s Reservation Act mandates 33% reservation in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies, but implementation is linked to delimitation after next Census (post-2026). Government exploring seat expansion using 2011 Census, which may face legal challenges regarding population parity and constitutional limits. Relevance GS II (Polity): Delimitation, Articles 81, 82, 170; equality vs reservation debate. GS II (Governance): Electoral reforms, federalism. Practice Question Q1. Implementation of women’s reservation raises complex constitutional and federal challenges. Discuss. (250 words) (250 words) Static Background  Article 81: Ensures “one vote, one value”, mandating equal population-seat ratio across states and constituencies. Article 82: Provides for readjustment of seats after every Census via Delimitation Commission. Article 170: Similar provisions for State Assemblies. Current cap: Lok Sabha strength limited to 550 (Article 81(1)) → requires constitutional amendment for expansion. Delimitation Freeze  1976 (42nd Amendment) → froze seat allocation based on 1971 Census. 2001 (84th Amendment) → extended freeze till first Census after 2026. Therefore, delimitation using 2011 Census may violate current constitutional framework unless amended. Key Constitutional Issues 1. One Vote, One Value Principle Article 81 requires uniform population-seat ratio, but expansion based on 2011 Census may distort representation across states. Could be challenged as violation of equality under Article 14 + electoral parity principle. 2. Census Linkage & Legal Validity Constitution mandates delimitation based on “latest Census” (post-2026). Using 2011 Census (outdated data) risks judicial invalidation for violating Article 82 framework. 3. Need for Constitutional Amendment Increasing Lok Sabha strength from 543 → ~816 requires amendment to Article 81(1). Without amendment, expansion would be ultra vires Constitution. 4. Reservation vs Equality Debate Women’s reservation justified under Article 15(3) (special provisions for women). However, expansion + reservation may face scrutiny under Article 14 (reasonable classification test) if it distorts representation principles. Governance / Political Implications Seat expansion may alter federal balance, benefiting high population states (UP, Bihar) disproportionately. Southern states may face relative decline in representation, raising federal tensions. Implementation delay persists as reservation is contingent on delimitation, not immediate. Way Forward Conduct next Census (post-2026) and undertake delimitation based on updated population data for constitutional validity. Pass constitutional amendment to increase Lok Sabha strength before implementing reservation. Develop balanced delimitation formula addressing concerns of population control-performing states. Ensure phased and transparent implementation to maintain federal consensus. Prelims Pointers Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (106th Amendment, 2023) → 33% reservation in LS & State Assemblies. Delimitation freeze valid till Census after 2026. Article 81 → population-seat ratio principle. Cabinet extends immigration, visa tracking system for another five years  Why in News ? Union Cabinet (March 2026) approved continuation of Immigration, Visa, Foreigners Registration & Tracking (IVFRT) Scheme till 2031 with ₹1,800 crore outlay. Decision follows enactment of Immigration and Foreigners Act, 2025, requiring upgraded digital infrastructure for immigration control and foreigner management. Issue in Brief IVFRT aims to create an integrated digital platform linking visa issuance, immigration clearance, and foreigner registration, ensuring efficient, secure, and real-time monitoring system. Focus on modernisation using emerging technologies, including faceless visa processing, biometrics, and automated immigration systems. Relevance GS III (Internal Security): Border management, illegal migration. GS II (Governance): e-Governance, service delivery, digital state capacity. GS III (Tech): AI, biometrics, surveillance systems. Practice Questions Q1. Digitalisation of immigration systems enhances both governance and security. Critically examine. (250 words) Static Background IVFRT launched in 2010 with ₹1,011 crore outlay, initially targeting digitisation of immigration and visa processes. Implemented by Ministry of Home Affairs, covering Immigration Check Posts (ICPs), FRROs (Foreigners Regional Registration Offices), and data centres. Linked with e-Visa system, enabling online visa applications and digital approvals. Key Features / Achievements 100% faceless and contactless visa system with online application, payment, and appointment scheduling. 91.24% e-Visas processed within 72 hours (last 5 years), significantly improving service efficiency. Immigration clearance time reduced from 5–6 minutes to 2.5–3 minutes per passenger, including biometric verification. Key Analysis 1. Governance & Service Delivery Integration of visa, immigration, and registration databases enables real-time tracking of foreigners, improving administrative coordination. Introduction of mobile-based services and self-service kiosks enhances ease of travel and reduces human interface. 2. Internal Security Dimension Strengthens monitoring of illegal migration, visa overstays, and human trafficking networks, critical in context of border management challenges. Integration with intelligence databases enables risk profiling and early threat detection. 3. Technology & Digital Infrastructure Adoption of biometrics, AI-based analytics, and automated clearance systems improves accuracy and reduces fraud. Expansion of data centres and infrastructure ensures scalability and resilience of immigration systems. 4. Economic / Global Mobility Impact Faster visa processing and seamless entry improve ease of doing business, tourism, and global mobility flows. Supports India’s positioning as a global hub for trade, services, and investment. Challenges / Concerns Risks related to data privacy and surveillance, especially with large-scale biometric and personal data collection. Need for cybersecurity safeguards to protect sensitive immigration databases from breaches. Coordination challenges across multiple agencies (MHA, MEA, intelligence agencies) for seamless implementation. Way Forward Strengthen data protection frameworks (aligned with DPDP Act, 2023) to ensure privacy and accountability. Enhance AI-driven risk assessment systems for better detection of illegal activities. Improve inter-agency integration and real-time data sharing for holistic immigration governance. Expand infrastructure at high-traffic immigration checkpoints to handle increasing passenger volumes. Prelims Pointers IVFRT implemented by Ministry of Home Affairs, not MEA. Covers visa issuance, immigration clearance, and foreigner registration. Introduced faceless e-Visa system with biometric integration. FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026 – Regulation of Foreign Funding Why in News ? Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha on 25 March 2026 by Ministry of Home Affairs to tighten control over foreign-funded NGOs and assets. Issue in Brief Bill proposes creation of a “designated authority” to seize, manage, and dispose assets of NGOs whose FCRA registration is cancelled, surrendered, or ceased. Aims to enhance transparency, accountability, and national security safeguards, but raises concerns over executive overreach and property rights. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance): FCRA, NGO regulation, Article 19(1)(c), Article 300A. GS II (IR): Foreign funding and sovereignty. GS IV (Ethics): Transparency vs civil society autonomy. Practice Questions Q1. Regulation of foreign funding is necessary but must balance democratic freedoms. Critically analyse. (250 words) Static Background Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010 regulates acceptance and utilisation of foreign contributions to prevent threats to sovereignty, public order, and national interest. Came into force 1 May 2011; amended in 2016, 2018, and 2020 to tighten compliance norms. Currently ~16,000 NGOs registered, receiving ~₹22,000 crore annually in foreign contributions. Key Provisions of Amendment Establishment of designated authority to take control of foreign-funded assets upon cancellation or surrender of licence. Provides for vesting (transfer) of assets created from foreign contributions to government-controlled authority. Introduces prior Central Government approval for initiating investigations, centralising enforcement oversight. Key Analysis  1. Governance & Transparency Government rationale: Prevent misuse of foreign funds for activities against national interest, including illegal conversions and financial irregularities. Centralised asset management aims to ensure proper utilisation of funds and prevent diversion after licence cancellation. 2. Constitutional Concerns Article 300A (Right to Property): Mandatory asset vesting without clear safeguards raises concerns about fairness, compensation, and due process. Article 14 (Equality before law): Requirement of prior government approval for investigation may lead to selective enforcement and arbitrariness. 3. Delegated Legislation Issue Bill criticised for “excessive delegation”, leaving key aspects (asset disposal, timelines, appeals) to executive rule-making, weakening legislative oversight. 4. Civil Society Impact Increased regulatory control may create compliance burden and operational uncertainty for NGOs, especially in development, health, and education sectors. Risk of shrinking civic space, affecting role of NGOs in governance and welfare delivery. Challenges / Criticism Potential misuse of powers for targeting dissenting organisations, raising concerns about democratic freedoms. Lack of clear procedural safeguards and independent appellate mechanisms. Centralisation may reduce autonomy of civil society institutions. Way Forward  Clearly define procedural safeguards, timelines, and compensation mechanisms for asset vesting. Establish independent appellate authority to ensure fairness and accountability. Balance national security concerns with freedom of association (Article 19(1)(c)). Ensure transparency in enforcement to prevent selective or arbitrary application. Prelims Pointers FCRA regulates foreign contribution and foreign hospitality. NGOs must obtain FCRA registration from Ministry of Home Affairs. FCRA amended multiple times (2016, 2018, 2020, 2026) to tighten norms.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 25 March 2026

Content Assistance to States to tackle Cyber Incidents SHE-Marts’ will provide a new market platform for rural women entrepreneurs Assistance to States to tackle Cyber Incidents  Issue in Brief   Cyber incidents in India surged sharply, rising from 14.02 lakh (2021) to 29.44 lakh (2025), indicating rapid expansion of digital vulnerabilities and cyber threats ecosystem. CERT-In acts as nodal agency under Section 70B, IT Act, 2000, coordinating national-level response and supporting States/UTs in prevention, detection, and mitigation. Federal structure: Cybercrime policing falls under State List (Police, Public Order), while Centre provides technical, financial, and institutional support through multi-layered mechanisms. Relevance GS-III (Internal Security): Cyber security architecture, cybercrime trends, critical infrastructure protection GS-II (Governance): Centre–State relations, cooperative federalism, institutional coordination GS-III (Economy & Tech): Digital economy risks, fintech security, emerging technologies (AI, deepfakes) Practice Question Q1.Cybersecurity in India is increasingly becoming a test of cooperative federalism. Examine in the context of rising cyber incidents and institutional mechanisms.(250 Words) Why in News ? PIB release highlights rising cyber incidents and Centre–State coordination mechanisms, reflecting increasing digitalisation risks in India’s governance and economy. Data spike in 2024–25 (20.41 lakh → 29.44 lakh) signals urgent need for capacity building of State Law Enforcement Agencies (LEAs). New SOP (Jan 2026) for NCRP–CFCFRMS integration emphasises victim-centric approach and cooperative federalism in cyber governance. Static Background  Cyber Security Architecture in India CERT-In: National nodal agency for incident response, advisories, vulnerability management, established under IT Act, 2000 (Sec 70B). I4C (Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre): MHA initiative for integrated cybercrime response, including investigation, intelligence, and coordination. NCRB: Publishes Crime in India report, providing cybercrime statistics and conviction data.  Federal Context Cybercrime = State subject (Seventh Schedule), but cybersecurity = shared responsibility, requiring cooperative federalism model. Centre supplements States through advisories, funding (CCPWC Scheme), capacity building, and digital infrastructure. Key Data & Evidence Cyber incidents (CERT-In): 2021: 14,02,809 2022: 13,91,457 2023: 15,92,917 2024: 20,41,360 2025: 29,44,248 Cybercrime cases (NCRB 2023): 86,420 cases registered, but only 1,104 convictions → low conviction rate concern. Financial fraud prevention: ₹8,690 crore saved via CFCFRMS (till Jan 2026). Capacity building: ₹132.93 crore released under CCPWC Scheme; 24,600+ personnel trained. Government Measures  A. Preventive & Monitoring Mechanisms NCCC (National Cyber Coordination Centre) monitors cyberspace for real-time threat detection and intelligence sharing with States. Cyber Swachhta Kendra (CSK) detects malware, botnets, and vulnerabilities, promoting cyber hygiene (Swachh Bharat analogy). Automated Threat Exchange Platform enables real-time sharing of alerts with States and sectors. B. Capacity Building & Training Cyber Bharat Setu Programme: Promotes cybersecurity culture in States/UTs (MP, Tripura, Uttarakhand, J&K participated in 2025). CyTrain MOOC Platform: 1.51 lakh officers enrolled, enhancing forensics, investigation, prosecution skills. Mock drills & workshops: Regular exercises for testing preparedness and inter-agency coordination. C. Investigation & Coordination Framework I4C (MHA): Apex body for coordinated cybercrime response across States. National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (NCRP): Enables citizen reporting, especially for women/children-related crimes. Helpline 1930: Immediate reporting of financial cyber frauds. D. Financial Fraud Mitigation CFCFRMS (2021): Enables real-time fund blocking, preventing fraudulent transactions. Cyber Fraud Mitigation Centre (CFMC): Multi-stakeholder platform with banks, telecoms, intermediaries, LEAs. E. Advanced Investigation Infrastructure National Digital Investigation Support Centre (NDISC): Provided assistance in 13,417+ cases, strengthening forensic capabilities. Samanvaya Platform + Pratibimb Module: Enables data analytics, interstate crime linkage mapping, geo-tagging of cyber criminals. F. Legal & Institutional Strengthening SOP (Jan 2026): Introduces uniform, victim-centric complaint handling framework, improving Centre–State coordination. Joint Cyber Coordination Teams (JCCTs): Target cybercrime hotspots (e.g., Jamtara, Mewat) for multi-jurisdictional coordination. Legal Dimension IT Act, 2000 (Sec 70B): Legal basis for CERT-In powers (monitoring, response, compliance directions). Seventh Schedule: Cybercrime enforcement lies under State List (Police) → need for cooperative federalism. Data Protection & Privacy concerns: Emerging interplay with Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023. Governance Dimension Multi-agency fragmentation: CERT-In, I4C, NCRB, State Police → coordination challenges. Capacity asymmetry across States: Advanced States vs. lagging States in cyber forensics, manpower, infrastructure. Urban concentration of incidents (Delhi highest) reflects digital divide and uneven exposure. Economic Dimension Cyber frauds threaten digital economy growth, especially UPI, fintech ecosystem, e-commerce expansion. ₹8,690 crore savings highlight economic stakes and importance of real-time intervention systems. Absence of loss estimation data (CERT-In gap) weakens policy prioritisation and insurance ecosystem development. Social / Ethical Dimension Rise in cyber crimes against women and children → need for gender-sensitive digital policing. Low conviction rate (~1.3% in 2023) undermines public trust in justice delivery. Digital literacy gaps increase vulnerability of rural and elderly populations. Security / Tech Dimension Emerging threats: AI-enabled phishing, ransomware, deepfakes, critical infrastructure attacks. Cross-border nature of cybercrime complicates jurisdiction and attribution. Need for indigenous cyber capabilities aligned with Atmanirbhar Bharat in cybersecurity tools. Challenges Data gaps: No official estimation of financial losses due to cyber incidents (CERT-In limitation). Low conviction rate: Weak investigation quality, digital evidence handling issues. Institutional overlap: Lack of single unified cyber command structure. Federal friction: States depend heavily on Centre for technology and funding. Skill shortage: Acute deficit of cybersecurity professionals in LEAs. Privacy concerns: Surveillance mechanisms like NCCC raise civil liberty debates. Way Forward Establish National Cyber Security Authority for unified command and coordination (recommended by experts). Mandatory cyber audit & compliance standards across States and critical sectors. Strengthen conviction ecosystem: Fast-track cyber courts, specialised prosecutors, digital evidence protocols. Data-driven governance: Develop national cyber loss registry for better policymaking. Enhance cyber literacy via Digital India + school curriculum integration. Promote public-private partnerships with fintech, telecom, AI firms for real-time threat intelligence. International cooperation: Strengthen MLATs, Budapest Convention engagement (debated). Prelims Pointers  CERT-In is a statutory body under Section 70B of the IT Act, 2000, responsible for cyber incident response and advisories. CERT-In functions under MeitY, not MHA → common prelims trap. Cybercrime → State subject (Police, Public Order), while cybersecurity → shared responsibility (Centre + States). I4C is an MHA initiative for cybercrime coordination and investigation support, distinct from CERT-In’s technical role. Helpline 1930 is dedicated to financial cyber fraud reporting, linked with real-time fund blocking system (CFCFRMS). NCCC is a cyber threat monitoring system, not an investigative or enforcement agency. NCRP (portal) enables complaint filing only; FIR and investigation are done by State Police. CERT-In (incidents data) and NCRB (crime data) are different datasets → frequent confusion. CCPWC Scheme (MHA) provides financial assistance to States for cybercrime capacity building. India is not a signatory to the Budapest Convention on Cybercrime. ‘SHE-Marts’ will provide a new market platform for rural women entrepreneurs Context Government announced ‘SHE-Marts’ (Febr 2026) to enhance market access for rural women entrepreneurs, signalling policy shift from financial inclusion to enterprise-led empowerment under SHG ecosystem. Rising focus on women-led development and rural entrepreneurship under DAY-NRLM, addressing persistent gap between credit availability and sustainable income generation for SHG members. Relevance GS-II (Governance): Rural development, SHG institutional strengthening, poverty alleviation schemes GS-I (Society): Women empowerment, gender equity, social capital GS-III (Economy): Inclusive growth, rural entrepreneurship, value chain development Practice Question Q1.“SHE-Marts represent a shift from financial inclusion to enterprise-led empowerment.” Analyse its significance in strengthening rural livelihoods.(250 Words) Issue in Brief SHE-Marts are structured retail platforms enabling direct sale of SHG products, reducing intermediaries and improving price realisation, visibility, and consumer outreach for rural women enterprises. Initiative addresses core bottleneck of weak market linkages, which has historically limited scaling, profitability, and sustainability of SHG-based micro-enterprises despite institutional support. Static Background  DAY-NRLM is a flagship programme promoting women-centric poverty alleviation through SHGs, focusing on financial inclusion, livelihood diversification, and institutional capacity building in rural areas. India hosts ~9 crore women in SHGs, representing world’s largest women-led community network, yet many remain confined to low-value, localised livelihood activities without formal market integration. Key Features of SHE-Marts Community-owned retail outlets at Cluster Level Federations (CLFs) ensure collective ownership, decentralised governance, and sustainability, strengthening institutional capacity within SHG federations. Provides market infrastructure, product visibility, and branding opportunities, enabling SHG products to compete in organised retail spaces and access broader consumer bases. Supported by innovative financing mechanisms, though no funds sanctioned yet, indicating early-stage conceptualisation and need for clear financial roadmap for implementation. Integrated with capacity building under DAY-NRLM, focusing on entrepreneurship development, product quality improvement, packaging, and business scaling strategies. Governance Significance Facilitates transition from subsistence livelihoods to enterprise-based models, enhancing income stability, productivity, and rural economic diversification aligned with inclusive growth objectives. Strengthens local value chains (production–aggregation–retail), reducing leakages and improving efficiency, competitiveness, and rural market integration. Social Significance Promotes women’s economic empowerment through ownership and decision-making, moving beyond participation to leadership in rural enterprises and financial autonomy. Strengthens social capital and collective agency of SHGs, enhancing bargaining power, community leadership, and gender equity outcomes in rural governance structures. Challenges Absence of dedicated funding and operational guidelines may delay rollout, affecting credibility and scalability of SHE-Marts as a nationwide initiative. Competition from e-commerce platforms and organised retail may limit market penetration unless quality, branding, and pricing competitiveness are ensured. Persistent gaps in logistics, storage, standardisation, and certification may hinder product consistency and consumer trust in SHG-produced goods. Risk of elite capture within SHGs or CLFs could undermine equitable access, reducing benefits for marginalised women within the ecosystem. Way Forward Integrate SHE-Marts with digital platforms like ONDC and e-commerce ecosystems, ensuring hybrid physical-digital market access and scalability of rural enterprises. Provide dedicated funding support, viability gap financing, and credit guarantees to ensure sustainability during initial operational phases. Strengthen quality certification, branding, GI tagging, and packaging infrastructure, enhancing competitiveness of SHG products in national and global markets. Expand entrepreneurship training, digital literacy, and supply chain management skills, ensuring long-term viability and professionalisation of women-led enterprises. Prelims Pointers  SHE-Marts are proposed under DAY-NRLM, Ministry of Rural Development, focusing on market access for SHG products rather than credit linkage mechanisms. Owned and operated by Cluster Level Federations (CLFs), ensuring community ownership and decentralised governance structure within SHG ecosystem. Aim is to enable transition from livelihood activities to enterprise ownership, marking shift toward women-led entrepreneurship model. Provide physical retail platforms for SHG products, not digital marketplaces, though future convergence with e-commerce is possible. No funds sanctioned yet (as of March 2026), indicating initiative is in early conceptual and policy announcement stage.  

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 25 March 2026

Content Deepening global corruption as a pointer for India The judicial push for environmental CSR Deepening global corruption as a pointer for India Context Transparency International’s CPI 2025 shows global average declining to 42/100, with 122/182 countries scoring below 50, indicating worsening corruption and weakening institutional accountability worldwide. India scored 39 (Rank 91/182), reflecting stagnation over a decade (38–41 range) despite rapid economic growth, raising concerns about mismatch between economic expansion and governance quality. Relevance GS-II (Governance): Transparency, accountability, anti-corruption institutions GS-III (Economy): Investment climate, ease of doing business Practice Questions Q1.Global trends of rising corruption reflect deeper institutional crises. Analyse India’s position in the Corruption Perceptions Index and suggest reforms for improving governance quality.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Global corruption is deepening, linked to weak oversight, shrinking civic freedoms, and institutional erosion, affecting democratic accountability and governance credibility. India’s stagnant CPI score highlights persistent gaps in transparency, regulatory enforcement, and institutional independence, limiting its aspiration to become a developed economy by 2047. Basics CPI (Transparency International) measures perceived public sector corruption, based on 13 data sources covering procurement, judiciary, regulatory quality, and accountability frameworks. Scores range 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean); score below 50 indicates serious corruption concerns and weak governance systems. Key Data & Evidence Global average CPI score: 42 (2025), lowest in over a decade, indicating systemic global governance decline. India: Score 39, Rank 91/182, with no significant improvement since 2014 (38) despite becoming world’s 4th largest economy. Economic cost of corruption: Estimated ~5% of global GDP (~$2.6 trillion annually); India loses 0.5–1.5% of GDP, amounting to tens of billions annually. Compliance burden: 26,134 imprisonment provisions across business laws; a pharma startup faces 998 compliances, ~49% with criminal liability, increasing rent-seeking risks. Challenges A. Governance & Institutional Weaknesses Persistent gaps in transparency, accountability, and oversight mechanisms reduce public trust and weaken regulatory credibility and institutional independence. Perception-based stagnation indicates limited structural reforms, despite episodic anti-corruption actions, affecting long-term governance credibility. B. Economic Implications Corruption increases transaction costs, regulatory uncertainty, and compliance burden, diverting entrepreneurial energy from innovation to rent-seeking navigation. Weak governance affects FDI inflows, sovereign ratings, and capital allocation decisions, making governance quality a competitive economic variable. C. Regulatory & Compliance Architecture Excessive criminalisation of business laws creates discretionary power for officials, increasing opportunities for corruption and harassment. Complex regulatory frameworks discourage ease of doing business and startup ecosystem growth, particularly in high-compliance sectors like pharmaceuticals. D. Comparative Perspective India performs better than Pakistan, Bangladesh, but lags behind East Asian and European countries, which improved through institutional reforms and regulatory predictability. Countries with rising CPI scores emphasised judicial efficiency, transparency laws, and independent oversight institutions. Positive Trends  Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) and Direct Benefit Transfers (DBT) have reduced leakages in welfare schemes by minimising intermediaries and discretion. GST Network enhanced tax transparency and formalisation, improving traceability in indirect taxation systems. RBI Digital Payments Index reached 516.76 (Sept 2025), reflecting rapid digitisation reducing cash-based corruption avenues. E-procurement and digital governance tools have improved transparency in public procurement and service delivery mechanisms. Governance Dimension Corruption is not merely a legal issue but a systemic governance failure affecting trust, equity, and institutional legitimacy. Undermines constitutional values of equality (Article 14) and rule of law, disproportionately affecting vulnerable populations. Way Forward Regulatory simplification and decriminalisation of business laws to reduce discretionary power and compliance burden. Strengthen independent oversight institutions (CVC, CAG, Lokpal) with greater autonomy, resources, and accountability mechanisms. Expand digital governance and AI-based monitoring systems to minimise human discretion in service delivery and procurement. Improve judicial efficiency and contract enforcement, ensuring time-bound resolution of corruption-related cases. Promote transparency frameworks (open data, public procurement portals) to enhance citizen oversight and accountability. Prelims Pointers CPI published by Transparency International, measures perception of public sector corruption, not actual cases. Score range: 0–100, with below 50 indicating serious corruption concerns. Based on 13 data sources, including World Bank, WEF, and other institutions. India’s score (2025): 39, rank 91/182 countries. CPI focuses on public sector corruption, not private sector or household-level corruption. The judicial push for environmental CSR Context Supreme Court invoked Article 51A(g), emphasising environmental protection as constitutional duty, triggered by Great Indian Bustard habitat destruction by energy projects, reframing CSR from charity to obligation. Rising climate challenges (air pollution, water stress, waste crisis) alongside India’s Net Zero 2070 commitment (COP26) highlight urgency of aligning corporate spending with ecological priorities. Relevance GS-II (Polity): Supreme Court activism, Fundamental Duties GS-III (Environment): Conservation, climate commitments, restoration Practice Questions Q1.The Supreme Court’s interpretation of CSR marks a shift from voluntary charity to constitutional obligation. Analyse its implications for environmental governance.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Despite mandatory CSR under Companies Act, 2013, corporate spending remains skewed towards social sectors, with environment receiving only 7–9% of funds, indicating systemic neglect of ecological restoration. Corporate preference for short-term, visible projects like awareness drives and renewable initiatives undermines long-term ecosystem restoration requiring sustained investment and technical expertise. Static Background Section 135, Companies Act, 2013 mandates eligible firms to spend 2% of average net profits on CSR, covering areas including environmental sustainability and ecological balance. Article 51A(g) imposes a fundamental duty on citizens and corporations to protect environment, now judicially interpreted as linked with right to carry on business. Data & Evidence   CSR allocation pattern: Education ~38%, Healthcare ~22%, Rural Development ~10%, while Environment only 7–9%, reflecting imbalanced prioritisation. Bonn Challenge commitment: India targets 26 million hectares restoration by 2030, but private sector contributed only ~2% of 9.8 million hectares restored so far. Demonstrates massive “restoration gap” between industrial ecological damage and corporate investment in ecosystem recovery. Challenges A. Structural & Economic Bias Corporates prefer low-cost, high-visibility CSR activities, avoiding complex, long-term restoration projects involving forests, soil health, and biodiversity monitoring. Short reporting cycles and compliance mindset incentivise quick-impact projects, rather than multi-year ecological investments with delayed outcomes. B. Institutional & Capacity Constraints Lack of technical expertise in restoration ecology among CSR partners limits adoption of scientifically sound afforestation and biodiversity recovery projects. Weak coordination with forest departments, universities, and NGOs reduces effectiveness and scalability of restoration initiatives. C. Ecological Concerns Popular methods like Miyawaki plantations prioritise rapid growth, often compromising native species diversity and long-term ecosystem stability. Urban bias in CSR site selection neglects degraded forest and remote landscapes, where restoration needs are most critical. D. Governance & Policy Gaps Absence of clear policy frameworks for degraded land restoration discourages corporate participation in large-scale ecological projects. CSR framework remains compliance-driven, lacking mandatory environmental allocation or outcome-based ecological metrics. Good Practices  Mahindra’s ‘Project Hariyali’ planted ~25 million trees, focusing on survival rates rather than plantation numbers, ensuring ecological sustainability. ITC’s social forestry (1.3 million acres) integrates livelihood generation with conservation, demonstrating scalable, inclusive restoration models. Tata Group watershed projects, JSW mangrove restoration, and HUL circular economy initiatives show corporate potential in ecosystem recovery. Ethical Dimension Supreme Court reframes CSR as constitutional obligation, linking business rights with environmental responsibility, shifting paradigm from voluntary philanthropy to enforceable accountability. Calls for transition from shareholder-centric governance → ecosystem-centric governance, where corporations act as fiduciaries of environmental sustainability. Way Forward Introduce minimum CSR allocation benchmarks for environmental restoration, ensuring balanced sectoral distribution aligned with climate commitments. Shift to outcome-based CSR metrics like carbon sequestration, water retention, biodiversity indices, replacing input-based compliance reporting. Establish Restoration Trust / Escrow Funds to ensure long-term financing continuity for landscape-scale ecological projects. Promote multi-stakeholder partnerships involving forest departments, academia, NGOs, and local communities for scientific and participatory restoration. Prioritise degraded and remote forest landscapes, aligning CSR with national targets like Bonn Challenge and Land Degradation Neutrality goals. Prelims Pointers  CSR mandated under Section 135, Companies Act, 2013 → 2% of profits. Environment is a permitted CSR activity, but not mandatory quota-based. Article 51A(g) relates to environmental protection as fundamental duty. Bonn Challenge → global restoration target of 350 million hectares by 2030. India’s target → 26 million hectares restoration by 2030.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 25 March 2026

Content SC status only for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs: top court When the Chief Justice steps away SC flags long-term bias against women in the armed forces Assam floats tender for satellites to monitor floods How BioPharma SHAKTI can transform biologics with non-animal models Dwarka Basin: an ancient haven Govt restores full RoDTEP duty benefits amid war SC status only for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs: top court Context Supreme Court held that conversion to religions other than Hinduism, Sikhism, or Buddhism leads to complete loss of SC status, reaffirming Clause 3 of Constitution (SC) Order, 1950.The ruling, in Chinthada Anand v. State of Andhra Pradesh and Ors (24 March 2026), stipulates that converts cannot claim SC benefits or protections under the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. Judgment triggered by case involving conversion to Christianity, raising issues of caste identity, reservation eligibility, and constitutional interpretation of religion-based exclusion. Relevance GS-II (Polity): Article 341, affirmative action, religious freedom vs reservation framework GS-I (Society): Caste, religion, social justice, Dalit identity GS-IV (Ethics): Equality vs historical justice, constitutional morality Practice Question Q1.The restriction of Scheduled Caste status to specific religions raises questions on equality and social justice. Critically examine in light of constitutional provisions and ground realities.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Court ruled SC status is religion-specific, and conversion results in immediate disqualification from reservation and legal protections, regardless of birth-based caste identity. Establishes that caste-based benefits are linked to social discrimination within specific religious frameworks, making religion and caste status legally inseparable. Static Background Article 341 empowers President to notify Scheduled Castes, operationalised through Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950. Clause 3 of 1950 Order restricts SC status to Hindus (original), Sikhs (1956 amendment), Buddhists (1990 amendment), excluding other religions. Article 25 (Freedom of Religion) vs affirmative action framework creates constitutional tension in cases of conversion and reservation eligibility. Key Observations of Supreme Court “Profess” implies public practice of religion, not merely private belief, requiring visible and outward adherence to religious identity. Conversion to non-recognised religions leads to “immediate and complete loss” of SC status, as Clause 3 bar is absolute and categorical. SC benefits cannot coexist with practice of another religion, as both positions are mutually exclusive under constitutional scheme. Reconversion Criteria   Claimant must prove original caste identity with credible evidence, ensuring authenticity of birth-based SC status. Must demonstrate genuine reconversion, including complete renunciation of previous religion and adoption of original customs and practices. Requires community acceptance and assimilation, making social recognition a key determinant beyond self-identification. SC vs ST Distinction  SC identity is religion-linked, based on historical untouchability within Hindu social order, hence restricted by Clause 3 framework. ST identity is socio-cultural, not religion-based; conversion does not automatically disqualify unless tribal identity and community acceptance are lost. Legal Dimension Judgment reinforces that SC status is not a fundamental right, but a remedial affirmative action tool linked to specific social discrimination context. Balances Article 15(4) (affirmative action) with Article 25, prioritising historical context of caste-based exclusion over religious freedom claims. Challenges  Critics argue violation of religious freedom (Article 25), as individuals may be penalised for exercising right to convert. Ground reality vs legal assumption gap: Caste-based discrimination persists among converted communities, questioning rationale of exclusion. Ongoing debate linked to Justice K.G. Balakrishnan Commission examining extension of SC status to Dalit converts. Way Forward Undertake evidence-based review of caste discrimination among converted communities, ensuring policy aligns with ground realities. Consider sub-categorisation or alternative affirmative action frameworks to address exclusion without diluting benefits for existing SCs. Strengthen data collection on caste discrimination beyond religion, enabling more inclusive and targeted policy design. Prelims Pointers SC status defined under Article 341 and Constitution (SC) Order, 1950. Clause 3 restricts SC status to Hindus, Sikhs, and Buddhists only. Sikhism included in 1956, Buddhism in 1990 via amendments. Conversion to other religions leads to loss of SC status. ST status is not religion-restricted, depends on tribal identity and community recognition. When the Chief Justice steps away Context On March 20, 2026, CJI Surya Kant recused from hearing petitions challenging the CEC Appointment Act, 2023, citing conflict of interest, marking second CJI recusal after CJI Sanjiv Khanna (2024). Case concerns replacement of CJI with Union Minister in selection panel, raising issues of judicial independence, separation of powers, and electoral integrity. Relevance GS-II (Polity): Judicial independence, separation of powers, constitutional morality GS-II (Governance): Institutional accountability, transparency in judiciary Practice Question Q1.Judicial recusal reflects the tension between individual conscience and institutional responsibility. Critically analyse with reference to recent developments.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Recusal highlights tension between individual judicial conscience and institutional necessity, as potential conflict extends to all judges under seniority-based CJI succession system. Absence of codified rules leads to inconsistency, uncertainty, and questions on transparency in judicial decision-making in constitutional cases. Static Background Recusal stems from natural justice principle: “nemo judex in causa sua”, ensuring no person judges a case involving personal or institutional interest. India lacks statutory framework on judicial recusal, unlike US (28 U.S. Code §455), making it entirely dependent on judicial discretion. Key Legal Doctrines Reasonable apprehension of bias (Ranjit Thakur, 1987) requires credible perception of bias by a reasonable person, not mere speculative possibility. Doctrine of necessity mandates adjudication when conflict affects all judges, ensuring continuity of justice despite institutional constraints. Key Concerns in Present Case A. Institutional Conflict  All Supreme Court judges are potential future CJIs, hence conflict cited by CJI is structural and applies to entire bench uniformly. Raises issue whether recusal undermines doctrine of necessity, as no alternate constitutional forum exists for adjudication. B. Departure from NJAC Precedent (2015) In NJAC case (2015), Justice J.S. Khehar refused recusal citing universal conflict and institutional obligation to decide the case. Current approach reflects shift towards individual conscience-based recusal, creating precedential inconsistency in constitutional adjudication. C. Master of the Roster Paradox Despite recusal, CJI retains authority to constitute bench, raising concerns about indirect influence over adjudication through bench selection powers. Creates contradiction between acknowledged conflict and continued administrative control over case allocation. D. Prospective Disqualification Issue Direction to exclude judges in line to become CJI imposes pre-determined disqualification without individual judicial assessment. Ignores uncertainties in judicial succession, making such exclusion legally impractical and potentially arbitrary. Institutional Implications Multiple recusals create delays in adjudicating critical constitutional questions, affecting timely resolution of election-related institutional issues. Impacts public confidence in judicial neutrality and transparency, especially in cases involving democratic institutions like Election Commission. Comparative Perspective United States: Section 455 provides codified recusal standards, ensuring objective and consistent application, though still largely self-enforced. India: No codified framework, resulting in subjective decision-making, lack of uniformity, and limited accountability mechanisms. Challenges  Over-reliance on judicial conscience leads to inconsistency across cases and benches. Lack of transparent reasoning in recusal decisions reduces accountability and public trust. Absence of review mechanism makes recusal decisions final and non-justiciable. Way Forward Enact clear statutory or judicial guidelines defining objective recusal standards, balancing impartiality with institutional continuity. Mandate reasoned recusal orders, enhancing transparency and constitutional accountability. Develop collegial or independent mechanism for deciding recusal in constitutional benches to reduce subjectivity. Clarify limits of “Master of the Roster” powers in cases involving conflict of interest. Prelims Pointers  Recusal based on principle: nemo judex in causa sua. No statutory law governs judicial recusal in India. Doctrine of necessity allows adjudication despite universal conflict. Ranjit Thakur (1987) → reasonable apprehension of bias test. NJAC case (2015) rejected recusal citing institutional necessity. SC flags long-term bias against women in the armed forces Why in News ? On March 24, 2026, Supreme Court upheld Permanent Commission (PC) and pensionary benefits for women officers in Army, Navy, and Air Force, addressing entrenched gender discrimination. Judgment emphasises systemic bias in career progression and evaluation, reinforcing constitutional guarantees of equality, dignity, and non-discrimination in armed forces. Relevance GS-II (Polity): Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 16), judicial activism GS-I (Society): Gender equality, women empowerment Practice Question Q1.The Supreme Court’s intervention in granting Permanent Commission to women reflects the shift from formal to substantive equality. Discuss.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Women officers (SSCWOs) faced structural disadvantages such as casual ACR grading, denial of training, and limited career opportunities, resulting in unequal competition for PC with male officers. Court identified institutional bias rather than lack of merit, as the root cause of career stagnation and denial of long-term service benefits. Static Background  Short Service Commission (SSC) provides limited tenure, whereas Permanent Commission (PC) ensures career progression, command roles, and pension eligibility. Women were historically excluded from PC, with gradual inclusion following Supreme Court rulings like Babita Puniya (2020). Key Findings of Supreme Court A. Indirect / Systemic Discrimination Court found “casual and middling ACR grading” of women due to assumption of no long-term career, leading to structural disadvantage in performance evaluation. Held that biased evaluation framework violated Article 14 and 16, making comparison with male officers fundamentally unequal. B. Unequal Opportunity Structures Women denied career-enhancing opportunities (training, command roles, key appointments), resulting in weaker service records and reduced competitiveness. Court termed this as “unequal playing field”, undermining substantive equality in employment. C. Rejection of Vacancy Cap Argument Supreme Court ruled that vacancy ceilings for PC are not sacrosanct, and cannot override constitutional mandate of equality and fairness. Established that administrative constraints cannot justify denial of fundamental rights. D. Constitutional Mandate for Inclusion Inclusion of women in PC selection is a constitutional obligation, not discretionary, ensuring equal treatment and career progression opportunities. Rejected arguments for separate or unequal consideration standards for women officers. Pension & “Deemed Service” Doctrine Court invoked Article 142 to grant pension benefits to women released after ~14 years, treating them as having completed 20 years of service. Recognised forced career truncation due to systemic discrimination, ensuring retrospective justice and financial security. Institutional Implications Mandates reforms in evaluation systems (ACRs), promotion processes, and training access, ensuring gender-neutral institutional practices. Reinforces that armed forces are subject to constitutional principles of equality and non-discrimination. Social Dimension Breaks stereotype of women as short-term participants in armed forces, promoting leadership roles and substantive gender equality. Enhances representation of women in command positions, contributing to inclusive and modern military structures. Challenges Implementation challenges in changing institutional culture, evaluation systems, and infrastructure constraints. Resistance due to traditional hierarchies and operational concerns within armed forces. Need to balance gender inclusion with operational efficiency and preparedness. Way Forward Reform ACR evaluation systems to ensure objective, transparent, and bias-free assessments across genders. Ensure equal access to training, command roles, and key assignments, strengthening career progression pathways. Institutionalise gender-sensitisation and accountability mechanisms within armed forces. Develop clear, uniform policies for PC and pension benefits, ensuring consistent implementation across services. Prelims Pointers  Permanent Commission (PC) → full career + pension; SSC → short tenure. Article 14 & 16 guarantee equality and equal opportunity in employment. Article 142 → power of SC to do complete justice. Babita Puniya case (2020) enabled women PC in Army. ACR (Annual Confidential Report) used for performance evaluation. Assam floats tender for satellites to monitor floods Why in News ? On March 16, 2026, Assam issued EOI for “AssamSAT”, becoming first Indian State to procure its own earth-observation satellites, marking shift from data-user to space asset owner. Announced in Assam Budget 2025–26, aimed at flood management, border surveillance, and internal security, especially in Brahmaputra valley and chars along Bangladesh border. Relevance GS-III (Science & Tech): Space technology, remote sensing GS-III (Disaster Management): Flood monitoring, early warning systems GS-II (Governance): Cooperative federalism, decentralisation Practice Question Q1.State-led satellite initiatives like AssamSAT mark a new phase of federalism in India’s space sector. Examine its potential and challenges.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Traditional model: States depend on NRSC (ISRO) for satellite data, causing delays in disaster response and limited real-time monitoring. AssamSAT proposes at least 5 LEO satellites, enabling high-frequency, near real-time imaging, addressing dynamic floods, infiltration, and ecological monitoring gaps. Static Background Space sector traditionally Union domain (Department of Space), with States as end-users of satellite data via NRSC. Indian Space Policy, 2023 enabled Non-Governmental Entities (NGEs) and private participation, decentralising access to space infrastructure and data services. Key Features of AssamSAT EOI model (DBLOT: Design, Build, Launch, Operate, Transfer) ensures private sector execution with eventual State ownership of satellites and data sovereignty. Minimum 5 satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO), likely forming a constellation enabling revisit time of few hours for same location. Likely use of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR), enabling all-weather, day-night imaging critical for Assam’s cloud-prone conditions (~50% yearly cloud cover). Governance Dimension Represents “federalism in space sector”, where States move from passive data consumers to active infrastructure owners, leveraging policy liberalisation (Space Policy 2023). Enhances decentralised governance and decision-making, reducing dependence on centralised satellite data pipelines. Security Dimension Supports border surveillance in chars (river islands) where physical fencing is infeasible due to seasonal flooding, enabling digital geofencing and real-time monitoring. Strategic relevance due to proximity to Siliguri Corridor (“Chicken’s Neck”), critical for national security, connectivity, and movement tracking. Enables monitoring of drug trafficking routes, infiltration, and poaching (Kaziranga National Park), strengthening internal security architecture. Disaster Management Dimension Enables dynamic flood mapping in Brahmaputra basin, where water levels change within hours, improving early warning and evacuation planning. High revisit frequency (few hours vs days) enhances real-time disaster response, damage assessment, and relief targeting efficiency. Economic Dimension Promotes private space ecosystem (e.g., Pixxel, Dhruva Space) under IN-SPACe and NSIL frameworks, boosting NewSpace economy in India. State ownership of data enables future monetisation and regional sharing, creating North-East geospatial data hub potential. Challenges High capital and operational costs for satellites, requiring sustainable financing and maintenance frameworks. Need for technical capacity within State agencies to utilise and interpret satellite data effectively. Data security and privacy concerns, especially in border and surveillance applications. Risk of duplication with central capabilities (ISRO/NRSC) without proper coordination. Way Forward Ensure Centre–State coordination with ISRO, NRSC, IN-SPACe, avoiding duplication and enabling data interoperability. Develop State-level geospatial analytics capacity and trained workforce for effective utilisation of satellite data. Integrate with NDMA disaster platforms and digital governance systems for real-time decision-making. Promote PPP models and regional collaboration among NE States, leveraging AssamSAT as shared infrastructure. Prelims Pointers  AssamSAT EOI issued on March 16, 2026 by Assam government. Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites provide high-resolution imaging with low revisit time. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) enables cloud-penetrating, day-night imaging. Indian Space Policy, 2023 allows private and non-governmental participation in space sector. NRSC (ISRO) provides remote sensing data to users including States. How BioPharma SHAKTI can transform biologics with non-animal models Context Union Budget 2026–27 announced Biopharma SHAKTI (₹10,000 crore) to boost biologics and biosimilars ecosystem, signalling shift from generic dominance to high-value biopharma manufacturing. Failures like Northwick Park Trial (2006) and Semorinemab Phase II failure (2022) exposed limitations of animal testing, pushing adoption of human-relevant Non-Animal Methodologies (NAMs). Relevance GS-III (Science & Tech): Biotechnology, drug development GS-III (Economy): Pharmaceutical industry, innovation ecosystem GS-IV (Ethics): Animal ethics, patient safety Practice Questions Q1.Non-animal methodologies (NAMs) are transforming drug development globally. Analyse their significance for India’s biopharma sector.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Animal models fail to predict human immune responses for biologics, due to species-specific receptor differences, leading to safety risks and clinical trial failures. Despite policy support, NAMs adoption in India remains limited, constraining innovation, cost-efficiency, and global competitiveness in biologics sector. Static Background  Biologics are large, complex molecules (e.g., monoclonal antibodies, vaccines, insulin) produced using living cells, used in treating chronic and complex diseases. Biosimilars are generic versions of biologics, requiring high regulatory scrutiny due to complexity and sensitivity of biological products. Key Scientific Shift: Animal Models → NAMs A. Limitations of Animal Testing Species differences in immune receptors make animal models poor predictors of human response, especially for target-specific biologics like monoclonal antibodies. Leads to false positives in preclinical trials, increasing clinical failure rates, costs, and patient safety risks. B. Non-Animal Methodologies (NAMs) Includes organoids, organ-on-chip systems, and 3D bioprinting, derived from human cells, replicating human physiology more accurately. Example: Breast cancer-on-chip (2024 study) enabled testing of CAR-T therapy in solid tumours, overcoming limitations of animal models. C. Efficiency Gains (Data-backed) NAMs can reduce drug development costs by 10–26% and lead optimisation time by ~19%, improving R&D productivity and speed to market. Policy & Regulatory Framework New Drugs and Clinical Trials (Amendment) Rules, 2023 recognise cell-based assays, organ-on-chip, and computational models as valid preclinical tools. CDSCO regulates approval of biologics and biosimilars, but updated guidelines for NAM integration remain in draft stage, slowing adoption. Economic / Industrial Dimension Biopharma SHAKTI aims to capture ~5% global biopharma market, shifting India from volume-driven generics → value-driven biologics manufacturing. Supports clinical trial infrastructure (1,000+ sites), NIPER expansion, and ecosystem development, boosting innovation and startup ecosystem. NAMs reduce R&D costs and failure rates, making India more competitive in global pharmaceutical value chains. Challenges / Gaps A. Scientific & Technical Constraints NAMs require standardisation, reproducibility, and validation, limiting their immediate industry-scale adoption. Lack of clear “context of use” frameworks restricts translation from lab innovation to industry application. B. Institutional & Funding Issues Over 90 Indian labs working on NAMs, but poor commercialisation due to weak industry linkage and limited sustained funding. Need for infrastructure and long-term ecosystem investment, beyond isolated product development. C. Regulatory & Market Barriers Slow regulatory acceptance of NAMs by CDSCO, reducing industry confidence. Patent evergreening delays entry of biosimilars, increasing drug costs and limiting market competition. Example: Trastuzumab biosimilars delayed till 2018 due to extended patents, despite earlier approval (2000). D. Ecosystem Constraints Weak entrepreneurial culture and investor awareness in biologics sector, limiting private investment and risk-taking. Underdeveloped supply chains for biologics manufacturing (raw materials, cold chains, reagents). Governance / Ethical Dimension NAMs align with ethical principle of reducing animal testing, promoting humane and scientifically superior drug development. Improves patient safety by reducing unpredictable human trial failures, strengthening public trust in pharmaceutical innovation. Way Forward Accelerate regulatory approval and validation frameworks for NAMs, ensuring industry confidence and faster adoption. Use Biopharma SHAKTI funds to build shared research infrastructure, rather than isolated products, enabling ecosystem-wide innovation. Strengthen industry–academia partnerships, translating lab innovations into scalable commercial applications. Reform patent laws to curb evergreening, ensuring timely entry of biosimilars and affordable healthcare access. Promote venture funding and investor awareness in biologics sector, supporting startups and MSMEs. Prelims Pointers Biologics → complex drugs produced from living cells (e.g., mAbs, vaccines, insulin). Biosimilars → generic versions of biologics, not identical like chemical generics. NDCT Rules, 2023 allow non-animal methodologies (NAMs). CDSCO → apex drug regulatory body in India. Organ-on-chip, organoids, 3D bioprinting → examples of NAMs. Dwarka Basin: an ancient haven Why in News ? In February 2026, researchers from IIT-Bombay, ISI Kolkata, IISER Kolkata dated Dwarka Basin fossils to early Miocene (~23–5.3 million years), identifying 42 snail species (4 new). Findings provide insights into ancient marine ecosystems of western India, with implications for paleoclimate reconstruction, biodiversity evolution, and resource exploration. Relevance GS-I (Geography): Geological time scale, marine ecosystems GS-III (Environment): Climate change, biodiversity evolution GS-I (Culture): Marine archaeology, heritage vs mythology Practice Question Q1.Explain how marine fossils help in reconstructing past climate and ecological conditions. Illustrate with Dwarka Basin findings.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Discovery shows Dwarka Basin was once a warm, nutrient-rich shallow marine ecosystem, contrasting with present coastal conditions, indicating significant long-term climatic and geological transformations. Highlights importance of microfossils and marine assemblages in reconstructing past environments, ocean productivity, and evolutionary patterns. Static Background Dwarka Basin: A sedimentary basin off Gujarat (Kathiawar Peninsula) containing marine rock formations (Gaj, Dwarka formations) dating to Miocene epoch. Miocene Epoch (23–5.3 million years ago) witnessed global warming (Miocene Climatic Optimum), higher sea levels, and tropical marine expansion. Key Scientific Findings A. Fossil Evidence & Dating Identification of foraminifera (Ammonia sp., Lockhartia sp.) as index fossils, enabling precise dating of rock layers to Burdigalian stage (~16–20 million years). Discovery of 42 gastropod species, including 4 new, indicating rich biodiversity and evolutionary diversification in Indian Ocean region. B. Paleoenvironment Reconstruction Dominance of Turritelline snails suggests nutrient-rich, shallow continental shelf environment with stable oxygen levels. Evidence of predation marks (Naticid drilling) reveals complex marine food chains and ecological interactions in Miocene oceans. Environmental / Geological Significance Helps reconstruct past climate patterns and marine productivity, aiding understanding of long-term climate change and oceanographic shifts. Provides baseline for modern biodiversity conservation, linking ancient ecosystems with present marine ecological trends. Economic / Resource Dimension Presence of marine sedimentary layers and organic-rich deposits makes basin significant for hydrocarbon exploration (ONGC interest). Fossil evidence indicates conditions favourable for oil and gas formation over geological timescales. Archaeological Dimension Region known for submerged structures near Dwarka (found since 1980s), including stone anchors and pillars, dated mostly to 1500 BCE–500 CE. Highlights gap between geological timescale (millions of years) and archaeological evidence (thousands of years), cautioning against conflating mythology with scientific chronology. Tourism & Governance Dimension Gujarat plans submarine tourism in Dwarka Basin, promoting underwater heritage and marine archaeology, boosting blue economy and coastal tourism. Requires balancing tourism development with ecological conservation and heritage protection. Challenges  Risk of over-commercialisation (tourism, resource extraction) impacting fragile marine ecosystems and archaeological sites. Need for scientific clarity to avoid misinformation linking fossils with mythological narratives. Limited deep-sea research infrastructure and interdisciplinary coordination in India. Way Forward Promote integrated research combining geology, paleontology, and marine archaeology for holistic understanding of Dwarka Basin. Strengthen regulatory frameworks for marine conservation alongside tourism and hydrocarbon exploration activities. Invest in deep-sea exploration technologies and institutional capacity (NIOT, NIO, ISRO collaboration). Encourage scientific communication to bridge gap between evidence and public narratives. Prelims Pointers Miocene Epoch → 23 to 5.3 million years ago. Foraminifera → microfossils used as index fossils for dating rock layers. Dwarka Basin → sedimentary basin off Gujarat with marine fossils. Gaj Formation → Miocene marine rock formation in western India. Turritelline snails indicate nutrient-rich shallow marine environments. Govt restores full RoDTEP duty benefits amid war  Why in News ? On March 23, 2026, Government restored full RoDTEP benefits, reversing February 23, 2026 decision of 50% cut, due to West Asia war disrupting maritime trade routes. Decision notified on March 24, 2026, aims to support exporters facing rising freight costs, insurance premiums, and supply chain disruptions. Relevance GS-III (Economy): Export promotion, trade policy GS-II (IR): Impact of geopolitical conflicts on trade GS-III (Infrastructure): Logistics, supply chains Practice Questions Q1.Export incentives like RoDTEP must balance WTO compliance and domestic competitiveness. Discuss.(250 Words) Issue in Brief Earlier reduction in RoDTEP rebates (Feb 23, 2026) due to fiscal constraints coincided with global trade disruptions, squeezing exporter margins. Restoration reflects shift from fiscal consolidation → export competitiveness protection, ensuring India’s trade resilience amid geopolitical shocks. Static Background RoDTEP (Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products) launched in 2021, refunds embedded taxes (electricity duty, fuel taxes, mandi tax) not covered under GST. Based on principle: “Taxes should not be exported”, ensuring level playing field in global markets. WTO-compliant scheme, unlike earlier MEIS, avoiding risk of anti-subsidy disputes. Key Policy Developments Feb 22, 2026: Existing RoDTEP rates in force. Feb 23, 2026: Government reduced rebates by 50% and imposed caps due to budget constraints. March 23, 2026: Decision to restore full benefits. March 24, 2026: Notification issued, superseding earlier orders. Economic Rationale of Restoration A. Impact of West Asia War Disruptions in Red Sea/Gulf maritime routes increased freight costs, insurance premiums, and transit time (15–20 days longer). Exporters faced margin compression, especially MSMEs with 3–5% margins, risking loss of global competitiveness. B. Export Competitiveness Restoring benefits offsets cost escalation, maintaining price competitiveness of Indian goods in global markets. Prevents loss of market share in sectors like textiles, engineering goods, leather. Sectoral Insights Even during cuts, agriculture (ITC HS Chapters 01–24) was exempt, covering rice, tea, coffee, meat, cereals. Reflects strategic importance of agri-exports for: Global market leadership Farmer income stability Food supply chain balance Governance / Policy Dimension Illustrates adaptive policymaking in response to geopolitical shocks, balancing fiscal prudence with trade support. Indicates possible shift towards integrated Export Promotion Mission (₹25,060 crore) to streamline fragmented export schemes. Fiscal Implications Budget allocation reduced from ₹18,232 crore → ₹10,000 crore (Budget 2026–27), but restoration may require supplementary allocation or re-prioritisation. Highlights trade-off between fiscal consolidation and export promotion. Challenges Frequent policy reversals may create uncertainty for exporters and investors. Sustained support may strain fiscal resources amid global slowdown. Continued dependence on incentives rather than structural competitiveness (logistics, infrastructure). Way Forward Strengthen logistics infrastructure (Sagarmala, Gati Shakti) to reduce structural export costs. Diversify trade routes and markets to reduce geopolitical vulnerability. Integrate schemes under Export Promotion Mission for efficiency and predictability. Promote value addition and high-tech exports, reducing reliance on incentive-driven competitiveness. Prelims Pointers  RoDTEP launched in 2021, replaces MEIS. Refunds embedded taxes not covered under GST. WTO-compliant remission scheme, not subsidy. Calculated as % of FOB value, subject to caps. DGFT notifies rates and implementation details.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 24 March 2026

Content Subhash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar (SCBAPMP) AI Skilling, MyWAVES & DD Free Dish Reforms  Subhash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar (SCBAPMP) Why in News ? PIB (23 March 2026) announced that nominations are open throughout the year via the National Awards Portal, indicating a policy shift towards continuous engagement, wider outreach, and increased participation in disaster management ecosystem. The move comes amid rising climate-induced disasters in India (heatwaves, floods, landslides), reinforcing the need to strengthen preparedness, early warning systems, and community-level resilience mechanisms. Relevance GS II (Governance): Disaster management framework, institutional incentives, cooperative federalism GS III (Disaster Management): Preparedness, mitigation, resilience, Sendai Framework alignment Practice Question Q. “Awards like the Subhash Chandra Bose Aapda Prabandhan Puraskar act as soft governance tools in disaster management.” Critically examine their role in strengthening India’s disaster resilience framework.(250 Words) Key Features Instituted in 2019 by Ministry of Home Affairs to recognise excellence in disaster management, covering contributions from individuals and institutions across India. Announced annually on 23 January (Parakram Diwas), linking disaster resilience with Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose’s ideals of leadership, courage, and national service. Cash award: ₹5 lakh (individual) and ₹51 lakh (institution), ensuring recognition is accompanied by financial support for scaling disaster management initiatives. Open to individuals, NGOs, private sector, academic institutions, and government bodies, reflecting a multi-stakeholder approach to disaster governance. Scope of Recognition Covers entire disaster management cycle—prevention, mitigation, preparedness, response, relief, rehabilitation, and reconstruction, reflecting India’s shift towards risk reduction and resilience-building approach. Includes domains such as early warning systems, research, innovation, community awareness, and capacity building, aligned with Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (2015–2030). Legal & Institutional Context Disaster management falls under Concurrent List (Entry 23: Social Security and Relief), enabling coordinated action between Union and States under cooperative federalism. Disaster Management Act, 2005 institutionalises NDMA, SDMAs, and DDMAs, transforming disaster governance into a structured, policy-driven system focused on preparedness and mitigation. The award functions as a soft governance instrument, incentivising innovation, best practices, and effective implementation of statutory disaster management frameworks. Data & Evidence 271 nominations received in 2026, indicating expanding participation across governance levels and sectors in disaster management initiatives. India has achieved over 90% reduction in cyclone-related mortality since the 1999 Odisha Super Cyclone, due to improved early warning systems and evacuation strategies. Challenges Symbolic recognition without structured replication mechanisms limits the ability to scale successful models across states and districts. Awareness and accessibility gaps restrict participation from grassroots organisations, smaller NGOs, and remote districts. Inter-state disparities in institutional capacity and preparedness lead to uneven representation and outcomes in award participation. Way Forward Establish a National Repository of Best Practices under NDMA to ensure systematic documentation and replication of award-winning innovations. Link the award with financial support, CSR funding, and pilot project scaling mechanisms to convert recognition into tangible governance outcomes. Enhance grassroots participation through Panchayats and Urban Local Bodies, strengthening localised disaster preparedness and response systems. Prelims Pointers Instituted: 2019 Announced: 23 January (Parakram Diwas) Cash Award: ₹5 lakh (individual), ₹51 lakh (institution) Covers entire disaster management cycle Year-round nominations via National Awards Portal AI Skilling, MyWAVES & DD Free Dish Reforms  Why in News ? PIB (23 March 2026): Government launched National AI Skilling Initiative, MyWAVES platform, and DD Free Dish access reforms, signalling a multi-pronged push towards digital inclusion, creator economy growth, and affordable public broadcasting. Reflects policy thrust on ‘Orange Economy’ (creative economy) and India’s ambition to become a global hub for digital content, AVGC sector, and AI-enabled media ecosystem. Relevance GS II (Governance): Digital inclusion, public broadcasting, IT regulation GS III (Economy): Digital economy, AVGC sector, employment, innovation GS III (Science & Tech): AI ecosystem, emerging technologies Practice Question Q. “India’s push towards AI skilling and public digital platforms reflects a shift towards an inclusive digital and creative economy.” Analyse the opportunities and challenges associated with this transition.(250 Words) Basics Concepts DD Free Dish DD Free Dish is India’s only free Direct-to-Home (DTH) service operated by Prasar Bharati, providing free access to television channels without monthly subscription fees. Uses satellite transmission (Ku-band) and typically requires a dish antenna + set-top box, mainly serving rural and low-income households (~4+ crore users). Plays a crucial role in public service broadcasting, disaster communication, and bridging digital divide, especially where cable/OTT penetration is low. WAVES OTT Platform WAVES is an OTT platform launched by Prasar Bharati, aimed at providing digital streaming of Doordarshan and other curated content. Designed to strengthen public broadcasting in digital era, competing with private OTT platforms while ensuring cultural representation and accessibility. Orange Economy Refers to economic activities linked to creativity, culture, media, and digital content industries (films, gaming, animation, content creation). Recognised globally by Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and increasingly adopted in India to leverage youth talent and digital platforms for economic growth and soft power projection. Key Initiatives 1. National AI Skilling Initiative Implemented with Google & YouTube via IICT, targeting 15,000 creators, students, and media professionals with free training, addressing AI skill deficit in creative industries. Two phases: Phase I: Foundational AI (Generative AI, prompting, cloud tools) Phase II: Advanced training (AI tools like Gemini, storytelling, content optimisation) Focus on AVGC sector, aligning with India’s strategy to become global content production hub. 2. MyWAVES Platform Citizen creator interface within WAVES OTT, enabling users to create, upload, and share content, transforming platform from consumer-centric to participatory ecosystem. Supports short videos, episodic content, multilingual formats, promoting regional diversity and grassroots storytelling. Linked with initiatives like Create in India Challenge, encouraging local content creation and cultural representation. 3. DD Free Dish Reforms Introduction of in-built satellite tuners in TV sets + Advanced Electronic Programme Guide (EPG), eliminating need for separate set-top boxes and reducing cost barriers. Enhances ease of access, especially in rural and remote areas, ensuring last-mile delivery of information, education, and entertainment. Advanced EPG enables intuitive navigation of channels and schedules, improving user experience in public broadcasting ecosystem. Policy & Institutional Context Falls under Union List (Entry 31: Broadcasting, communication), giving Centre authority over satellite, OTT, and broadcasting infrastructure. Linked with: Digital India Programme → universal digital access National AVGC Policy (2022) → creative economy growth IT Rules, 2021 → digital content regulation framework Strengthens Prasar Bharati’s mandate of providing accessible, affordable, and inclusive broadcasting services. Data & Evidence India has 800+ million internet users, making it one of the largest digital content markets globally. DD Free Dish reaches ~4 crore households, predominantly in rural India, making it critical for information dissemination and governance communication. AVGC sector expected to grow at ~14–16% CAGR, indicating strong demand for AI-skilled workforce and digital creators. Challenges Digital divide remains significant, with gaps in internet access, device affordability, and digital literacy, limiting reach of OTT and AI skilling initiatives. Content regulation challenges in UGC platforms like MyWAVES, including misinformation, copyright issues, and ethical concerns (deepfakes). Employment linkage gap, where AI training may not directly translate into jobs or income without strong industry integration and monetisation pathways. Public broadcasting faces competition from private OTT platforms, requiring content quality improvement and innovation. Way Forward Integrate AI skilling with industry ecosystems, startups, and monetisation platforms, ensuring employment-oriented outcomes and global competitiveness. Strengthen balanced regulatory frameworks for UGC platforms, ensuring freedom of expression with accountability. Expand digital infrastructure (BharatNet, 5G) to bridge urban-rural access gap. Enhance content quality and regional diversity in public broadcasting, making platforms like WAVES and DD Free Dish more competitive and relevant. Prelims Pointers DD Free Dish: Free DTH service by Prasar Bharati, no monthly subscription MyWAVES: UGC platform under WAVES OTT AI Skilling: 15,000 beneficiaries, partnership with Google & YouTube EPG: Electronic Programme Guide for channel navigation Linked to Orange Economy and AVGC sector