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Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 01 April 2026

Content Digital Push Deepens in Rural India: eGramSwaraj Records Over ₹3 Lakh Crores in Online Payments; SabhaSaar Expands to 23 Languages India emerges as Global Leader in issuing Compliance Certificates under Nagoya Protocol Digital Push Deepens in Rural India: eGramSwaraj Records Over ₹3 Lakh Crores in Online Payments; SabhaSaar Expands to 23 Languages Why in News? PIB (31 March 2026) reported over ₹3 lakh crore cumulative transactions through eGramSwaraj, marking deepening digital financial governance at grassroots level. SabhaSaar AI tool expanded to 23 Indian languages, enhancing inclusivity and accessibility in Gram Sabha proceedings across diverse linguistic regions. Reflects transition from basic digitisation to full-scale digital governance integrating finance, participation, and decision-making in Panchayati Raj Institutions. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Panchayati Raj Institutions – 73rd Constitutional Amendment (Part IX) Decentralisation & grassroots governance Gram Sabha & participatory democracy (Article 243A) E-governance: transparency, accountability, auditability GS III (Science & Technology + Economy) Digital India & Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) Artificial Intelligence in governance (SabhaSaar) Financial inclusion & rural digital economy Cybersecurity, data protection, digital divide Practice Question Q1.  Digital platforms like eGramSwaraj are redefining fiscal and administrative transparency at the grassroots level.Discuss their impact on decentralised governance in India. (250 words) Context Panchayati Raj Institutions historically suffered from fragmented accounting systems, delayed payments, weak documentation, and limited citizen participation in Gram Sabha processes. Government initiatives aim to ensure real-time financial tracking, improved transparency, and digitised participatory governance at grassroots level. Represents convergence of Digital India, decentralisation reforms, and AI-based governance tools for strengthening local democracy. Static Background Panchayati Raj System Established through 73rd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992, granting constitutional status to local self-government institutions in rural India. Part IX of Constitution (Articles 243–243O) defines structure, powers, elections, and financial provisions for Panchayats. Gram Sabha under Article 243A acts as foundation of direct democracy, enabling participatory decision-making at village level. Eleventh Schedule lists 29 subjects including agriculture, health, and education, devolved to Panchayats for local governance. e-Panchayat Mission Mode Project Launched under Digital India Programme to digitise entire lifecycle of Panchayat functioning, including planning, budgeting, implementation, and monitoring. Aims to enhance transparency, accountability, and efficiency through integrated digital platforms such as eGramSwaraj and AuditOnline. Public Financial Management System (PFMS) Developed by Controller General of Accounts to ensure real-time tracking of funds and direct digital payments across government schemes. Enables end-to-end financial visibility from Centre to last-mile implementing agencies, reducing leakages and delays. Key Features & Achievements eGramSwaraj Integrated digital platform enabling planning, accounting, budgeting, and real-time online payments for Panchayati Raj Institutions. Replaces traditional paper-based records and cash transactions with digital workflows ensuring transparency and accountability in governance processes. Data & Evidence Over ₹3 lakh crore cumulative transactions demonstrate massive scale of digital financial operations at grassroots governance level. ₹53,342 crore transferred during FY 2025–26 alone, indicating rapid adoption and increasing reliance on digital payment systems. 2,59,798 PRIs onboarded on platform, ensuring near-universal coverage of Panchayati Raj institutions across India. 2,50,807 PRIs actively making online payments, reflecting operational integration of digital systems into daily governance. 2,55,254 Gram Panchayats uploaded development plans, improving planning transparency and accountability in resource allocation. 1,60,79,737 vendors registered on platform, expanding rural economic ecosystem and enabling direct vendor payments. Outcomes Ensures complete digital audit trail of financial transactions, reducing scope for corruption, leakages, and discretionary misuse of funds. Enables real-time payments directly to vendors and service providers, improving efficiency and reducing administrative delays. Facilitates better monitoring and evaluation by higher authorities through real-time dashboards and data analytics. SabhaSaar (AI Tool) AI-powered voice-to-text tool launched in August 2025 to automate recording and summarisation of Gram Sabha meetings. Generates structured outputs including minutes, attendance, resolutions, and actionable points, improving documentation quality and consistency. Features Uses speech recognition technology to capture discussions in local languages, enhancing accessibility and inclusivity in governance processes. Expanded from 13 to 23 languages, covering major linguistic diversity and aligning with constitutional recognition of languages. Data Adopted by 1,11,486 Gram Panchayats, indicating growing trust and usage of AI tools in grassroots governance processes. Received national recognition through awards in AI and social impact categories, validating technological innovation in governance. Outcomes Enhances participatory democracy by enabling citizens to engage in their native languages without linguistic barriers. Improves transparency through accurate and accessible documentation of Gram Sabha proceedings and decisions. Builds institutional memory, enabling continuity and accountability in local governance decisions over time. Significance Strengthens financial governance through real-time tracking of public expenditure and elimination of manual, opaque financial processes. Enhances administrative efficiency by standardising procedures, reducing delays, and enabling faster decision-making across Panchayati Raj Institutions. Deepens democratic participation by documenting Gram Sabha proceedings and making them accessible for public scrutiny and engagement. Promotes social inclusion by enabling multilingual participation and reducing barriers for marginalised and non-literate populations. Supports rural economic formalisation by integrating large vendor ecosystem into digital payment networks and formal financial systems. Demonstrates application of advanced technologies like AI and digital public infrastructure in grassroots governance contexts. Challenges Persistent digital divide due to uneven internet connectivity, particularly in remote, tribal, and geographically difficult regions.E.g,While India crossed the 1 billion internet connections mark in 2025, active internet penetration in rural areas stands at approximately 55-57%. This means nearly 45% of rural India remains offline or “under-connected.” Limited digital literacy among Panchayat officials and citizens, affecting effective utilisation of digital governance platforms.E.g,Even with 63.9 million people certified under PMGDISHA, a 2025 impact study found that 72% of rural users still rely on Common Service Centers (CSCs) or “village computer points” for basic tasks like checking land records or filing PM-Kisan applications. Incomplete devolution of funds, functions, and functionaries restricts full potential of digital tools in decentralised governance. Technological limitations in AI tools, especially regarding dialect recognition and accuracy in noisy rural environments. Cybersecurity risks and lack of robust data protection frameworks at local governance level raise concerns of data misuse. Risk of procedural compliance replacing genuine participation, where digital records exist without meaningful deliberation in Gram Sabhas. Way Forward Strengthen last-mile digital infrastructure through accelerated BharatNet rollout and ensuring reliable electricity supply in rural areas. Implement continuous capacity-building programmes for Panchayat officials focusing on digital skills and governance applications. Improve AI tools with enhanced dialect recognition, real-time translation, and contextual understanding of local languages. Ensure effective devolution of funds, functions, and functionaries to complement digital governance with institutional empowerment. Integrate digital platforms with social audit mechanisms to enhance accountability and citizen oversight in governance processes. Develop robust cybersecurity and data protection frameworks tailored for Panchayati Raj Institutions and local governance systems. Promote Gram Sabha participation through awareness campaigns and incentives, ensuring technology complements rather than replaces deliberation. Converge with schemes like MGNREGA, SVAMITVA, and SDG localisation initiatives for holistic rural development planning. Data & Facts for Answers ₹3 lakh crore cumulative digital transactions through eGramSwaraj highlight scale of grassroots financial digitisation in India. Over 2.59 lakh PRIs onboarded indicate near-universal institutional coverage under digital governance framework. SabhaSaar’s expansion to 23 languages demonstrates commitment to inclusive and multilingual governance practices. More than 1.6 crore vendors integrated into system reflects significant formalisation of rural economic transactions. Prelims Pointers eGramSwaraj is part of e-Panchayat Mission Mode Project under Digital India Programme for Panchayat-level governance digitisation. PFMS enables real-time fund tracking and direct payments, reducing leakages and improving financial transparency. SabhaSaar is an AI-based voice-to-text tool used for recording and summarising Gram Sabha proceedings. Panchayati Raj system derives constitutional status from 73rd Amendment Act, 1992, under Part IX of Constitution. India emerges as Global Leader in issuing Compliance Certificates under Nagoya Protocol Why in News? India emerged as the global leader in issuing Internationally Recognized Certificates of Compliance (IRCCs), accounting for more than 56 percent of total certificates issued worldwide. Latest ABS Clearing-House data shows India issued 3,561 IRCCs out of global 6,311, significantly outperforming all other participating countries. Demonstrates India’s strong implementation of Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) provisions under Nagoya Protocol and leadership in biodiversity governance. Relevance GS III (Environment & Ecology) Biodiversity conservation under Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) framework Sustainable use of genetic resources Bio-economy & ecological governance GS II (International Relations) India’s leadership in global environmental governance Multilateral environmental agreements (Nagoya Protocol) Equity, climate justice, and North-South cooperation Practice Question Q1.  India’s leadership in issuing Internationally Recognized Certificates of Compliance reflects its strong implementation of the Nagoya Protocol.Analyse its significance for biodiversity governance. (250 words) Context Nagoya Protocol operationalises fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from utilisation of genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge. IRCCs serve as globally recognised legal instruments ensuring compliance with Prior Informed Consent and Mutually Agreed Terms between users and providers. Increasing global demand for biological resources in pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, and agriculture has intensified importance of ABS frameworks. Static Background Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) International treaty adopted in 1992 with objectives of biodiversity conservation, sustainable use, and fair sharing of benefits from genetic resources. Provides overarching legal framework for biodiversity governance, under which Nagoya Protocol was later adopted as supplementary agreement. Nagoya Protocol on ABS (2010) Supplementary agreement to CBD focusing specifically on Access and Benefit Sharing of genetic resources and associated traditional knowledge. Mandates obtaining Prior Informed Consent and establishing Mutually Agreed Terms before accessing biological resources. Entered into force in 2014 and aims to ensure provider countries and communities receive fair compensation. ABS Clearing-House Global online platform under CBD for transparency, information sharing, and monitoring of ABS implementation by member countries. Maintains database of IRCCs, national laws, and compliance measures to ensure accountability in resource utilisation. India’s Legal Framework Biological Diversity Act, 2002 provides statutory basis for ABS implementation and regulation of access to biological resources. Institutional structure includes National Biodiversity Authority, State Biodiversity Boards, and Biodiversity Management Committees at local level. Ensures decentralised governance and involvement of local communities in benefit-sharing mechanisms. Key Highlights & Data India issued 3,561 IRCCs, representing over 56 percent of total global certificates, establishing clear dominance in ABS compliance mechanisms. Globally, only 34 out of 142 registered countries on ABS Clearing-House have issued IRCCs, highlighting India’s exceptional implementation performance. Other countries lag significantly behind, including France with 964 certificates, Spain with 320, and Argentina with 257 IRCCs. IRCCs act as legal proof that access to genetic resources followed due procedures of consent and benefit-sharing agreements. Significance Establishes India as a global leader in biodiversity governance and implementation of international environmental agreements under CBD framework. Strengthens protection of traditional knowledge and ensures local communities receive fair economic benefits from resource utilisation. Enhances transparency and traceability in utilisation of genetic resources, from research stages to commercial applications. Boosts India’s credibility in international negotiations on biodiversity, climate change, and sustainable development frameworks. Supports bio-economy growth by creating a regulated and predictable framework for accessing biological resources. Reinforces India’s commitment towards Sustainable Development Goals, particularly SDG 15 (Life on Land) and SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption). Challenges Implementation gaps persist at grassroots level due to limited awareness among local communities about their rights under ABS framework. Administrative delays and procedural complexities may discourage research institutions and private sector participation in accessing resources legally. Monitoring end-use of genetic resources globally remains difficult, especially in cases of digital sequence information and biotechnology innovations. Limited capacity of Biodiversity Management Committees affects effective documentation of People’s Biodiversity Registers and local knowledge systems. Concerns of biopiracy and misappropriation of traditional knowledge continue due to weak international enforcement mechanisms. Balancing conservation objectives with economic utilisation of resources remains a key policy challenge in biodiversity governance. Way Forward Strengthen awareness campaigns at local level to ensure communities understand rights related to benefit-sharing and protection of traditional knowledge. Simplify regulatory procedures and ensure time-bound approvals to promote research, innovation, and sustainable utilisation of biological resources. Enhance capacity of Biodiversity Management Committees through training, funding, and digital tools for better documentation and monitoring. Develop robust mechanisms for tracking utilisation of genetic resources, including digital sequence information and cross-border applications. Promote international cooperation for preventing biopiracy and ensuring enforcement of ABS obligations across jurisdictions. Integrate ABS framework with bio-economy policies to balance conservation with sustainable economic development. Data & Facts for Answers India issued 3,561 IRCCs out of global total of 6,311, accounting for over 56 percent share worldwide. Only 34 out of 142 countries registered on ABS Clearing-House have issued IRCCs, highlighting low global compliance levels. India’s ABS framework implemented through three-tier institutional structure involving national, state, and local biodiversity bodies. Prelims Pointers Nagoya Protocol deals with Access and Benefit Sharing of genetic resources under Convention on Biological Diversity framework. IRCCs are issued as proof of Prior Informed Consent and Mutually Agreed Terms between resource providers and users. Biological Diversity Act, 2002 governs biodiversity conservation and ABS implementation in India. ABS Clearing-House is global platform for transparency and monitoring of compliance under Nagoya Protocol.  

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 01 April 2026

Content Disaster Finance & 16th Finance Commission: Odisha Paradox An impeachment move with no winners Disaster Finance & 16th Finance Commission: Odisha Paradox Why in News? Odisha, one of India’s most disaster-prone States, faces largest reduction (1.57 percentage points) in disaster funding share under 16th Finance Commission. Occurs despite Odisha having highest hazard score and proven disaster preparedness, raising concerns about flaws in allocation formula. Debate triggered over fairness and scientific validity of Disaster Risk Index (DRI) used for SDRF allocations. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Finance Commission (Article 280) & fiscal federalism Centre–State financial relations & horizontal devolution Cooperative federalism & equity in resource distribution Disaster governance institutions (NDMA, SDRF) GS  III (Economy + Environment & Disaster Management) Disaster risk management & Sendai Framework alignment Climate change, extreme events & vulnerability mapping Public finance allocation efficiency Data governance & use of indices (DRI) in policymaking Practice Question Q1.  The Disaster Risk Index (DRI) used by the 16th Finance Commission has raised concerns of horizontal inequity among States.Critically analyse. (250 words) Context Odisha has 574.7 km cyclone-prone coastline and has faced some of the most intense cyclones in the Indian subcontinent historically. Through early warning systems, cyclone shelters, and mass evacuations, the State reduced cyclone mortality to near zero over two decades. Despite this success, revised formula has reduced its share, highlighting mismatch between risk exposure and fiscal allocation. Static Background Finance Commission & Disaster Funding Finance Commission under Article 280 recommends distribution of finances between Centre and States, including disaster management funds. State Disaster Response Fund (SDRF) is primary funding mechanism for disaster preparedness, relief, and response at State level. 16th Finance Commission allocated ₹2,04,401 crore to SDRF, a 59.5% increase over 15th Finance Commission allocation. Disaster Risk Index (DRI) 16th Finance Commission uses multiplicative formula: DRI = Hazard × Exposure × Vulnerability. Marks shift from additive approach (15th FC) to theoretically more accurate risk-based framework. Based on principle that disasters occur when hazard intersects with exposed and vulnerable populations. Key Issues in Current Formula Mis-measurement of Exposure Exposure measured using total population scaled linearly, rather than population residing in hazard-prone zones. Contradicts IPCC definition, where exposure refers to people located in areas susceptible to hazards, not entire population. Leads to distortion where large inland populations are treated equally exposed as smaller coastal populations. Population Bias in Multiplicative Formula Multiplicative DRI amplifies population effect, effectively rewarding demographic size rather than actual disaster risk exposure. Odisha with hazard score 12 and low population score gets DRI of 79.8, while Uttar Pradesh reaches 413.2 despite lower hazard levels. Undermines objective of risk-based allocation by privileging populous States over high-risk States. Inadequate Proxy for Vulnerability Vulnerability measured through per capita NSDP, assuming poorer States are more vulnerable to disasters. NSDP reflects fiscal capacity, not actual disaster vulnerability like housing quality, infrastructure resilience, or health systems. Ignores intra-state inequalities and spatial concentration of vulnerability within hazard-prone districts. Empirical Distortions Kerala assigned low vulnerability score despite ₹31,000 crore flood damage in 2018, due to relatively higher per capita income. Jharkhand loses funding share despite high poverty and vulnerability, as population factor dominates multiplicative framework. Around 20 States lose share, not because of lower risk, but due to lower population or higher average income levels. Implications Creates horizontal fiscal inequity, where high-risk States receive lower disaster funding relative to actual vulnerability and exposure. Disincentivises States investing in disaster preparedness, as improved resilience does not translate into sustained fiscal support. Weakens India’s overall disaster preparedness by misallocating resources away from most hazard-prone regions. Undermines cooperative federalism by generating perceptions of arbitrary and inequitable fiscal transfers. Data & Evidence Odisha hazard score: highest in India, yet faces reduction in SDRF share by 1.57 percentage points. Bihar DRI: 224.2 and Uttar Pradesh: 413.2 due to population weight, despite comparatively lower hazard exposure. Kerala flood damages (2018): ₹31,000 crore, yet vulnerability score near minimum under current formula. SDRF allocation increased to ₹2.04 lakh crore, but distribution remains skewed due to flawed index construction. What Needs to Change ? Reforming Exposure Measurement Exposure should be calculated as population residing in hazard-prone zones, not total State population. Use BMTPC Vulnerability Atlas combined with Census enumeration block data for precise spatial exposure mapping. Redefining Vulnerability Develop composite vulnerability index including: Share of kutcha housing and unsafe structures Health infrastructure availability in hazard-prone districts Agricultural dependence and crop insurance coverage Use datasets such as NFHS-5, PMFBY, NHM, and IMD records for multidimensional assessment. Institutional Mechanism Mandate National Disaster Management Authority to publish annual State Disaster Vulnerability Index with standardised methodology. Ensure consistency and transparency across Finance Commission cycles, avoiding ad hoc or contested metrics. Aligning Formula with Risk Principles Ensure DRI reflects actual interaction of hazard, exposure, and vulnerability, rather than population-driven distortions. Introduce safeguards or weights to prevent demographic size from dominating allocation outcomes. Way Forward Transition towards spatially disaggregated disaster risk mapping, integrating geospatial data with socio-economic indicators for precise allocation. Strengthen data governance and interoperability between agencies like IMD, NDMA, Census, and State governments. Incorporate climate change projections to anticipate future disaster risks rather than relying solely on historical data. Ensure Finance Commission formulas align with Sendai Framework principles of disaster risk reduction and resilience building. Promote incentive-based funding rewarding States for investments in disaster preparedness and resilience infrastructure. Prelims Pointers Finance Commission constituted under Article 280 recommends disaster funding through SDRF and NDRF mechanisms. Nagoya Protocol unrelated; disaster funding linked to NDMA and SDRF frameworks. DRI formula: Hazard × Exposure × Vulnerability used by 16th Finance Commission. IPCC defines exposure as population located in hazard-prone areas, not total population within administrative boundaries. An impeachment move with no winners  Why in News? Around 193 Opposition MPs moved impeachment notice against Chief Election Commissioner, alleging partisan conduct, electoral roll manipulation, and disenfranchisement concerns. First such attempt against CEC in India’s history, signalling deep institutional trust deficit in Election Commission of India (ECI). Triggered by controversies surrounding Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls and alleged discrepancies in voter lists. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Election Commission of India (Article 324) – independence & neutrality Removal of CEC & constitutional safeguards Electoral reforms & integrity of electoral rolls Separation of powers & judicialisation of governance Practice Qustion Q1. The recent impeachment move against the Chief Election Commissioner reflects deeper concerns about institutional trust in electoral governance. Discuss. (250 words) Context ECI historically regarded as most credible constitutional institution, praised for integrity and neutrality in electoral management. Recent electoral roll revisions and perceived lack of transparency led to escalating confrontation between Opposition parties and ECI. Situation reflects shift from institutional trust → adversarial political engagement with constitutional bodies. Static Background Election Commission of India (ECI) Constitutional body under Article 324, responsible for superintendence, direction, and control of elections in India. Comprises Chief Election Commissioner and Election Commissioners with security of tenure similar to Supreme Court judges. CEC removable only through impeachment by Parliament on grounds of proved misbehaviour or incapacity. Electoral Rolls & Legal Framework Preparation and revision governed by Representation of the People Act, 1950. Universal adult suffrage under Article 326, making electoral rolls central to democratic participation. ECI responsible for ensuring inclusion, accuracy, and non-discrimination in voter lists. Key Issues Highlighted Impeachment as Political Signal Motion unlikely to succeed due to numbers, indicating symbolic rather than outcome-oriented political strategy. Reflects attempt to delegitimise the institution and raise public awareness about alleged electoral irregularities. Suggests erosion of norm of treating ECI as neutral referee in democratic competition. Special Intensive Revision (SIR) Controversy Large-scale revision of electoral rolls undertaken with AI-based “logical discrepancy” detection tools. Significant number of voters deleted or kept under adjudication, raising concerns about potential disenfranchisement. Continuation of elections despite unresolved voter status created doubts about procedural fairness and inclusiveness. Breakdown of Institutional Communication Increasing hostility between Opposition and ECI marked by public accusations, press conferences, and legal battles. ECI perceived as unresponsive or opaque in addressing concerns, leading to collapse of dialogue channels. Shift from cooperative engagement to institutional confrontation weakens democratic norms. Judicialisation of Electoral Process Supreme Court involvement through multiple petitions and appointment of judicial officers to resolve voter disputes. Indicates extraordinary reliance on judiciary for routine electoral functions, reflecting institutional stress. Raises concerns about blurring of separation of powers and administrative autonomy of ECI. Perception of Partisanship Allegations of selective actions and timing of decisions created perception of bias towards ruling dispensation. Even perception of bias can undermine legitimacy, as ECI’s authority depends heavily on public trust and neutrality. Implications Weakening of ECI’s credibility risks delegitimising electoral outcomes, especially for losing parties and their supporters. Erosion of trust in electoral processes can lead to reduced voter confidence and democratic participation. Politicisation of constitutional bodies threatens institutional autonomy and independence in long term. Potential disenfranchisement undermines core democratic right to vote under Article 326. Creates dangerous precedent where referee becomes perceived participant in political contestation. Critical Analysis Impeachment move represents political theatre but signals deeper systemic concerns about electoral integrity and institutional accountability. ECI’s insistence on procedural correctness without transparent communication may reflect administrative rigidity over participatory governance. Over-reliance on technological tools like AI without adequate safeguards raises issues of exclusion, opacity, and accountability. Both sides contribute to erosion of trust: Political actors by attacking institution Institution by not sufficiently engaging with stakeholders Way Forward Strengthen transparency by publishing detailed methodologies, data, and audit trails for electoral roll revisions. Institutionalise structured dialogue mechanisms between ECI and political parties to resolve disputes proactively. Establish independent electoral audit mechanisms or ombudsman for addressing grievances related to voter lists. Regulate use of AI tools in governance through clear accountability frameworks and human oversight mechanisms. Ensure strict adherence to inclusion principle, prioritising voter rights over administrative efficiency. Reinforce institutional independence through collegium-based appointments and safeguards against perceived executive influence. Prelims Pointers ECI established under Article 324 with powers over conduct of elections in India. CEC removal process similar to Supreme Court judge, requiring special majority in Parliament. Electoral rolls governed by Representation of the People Act, 1950. Universal adult suffrage guaranteed under Article 326 of Constitution.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 01 April 2026

Content Digital Governance in India: Challenges in the Era of 31 GB Data Consumption India’s Macroeconomic Contradiction & Oil–Fiscal Vulnerability India’s Semiconductor Push: Sanand as “Bridge to Silicon Valley” Space Debris & Orbital Governance Crisis: “Failure of Governance, Not Engineering” Maternal Mortality in India: Progress, Gaps, and 2030 Challenge Artemis II Mission: Human Return to Lunar Orbit INS Dunagiri (Project 17A): Boost to Aatmanirbhar Naval Capability Digital Governance in India: Challenges in the Era of 31 GB Data Consumption Why in News? India’s average monthly mobile data consumption reached 31 GB per user in 2025, rising sharply from 27.5 GB in 2024 (Nokia MBiT Report). India now has world’s second-largest 5G subscriber base and 5G data consumption, indicating rapid digital expansion. Highlights emerging paradox: high data consumption coexists with structural governance, infrastructure, and inclusion challenges. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Digital India & e-governance reforms Service delivery & last-mile governance gaps Digital inclusion & accessibility issues State capacity & governance efficiency GS III (Science & Technology + Economy) Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) 5G expansion & telecom infrastructure Digital divide & rural connectivity gaps Data economy & platform governance Practice Question Q1.  India’s rising digital consumption has not translated into equitable digital governance outcomes.Critically examine. (250 words) Context India’s digital ecosystem is expanding rapidly with 5G rollout, AI-driven services, and digital public infrastructure platforms. Growth in data consumption is driven by video streaming, AI applications, digital governance services, and cloud-based platforms. However, governance systems face challenges in translating digital access into meaningful inclusion and administrative empowerment. Digital India Programme Launched in 2015 to transform India into a digitally empowered society and knowledge economy. Focus areas include: Digital infrastructure as a core utility Governance and services on demand Digital empowerment of citizens Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) India’s DPI stack includes: Aadhaar (identity) UPI (payments) DigiLocker (documents) Aims to enable scalable, interoperable, and inclusive governance systems. Infrastructure Gap: The “31 GB Challenge” Rapid increase in data usage to 31 GB/user places heavy pressure on rural telecom infrastructure and middle-mile connectivity systems. 5G traffic remains concentrated in metros, with 58% of metro data traffic on 5G, while rural areas depend on congested 4G networks. Around 35,000 Gram Panchayats face dark fiber issues, where optical fiber exists but remains non-operational. Creates digital inequality where urban users access high-speed AI services, while rural users face latency and connectivity disruptions. India’s Macroeconomic Contradiction & Oil–Fiscal Vulnerability Why in News? Rising global oil prices amid West Asia tensions have exposed India’s structural fiscal vulnerability to external energy shocks. Empirical estimates and recent fiscal responses highlight simultaneous pressures on inflation, fiscal deficit, and current account balance. Debate intensifies on India’s “growth vs resilience” contradiction, where strong GDP coexists with deep macroeconomic stress. Relevance GS III (Economy) Fiscal policy & FRBM framework Inflation, Current Account Deficit (CAD), and growth linkages Energy security & oil import dependence External sector vulnerabilities Practice Question Q1.  Examine how global oil price shocks affect India’s fiscal stability, inflation, and growth trajectory. (250 words) Context India’s macroeconomy shows divergence between robust headline indicators (growth, forex reserves) and underlying vulnerabilities (oil shocks, consumption stress, fiscal pressures). Increasing reliance on transaction-based taxes and infrastructure-led expenditure has made fiscal system more sensitive to external shocks. Energy dependence (85–87% crude imports) acts as primary transmission channel of global instability into domestic economy. Static Background Fiscal Architecture of India Fiscal policy guided by FRBM Act, targeting fiscal deficit consolidation while maintaining growth-supportive expenditure. Revenue sources: Direct taxes (income, corporate) Indirect taxes (GST, excise duties) Expenditure pattern includes: Capital expenditure (infrastructure) Revenue expenditure (subsidies, welfare schemes) External Sector Linkages Current Account Deficit (CAD) reflects difference between imports and exports of goods and services. Oil imports constitute largest share of India’s import bill, making CAD highly sensitive to crude price fluctuations. Core Macroeconomic Contradiction India recorded strong GDP growth (~8.1% in Q3 FY26) and high forex reserves (~$709 billion), indicating macroeconomic stability. Simultaneously, rupee depreciation (~₹95/$), FPI outflows ($8 billion+), and oil price surge (~$156/bbl) indicate external vulnerabilities. Fiscal consolidation target (4.3% by FY27) coexists with rising subsidy burdens and revenue losses due to tax cuts. Suggests shift from stable growth model → shock-sensitive growth model dependent on global conditions. Oil–Fiscal Transmission Mechanism India imports 85–87% of crude oil, making economy directly exposed to global price volatility and geopolitical disruptions. A $10 per barrel increase typically: Raises CPI inflation by ~0.2 percentage points Widens CAD by $9–10 billion (~0.4% of GDP) Reduces GDP growth by ~0.5 percentage points Oil shocks increase subsidy burden (fertiliser, LPG), transport costs, and inflation-linked expenditure simultaneously. Recent Evidence of Transmission Crude prices rose from ~$59/bbl (2019) to over $120/bbl (2022), triggering fiscal and inflationary pressures. Government reduced excise duties on petrol and diesel, causing ₹2.2 lakh crore revenue loss between 2021–2022. Energy subsidies surged, with fertiliser and LPG support pushing total subsidies to ~₹3.2 lakh crore. Current projections suggest oil at $100/bbl could increase government expenditure by ₹3.6 trillion and widen CAD. Structural Shifts in Fiscal System Revenue Side Vulnerability Increasing reliance on GST and transaction-based taxes (~₹22.8 lakh crore FY25) makes revenue highly sensitive to consumption cycles. Oil shocks reduce consumption through inflation, thereby lowering GST buoyancy and tax collections. Limited expansion of direct tax base reduces stability and counter-cyclical capacity of fiscal system. Expenditure Side Rigidity Shift towards infrastructure-led growth with capex around ₹17.15 lakh crore (Budget 2026–27). Reduced fiscal flexibility for welfare spending during shocks, as seen in constrained allocations to schemes like MGNREGA. Creates trade-off between long-term growth investment and short-term consumption stabilisation. Household Sector Vulnerability Private consumption contributes ~61.4% of GDP, making household demand critical for growth sustainability. Household liabilities increased from ~36–37% of GDP (2022) to over 41% (2025), indicating rising leverage. Consumption increasingly sustained through credit rather than income growth, making households vulnerable to inflation shocks. Net financial savings declined to 3–4% of GDP before recovering to ~7.6%, reflecting volatility in financial resilience. Transmission to Households LPG import dependence (>60%) exposes households to supply disruptions and price volatility. Rising energy costs increase household expenditure on essentials, reducing discretionary consumption. Impact visible in sectors like food delivery and small businesses, where demand contractions affect livelihoods. Industrial and Structural Concerns Growth concentrated in capital-intensive and high-tech sectors (46% of manufacturing value added). Labour-intensive sectors remain weak, limiting employment generation and inclusive growth. Industrial structure becomes less resilient to demand shocks due to limited diversification and employment absorption capacity. Implications Fiscal system faces double squeeze: Revenue decline due to lower consumption Expenditure increase due to subsidies and inflation External shocks simultaneously affect CAD, inflation, fiscal deficit, and growth, reducing macroeconomic stability. Household stress can weaken domestic demand, undermining growth sustainability despite high investment levels. Narrowing fiscal space reduces government’s ability to respond to future shocks, affecting long-term resilience. Challenges High dependence on imported energy exposes economy to uncontrollable geopolitical and price shocks. Limited diversification of tax base increases reliance on volatile transaction-based revenues. Weak income growth and rising household debt create fragile consumption patterns. Trade-off between fiscal consolidation and welfare spending constrains policy flexibility. Structural imbalance between capital-intensive growth and employment generation persists. Way Forward Promote energy diversification through renewables, green hydrogen, and domestic production to reduce oil import dependence. Broaden direct tax base and improve compliance to enhance revenue stability and counter-cyclical fiscal capacity. Strengthen income-led growth through employment generation and wage growth in labour-intensive sectors. Maintain balanced fiscal strategy combining capex with targeted welfare spending for demand stabilisation. Build fiscal buffers during stable periods to enhance shock absorption capacity during crises. Improve household financial resilience through savings incentives, credit regulation, and social protection mechanisms. Data & Facts for Answers Oil import dependence: 85–87% of total crude requirement. $10 increase in crude: Inflation +0.2 percentage points CAD +$9–10 billion GDP growth –0.5 percentage points Excise duty cuts led to ₹2.2 lakh crore revenue loss (2021–22). Energy subsidies reached ~₹3.2 lakh crore during oil shock period. Household liabilities increased to 41% of GDP (2025). Prelims Pointers CAD reflects difference between imports and exports of goods and services. GST is indirect tax based on consumption and transactions, sensitive to demand fluctuations. FRBM Act governs fiscal deficit targets and macro-fiscal discipline in India. Oil price shocks affect inflation, growth, and fiscal balance simultaneously in import-dependent economies. India’s Semiconductor Push: Sanand as “Bridge to Silicon Valley” Why in News? Prime Minister inaugurated ₹3,300 crore Kaynes Semiconductor ATMP facility in Sanand, Gujarat, marking major milestone under India Semiconductor Mission. Sanand projected as global node connecting India’s manufacturing ecosystem with Silicon Valley supply chains. Signals India’s strategic shift from chip consumer → trusted semiconductor supplier amid global supply chain realignments. Relevance GS III (Science & Technology + Economy) Semiconductor ecosystem & strategic technologies Industrial policy & manufacturing (Make in India) Global supply chains & China+1 strategy Innovation, R&D, and high-tech employment GS II (International Relations) Technology partnerships & trusted supply chains Strategic alliances (US-led initiatives like Pax Silica) Practice Question Q1.  Evaluate India’s semiconductor mission in enhancing technological self-reliance and economic resilience. (250 words) Context Semiconductor shortages during COVID-19 and geopolitical tensions exposed global supply chain fragility and overdependence on few countries. India aims to leverage China+1 strategy and trusted supply chain partnerships to position itself in semiconductor value chain. Initiative complements India’s broader goal of high-value manufacturing-led growth to offset macroeconomic vulnerabilities. Static Background India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) Launched in 2021 with $10 billion incentive package to develop semiconductor and display manufacturing ecosystem. Focus areas include: Fabrication units (fabs) Assembly, Testing, Marking, Packaging (ATMP) Semiconductor design ecosystem Global Semiconductor Value Chain Segmented into: Design (US-dominated) Fabrication (Taiwan, South Korea) ATMP (China, Southeast Asia) India currently strong in chip design talent, but weak in manufacturing and fabrication infrastructure. Key Developments Sanand Semiconductor Hub Emerging as India’s semiconductor manufacturing cluster, building on its industrial base in automobiles and electronics. Kaynes Semicon facility focuses on ATMP segment, which is less capital-intensive and entry point for new players. Acts as integration point between domestic production and global supply chains, especially with US-based tech ecosystem. Market Expansion India’s semiconductor market currently valued at ₹4.5 lakh crore, projected to reach ₹9 lakh crore (~$100 billion) by 2030. Driven by demand from: Electronics manufacturing Automotive sector (EVs, smart systems) AI, IoT, and telecom infrastructure Pax Silica Initiative US-led coalition aimed at securing supply chains for semiconductors, AI, and rare earth elements. India’s participation strengthens position within “trusted geographies” network, reducing exposure to geopolitical disruptions. Enhances resilience against shocks similar to those affecting energy supply chains. Significance Positions India as reliable alternative in global semiconductor supply chains, reducing dependence on East Asian concentration. Supports transition towards high-value manufacturing and export diversification, improving current account stability. Generates high-skill employment and technology spillovers, boosting innovation ecosystem. Strengthens strategic autonomy in critical technologies like AI, defence electronics, and telecommunications. Aligns with vision of “Techade” where technology-driven growth becomes key economic driver. Link with Macroeconomic Challenges Semiconductor push acts as counterbalance to oil-driven macroeconomic vulnerabilities by shifting economy toward knowledge-intensive sectors. High-value exports from semiconductor ecosystem can stabilise CAD and reduce dependence on volatile service exports. Expands formal, high-income workforce, helping broaden direct tax base and reduce reliance on transaction-based taxes. Less sensitive to commodity price shocks, providing structural resilience against global energy volatility. Challenges Semiconductor fabrication requires extremely high capital investment, advanced technology, and stable supply of water and power. India currently lacks ecosystem depth in upstream segments like wafer fabrication and advanced node manufacturing. Dependence on imports for critical inputs such as semiconductor-grade silicon and rare earth materials persists. Skill gaps in specialised semiconductor manufacturing and research areas may constrain scaling. Global competition intense, with countries offering aggressive subsidies and incentives to attract semiconductor investments. Geopolitical risks could affect supply chain integration despite participation in alliances like Pax Silica. Way Forward Focus on gradual value chain integration, starting from ATMP and moving towards advanced fabrication capabilities. Strengthen ecosystem through R&D investments, semiconductor design hubs, and academic-industry collaboration. Ensure policy stability and competitive incentives to attract global semiconductor firms and investments. Develop supporting infrastructure including reliable power, water, logistics, and semiconductor-grade industrial clusters. Build strategic partnerships for technology transfer and supply chain resilience within trusted global alliances. Promote skill development through specialised training programmes in semiconductor engineering and manufacturing. Data & Facts for Answers Kaynes Semiconductor facility: ₹3,300 crore investment in Sanand. India semiconductor market: Current: ₹4.5 lakh crore Target: ₹9 lakh crore by 2030 India among largest adopters of AI and digital technologies, supporting semiconductor demand growth. Prelims Pointers India Semiconductor Mission launched in 2021 to develop semiconductor ecosystem. ATMP refers to Assembly, Testing, Marking, and Packaging segment of semiconductor value chain. Pax Silica is a US-led initiative focusing on secure supply chains for semiconductors and critical technologies. Semiconductor industry critical for electronics, AI, telecom, defence, and automotive sectors. Space Debris & Orbital Governance Crisis: “Failure of Governance, Not Engineering” Why in News? Rapid expansion of private satellite constellations and declining launch costs have intensified orbital congestion and space debris risks. Lack of enforceable global mechanisms to verify compliance with debris mitigation norms has exposed serious governance gaps in space sustainability. Renewed debate on need for binding international regulations as existing frameworks remain outdated and voluntary. Relevance GS III (Science & Technology + Security) Space technology & satellite ecosystem Space debris & Kessler Syndrome Global commons governance Space situational awareness GS II (International Relations) Outer Space Treaty & global governance gaps Need for international regulatory frameworks Practice Question Q1.  Space debris is increasingly becoming a governance challenge rather than a technological one. Discuss. (250 words) Context Earth’s orbital space is increasingly crowded due to commercial satellite launches, mega-constellations, and dual-use strategic assets. Shift from state-dominated space activities to multi-actor ecosystem involving private companies and emerging space nations. Governance frameworks have failed to keep pace with technological acceleration and commercialisation of space. Static Background Outer Space Treaty (1967) Article VI: States responsible for national activities, including private actors in space. Article VII: Liability for damage caused by space objects. Designed for state-centric era, lacking provisions for cumulative harm, congestion, and sustainability obligations. Liability Convention (1972) Provides compensation framework for damage caused by space objects. Focuses on post-damage liability rather than preventive governance mechanisms. Space Debris & Kessler Syndrome Even small debris (<1 cm) travelling at ~7–8 km/s can destroy satellites due to high kinetic energy. Collisions generate cascading debris (Kessler Syndrome), potentially making orbits unusable for generations. Core Governance Gap Pre-Launch Promises vs Post-Launch Reality Regulators rely on self-declared compliance by satellite operators before launch, without mechanisms for post-launch verification. No global system exists to confirm: Satellite de-orbiting Passivation Collision avoidance compliance Creates accountability vacuum where responsibility remains unclear after deployment. Information Asymmetry Space situational data (orbital positions, collision risks) is: Unevenly distributed across countries Often restricted due to national security or commercial interests Prevents creation of global space traffic management system, increasing collision risks. Regulatory Arbitrage Different countries impose varying licensing standards for satellite operations. Operators register in lenient jurisdictions (“flags of convenience”) to avoid strict debris mitigation norms. Leads to uneven compliance and race to the bottom in regulatory standards. Monitoring and Enforcement Vacuum No “orbital policing authority” to monitor compliance with debris mitigation commitments. Difficulty in tracking small debris makes enforcement technically challenging. Liability often determined only after damage occurs, and even then with limited attribution certainty. Technical Challenges Majority of dangerous debris remains untrackable due to size and velocity limitations of current tracking systems. Identification of debris source often possible only after collision, complicating accountability mechanisms. Increasing satellite density raises probability of collision cascades and long-term orbital instability. Legal and Ethical Limitations Existing treaties do not address: Cumulative environmental harm in orbit Long-term sustainability and stewardship obligations No defined threshold for: Acceptable congestion Duty of care in space operations Voluntary guidelines dominate, leading to weak compliance and lack of sanctions. Implications Risk of Kessler Syndrome could render critical orbits (LEO) unusable, affecting communication, navigation, and defence systems. Increasing collisions threaten global digital infrastructure dependent on satellites. Creates “Tragedy of Commons” situation where individual actors maximise usage while collective sustainability deteriorates. Weak governance undermines equitable access for future generations and emerging space nations. Role of Environmental Governance Principles Precautionary Principle: Lack of certainty should not delay preventive action against orbital debris risks. Intergenerational Equity: Current exploitation should not compromise future access to orbital resources. Proportionality: Balance between commercial utilisation and sustainability obligations must be ensured. India’s Strategic Opportunity India is developing national space legislation and expanding commercial participation through IN-SPACe and private sector reforms. Opportunity to embed: Mandatory debris mitigation standards Verifiable end-of-life disposal requirements Data-sharing obligations for space situational awareness Can position itself as leader in ethical and sustainable space governance frameworks. Way Forward Establish global Space Traffic Management (STM) system for real-time tracking and collision avoidance coordination. Standardise international licensing norms with uniform debris mitigation thresholds and compliance verification mechanisms. Mandate data-sharing protocols to reduce information asymmetry and improve situational awareness. Develop enforceable legal frameworks incorporating duty-of-care standards and penalties for non-compliance. Promote active debris removal technologies and incentivise sustainable satellite design practices. Integrate space governance with international environmental law principles to ensure long-term sustainability. Data & Facts for Answers Orbital velocity: ~7–8 km/s, making even millimetre-sized debris highly destructive. Thousands of new fragments generated per collision, increasing exponential risk. Growing number of private satellite constellations significantly increasing orbital congestion. Prelims Pointers Outer Space Treaty (1967) governs international space law and assigns responsibility to states for space activities. Liability Convention (1972) deals with compensation for damage caused by space objects. Kessler Syndrome refers to cascading collisions of space debris leading to unusable orbits. Space situational awareness involves tracking objects in orbit to prevent collisions. Maternal Mortality in India: Progress, Gaps, and 2030 Challenge Why in News? A 2026 study (Lancet) highlights India’s difficulty in achieving SDG target of reducing Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) below 70 by 2030. Despite major long-term decline, progress has slowed in recent years, raising concerns about last-mile health delivery. India still contributes ~10% of global maternal deaths, reflecting scale and structural challenges. Relevance GS II (Social Justice + Governance) Public health systems & service delivery Women’s health & gender equity Regional disparities in development SDG implementation GS III (Economy – Human Capital) Human development indicators Health outcomes & productivity linkages Practice Question Q1.  Despite significant progress, India faces challenges in achieving SDG targets on maternal mortality.Analyse the reasons and suggest measures. (250 words) Context India reduced maternal deaths from 1.19 lakh (1990) to 24,700 (2023), demonstrating substantial public health progress. MMR declined from 508 (1990) to 116 (2023), but pace of decline is insufficient to meet SDG targets. Challenge now lies in addressing regional disparities and preventable causes of maternal deaths. Static Background Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR) Defined as number of maternal deaths per 1 lakh live births due to pregnancy-related causes within one year of pregnancy termination. Indicator of: Health system effectiveness Women’s health status Socio-economic development SDG Target (Goal 3.1) Reduce global MMR to less than 70 per 1 lakh live births by 2030. Focus on: Universal access to maternal healthcare Skilled birth attendance Emergency obstetric care Key Trends & Data MMR declined from 508 (1990) → 116 (2023), reflecting long-term improvement in maternal healthcare access. India recorded 24,700 maternal deaths in 2023, down significantly from earlier decades. SRS data shows further improvement to 88 (2021–23), indicating possible data variation across sources. Global context: Total maternal deaths: 2.4 lakh globally (2023) India accounts for ~10% share Around 100 out of 204 countries already achieved SDG target, while India remains in 100–140 MMR category. Regional Disparities Southern states and some advanced regions are close to or have achieved SDG targets due to better health infrastructure. High-burden states such as: Assam (MMR ~110) Uttar Pradesh (MMR ~141) continue to pull down national averages. Reflects inter-state inequality in healthcare access, infrastructure, and socio-economic conditions. Causes of Maternal Mortality Nearly 40% of deaths due to preventable causes: Haemorrhage (excessive bleeding) Hypertensive disorders (eclampsia) Other contributing factors: Sepsis and infections COVID-19 related complications (2020–21 period) Delayed access to emergency care Indicates gap not in knowledge, but in timely and effective implementation of care. Key Challenges Slowing Momentum Initial gains achieved through institutional deliveries and schemes like JSY, but further reductions require systemic strengthening. Marginal improvements now require addressing complex structural and behavioural barriers. Weak Primary Healthcare Systems Inadequate availability of: Skilled birth attendants Emergency obstetric care in rural and tribal areas “Last-mile delivery gap” similar to other governance sectors affects maternal outcomes. Data Discrepancies Variation between Lancet (116) and SRS (88) creates uncertainty in assessment and policy targeting. Differences arise due to: Methodology Sample size Inclusion criteria Weakens evidence-based policymaking. Socio-economic Determinants High fertility rates, malnutrition, early marriage, and low female literacy increase maternal risk. Household vulnerability and lack of financial access delay healthcare utilisation. Regional Inequality Concentration of high MMR in few states suggests uneven policy implementation and governance capacity. National averages mask sub-national disparities and pockets of high vulnerability. Implications Failure to meet SDG targets affects India’s global health commitments and human development rankings. High maternal mortality undermines women’s health, productivity, and intergenerational outcomes. Reflects broader governance challenge where access does not translate into effective service delivery. Integrated Approach (Virtuous Cycle) Reducing child mortality leads to lower fertility rates, reducing lifetime maternal risk exposure. Lower fertility enables better healthcare access per pregnancy and improved maternal outcomes. Strengthened primary healthcare creates multiplier effect across health indicators. Way Forward Strengthen primary healthcare systems with focus on: Skilled birth attendance Emergency obstetric care Referral transport systems Target high-burden states through region-specific interventions and resource prioritisation. Improve data systems by harmonising SRS, NFHS, and global estimates for accurate monitoring. Address socio-economic determinants through: Female education Nutrition programmes Delay in age of marriage Enhance community awareness and institutional delivery through ASHA and frontline health workers. Integrate maternal health with broader reproductive and child health programmes for holistic outcomes. Data & Facts for Answers MMR: 508 (1990) → 116 (2023) Maternal deaths: 1.19 lakh (1990) → 24,700 (2023) India’s share: ~10% of global maternal deaths Preventable causes account for ~40% of deaths SDG target: <70 per 1 lakh live births by 2030 Prelims Pointers MMR measures maternal deaths per 1 lakh live births. SDG Goal 3.1 focuses on reducing maternal mortality globally. Sample Registration System (SRS) provides official estimates of mortality indicators in India. Major causes: haemorrhage, hypertensive disorders, infections. Artemis II Mission: Human Return to Lunar Orbit Why in News? NASA is launching Artemis II, first crewed lunar mission since Apollo era (1972), marking return of humans to Moon’s vicinity. Mission will carry four astronauts on a 10-day flyby, testing systems before planned lunar landing mission (Artemis III). Represents major milestone in global space race, deep-space exploration, and human spaceflight capability revival. Relevance GS III (Science & Technology) Space exploration & human spaceflight Deep space missions & technological advancements Comparative space strategies (NASA vs ISRO) GS II (International Relations) Global space race & strategic competition International collaboration in space missions Practice Question Q1.  Discuss the significance of Artemis II mission in shaping the future of human space exploration. (250 words) Context Artemis programme aims to establish sustained human presence on Moon and enable future Mars missions. Artemis II follows Artemis I (2022 uncrewed mission), which validated Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion spacecraft. Mission signifies shift from exploration-only approach → long-term space habitation strategy. Static Background Artemis Programme NASA-led initiative with international collaboration (ESA, JAXA, CSA). Objectives: Return humans to Moon Establish Lunar Gateway space station Enable future Mars exploration Apollo Missions (1969–1972) Last human Moon mission: Apollo 17 (1972). Used Saturn V rockets, still considered most powerful rockets ever built. Focused on short-term exploration, not long-term sustainability. Mission Profile of Artemis II Nature of Mission Crewed lunar flyby mission without landing, designed to test life-support, navigation, and safety systems. Serves as precursor to Artemis III, which aims for human lunar landing (expected ~2028). Trajectory & Path Spacecraft will orbit Earth twice before entering Trans-Lunar Injection (TLI) trajectory toward Moon. Takes 3–4 days to reach Moon’s vicinity, similar to Apollo missions due to high-energy trajectory. Orion spacecraft will travel around Moon and return to Earth, completing mission in about 10 days. Distance & Exploration Milestone Orion will travel ~6,500 km beyond far side of Moon, the farthest distance humans have ever reached in space. Apollo missions reached only ~110 km above lunar surface on far side during orbit. Expands human operational envelope in deep space exploration. Technology & Systems Space Launch System (SLS) Most powerful operational rocket currently available to NASA. Designed for: Heavy payloads Deep space missions Enables faster trajectory compared to fuel-efficient but slower missions. Orion Spacecraft Crew capsule designed for deep-space missions beyond low Earth orbit. Equipped with: Advanced life-support systems Radiation protection High-speed re-entry capability First time used for crewed mission after successful uncrewed Artemis I validation. Trajectory Choice: Faster vs Fuel-Efficient Artemis II uses shorter, high-energy trajectory, reaching Moon in 3–4 days. Requires powerful rockets like SLS, increasing fuel consumption but reducing travel time. In contrast, missions like Chandrayaan-3 use longer, fuel-efficient orbits, taking weeks to reach Moon. Reflects trade-off between cost efficiency and mission urgency/complexity. Significance Marks return of human spaceflight beyond low Earth orbit after five decades. Demonstrates technological advancement in deep-space navigation, life-support systems, and crew safety. Strengthens US leadership in global space race amid competition from China and emerging space powers. Provides foundation for: Lunar base development Resource utilisation (helium-3, water ice) Enables future interplanetary missions, especially Mars exploration. Challenges High cost of Artemis programme raises concerns about sustainability of long-term human space missions. Technical risks associated with deep-space radiation, life-support reliability, and re-entry safety. Dependence on international collaboration may create geopolitical and coordination challenges. Space debris and orbital congestion add risks to mission safety during launch and return phases. Implications for India Highlights need for India to strengthen Gaganyaan programme and future deep-space ambitions. Opportunity to expand collaboration in Artemis Accords and lunar exploration initiatives. Reinforces importance of developing heavy-lift launch vehicles and human-rated spacecraft systems. Opens avenues for India in space economy, technology partnerships, and lunar resource exploration. Data & Facts for Answers Mission duration: ~10 days Travel time to Moon: 3–4 days Distance beyond Moon: ~6,500 km (farthest human travel) Artemis I duration: ~25 days (uncrewed) Last human Moon mission: 1972 (Apollo 17) Prelims Pointers Artemis II is NASA’s first crewed lunar mission after Apollo era. SLS is NASA’s heavy-lift rocket for deep space missions. Orion spacecraft designed for human spaceflight beyond low Earth orbit. Chandrayaan missions use fuel-efficient trajectories, unlike high-energy Artemis missions. INS Dunagiri (Project 17A): Boost to Aatmanirbhar Naval Capability Why in News? Indian Navy received INS Dunagiri, fifth Nilgiri-class (Project 17A) stealth frigate, built indigenously at GRSE, Kolkata. Marks major milestone in self-reliance in warship design, construction, and advanced naval combat capability. Demonstrates progress in indigenisation (75%) and reduced shipbuilding timelines, strengthening defence manufacturing ecosystem. Relevance GS III (Security + Economy) Defence modernisation & maritime security Aatmanirbhar Bharat in defence manufacturing Blue economy & Indian Ocean Region (IOR) security Military technology & indigenisation Practice Question Q1.  Examine the role of indigenous warship development in enhancing India’s maritime security and strategic autonomy. (250 words) Context India is strengthening naval capabilities amid rising strategic competition in the Indian Ocean Region (IOR) and need to secure sea lanes. Shift towards Aatmanirbhar Bharat in defence aims to reduce import dependence and build domestic industrial capacity. Project 17A represents next-generation upgrade over earlier Shivalik-class (Project 17) stealth frigates. Static Background Project 17A (Nilgiri Class) Follow-on project to Project 17 (Shivalik class) with improved: Stealth features Automation Weapon systems Total 7 ships being constructed at: Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Ltd (MDL) Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers (GRSE) Aatmanirbhar Bharat in Defence Focus on: Indigenous design and manufacturing MSME participation Import substitution Supported by policies like: Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP) Positive Indigenisation Lists Key Features of INS Dunagiri Advanced Stealth & Design Incorporates low radar cross-section design and stealth technologies, making detection difficult in modern naval warfare. Represents generational improvement in survivability, signature reduction, and combat readiness. Integrated Construction Methodology Built using modular construction techniques, reducing build time to 80 months compared to 93 months for lead ship. Enhances efficiency, scalability, and industrial capability in warship manufacturing. Propulsion System (CODOG) Combined Diesel or Gas propulsion system allows: Fuel-efficient cruising on diesel High-speed combat manoeuvres using gas turbine Provides operational flexibility across mission profiles. Weapons & Combat Systems Equipped with advanced multi-layered combat capabilities: BrahMos supersonic cruise missiles for surface strike MRSAM air defence system with MFSTAR radar for aerial threats 76 mm Super Rapid Gun Mount and close-in weapon systems Anti-submarine warfare capability using torpedoes and rockets Capable of addressing surface, air, and sub-surface threats simultaneously. Integrated Platform Management System (IPMS) Automates control and monitoring of onboard systems, enhancing: Operational efficiency Crew safety Damage control capability Significance Strengthens India’s ability to operate as a blue-water navy with multi-mission combat platforms. Enhances maritime security in IOR, including protection of Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs). Reduces dependence on foreign suppliers, improving strategic autonomy in defence sector. Supports high-technology manufacturing ecosystem, aligning with Make in India and defence indigenisation goals. Demonstrates India’s capability in complex systems engineering and advanced naval architecture. Economic & Industrial Impact High indigenisation level (75%) ensures domestic value addition and reduced import bill. Involvement of 200+ MSMEs strengthens defence supply chain and industrial ecosystem. Generates employment: ~4,000 direct jobs ~10,000 indirect jobs Builds long-term capabilities in precision engineering, electronics, and defence manufacturing. Strategic Relevance Enhances India’s deterrence capability amid: Increasing Chinese naval presence in IOR Growing maritime security challenges Supports India’s role in Indo-Pacific security architecture and QUAD cooperation. Critical for safeguarding energy imports and trade routes, especially during geopolitical instability in West Asia. Challenges High capital costs and long gestation periods of warship projects may strain defence budgets. Dependence on some imported subsystems persists despite high indigenisation levels. Need for continuous technological upgrades to match rapid advancements in naval warfare systems. Skilled manpower and R&D ecosystem need further strengthening for next-generation platforms. Way Forward Increase indigenisation beyond 75% through domestic development of critical subsystems and electronics. Strengthen public-private partnerships and encourage private sector participation in shipbuilding and defence production. Invest in R&D for: Next-generation propulsion AI-enabled naval systems Autonomous maritime platforms Enhance export potential of indigenous warships to position India as global defence manufacturing hub. Integrate naval modernisation with broader maritime strategy under SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region). Data & Facts for Answers INS Dunagiri: 5th Project 17A frigate, delivered March 2026. Build time reduced to 80 months from 93 months for first ship. Indigenisation level: ~75%. MSME participation: 200+ units. Employment: 4,000 direct and 10,000 indirect jobs. Prelims Pointers Project 17A refers to Nilgiri-class stealth frigates of Indian Navy. CODOG propulsion combines diesel engine and gas turbine for operational flexibility. BrahMos is supersonic cruise missile used for surface strike capability. MFSTAR radar used for multi-function surveillance and threat detection.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 31 March 2026

Content Release of publication “Energy Statistics India 2026” Delivery of ‘Agray’ – ASW Shallow Water Craft Release of publication “Energy Statistics India 2026” Why in News ? National Statistics Office released “Energy Statistics India 2026” (33rd edition). Expanded scope with: Credit flow to energy sector Global energy statistics comparison Aviation & marine bunker fuels data Improved coal and electricity consumption datasets Serves as official evidence base for India’s energy transition, climate commitments and policy design. Relevance GS III (Economy) Energy–GDP linkage; energy intensity of economy. Financialisation: credit flow to energy sector. Infrastructure: DISCOM reforms, transmission networks. GS III (Environment) Fossil fuel dependence vs climate commitments (Net Zero 2070). Renewable energy transition and sustainability trade-offs. Practice Question Q. “India’s energy transition is currently additive rather than substitutive.”Examine this statement in light of the findings of Energy Statistics India 2026. Discuss the challenges and suggest a balanced pathway for achieving energy security and sustainability. (250 words) Background & Conceptual Clarity Published annually by Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation. Provides integrated energy database covering: Reserves, production, capacity, consumption, imports/exports Uses Energy Balance framework: Aligns with International Energy Agency standards Key terms: TPES (Total Primary Energy Supply): Total energy available in economy TFC (Total Final Consumption): Energy actually consumed by end-users KTOE: Standardised unit (Kilo Tonnes of Oil Equivalent) Includes: Sankey diagrams (energy flow) Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) indicators Major Improvements in 2026 Edition Inclusion of credit flow to energy sector → links finance with energy transition Filling data gaps: Domestic coal via e-auction Imported non-coking coal Industry-wise electricity use (via ASI database) First-time inclusion: International aviation & marine bunker fuels Industry-wise HSD distribution Standardisation of end-use sectors → better comparability and policy targeting Key Trends & Data Insights Energy Supply TPES: 9,32,816 KTOE (↑ 2.95%) Indicates steady economic expansion with rising energy demand Energy Consumption TFC: 6,08,578 KTOE ↑ 30.41% since 2015–16 Per capita consumption: 15,296 → 18,096 MJ (CAGR 1.89%) Interpretation: Rising living standards + industrial activity Coal Dominance Coal supply: 3,87,761 → 5,52,315 KTOE Remains backbone of India’s energy mix Reflects: Energy security priority Slow pace of structural transition Renewable Energy Growth Total potential: 47,04,043 MW Solar: ~71% Wind: ~25% Installed capacity: 90 GW → 229 GW (CAGR ~10.93%) Generation: 1.89 lakh GWh → 4.16 lakh GWh Shows: Rapid expansion but still supplementary to coal Regional Concentration ~70% RE potential in: Rajasthan (23.7%), Maharashtra, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh Implication: Need for grid connectivity & inter-state transmission Efficiency Gains T&D losses: 22% → 17% Indicates: DISCOM reforms, UDAY-like interventions, infrastructure upgrades Financial Trends Credit flow: ₹1,688 Cr (2021) → ₹10,325 Cr (2025) Reflects: Increasing financialisation of energy transition Overview Energy Transition Reality Dual trend: Rapid RE growth Continued fossil fuel dominance Implies: Transition is additive, not substitutive yet Energy Security vs Sustainability Coal dominance ensures: Reliability Domestic availability But conflicts with: Net Zero 2070 target Emission reduction commitments Economic Linkages Rising TPES and TFC → strong correlation with GDP growth Energy intensity still relatively high → scope for efficiency gains Regional Imbalance RE concentration → risk of: Transmission bottlenecks Uneven development Data Governance Shift Improved granularity: Enables evidence-based policymaking Supports carbon markets, sectoral planning Issues & Concerns Persistent coal dependence High import dependence (oil, gas, critical minerals) DISCOM financial stress affecting power sector viability Intermittency of renewables due to lack of storage Data gaps still remain in: Informal sector energy use Policy fragmentation across ministries Land and ecological issues in large RE projects Way Forward Accelerate coal-to-clean transition roadmap with timelines Scale up: Battery storage Pumped hydro Green hydrogen Strengthen carbon market mechanisms Enhance grid infrastructure (Green Energy Corridors) Promote decentralised RE (rooftop solar, mini-grids) Deepen energy data systems with real-time analytics Reform DISCOMs: Cost-reflective tariffs Loss reduction targets Align finance: Green bonds Climate finance frameworks Prelims Pointers Published by NSO (MoSPI) Unit: KTOE TPES ≠ TFC Coal = largest energy source Solar = highest share in RE potential (~71%) T&D losses reduced to ~17% Includes Sankey diagrams & Energy Balance Tables Delivery of ‘Agray’ – ASW Shallow Water Craft Why in News ? Indian Navy inducted ‘Agray’, fourth Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft, marking progress in indigenous naval capability and maritime security preparedness. Relevance GS III (Security) Coastal defence & anti-submarine warfare (ASW). Undersea domain awareness as emerging security frontier. Protection of Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs). Practice Question Q. Discuss the strategic significance of Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Crafts (ASW-SWC) like ‘Agray’ in strengthening India’s maritime security architecture. Highlight the challenges in achieving self-reliance in naval defence manufacturing. (250 words) Background Built by Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers, reflecting India’s growing indigenous shipbuilding ecosystem under Aatmanirbhar Bharat with significant domestic technological and industrial participation. Designed as replacement for ageing Abhay-class corvettes, focusing on shallow water anti-submarine operations and enhancing coastal defence capabilities. Constructed under standards of Indian Register of Shipping, ensuring compliance with international shipbuilding and safety norms. Key Features Approximately 77 metres long warship, making it among the largest Indian naval vessels powered by waterjet propulsion systems. Equipped with lightweight torpedoes, indigenous rocket launchers and shallow water sonar systems for effective submarine detection and engagement. Waterjet propulsion enhances manoeuvrability, shallow draft navigation, and reduces acoustic signature, improving stealth in littoral combat environments. Operational Role Designed primarily for anti-submarine warfare in shallow coastal waters where conventional large vessels face operational limitations. Supports mine warfare operations and strengthens coastal surveillance, ensuring protection of critical maritime infrastructure and sea lanes. Enhances layered maritime defence by complementing deep-water naval assets and aerial surveillance systems. Strategic Significance Strengthens India’s maritime security amid increasing submarine presence in the Indian Ocean Region by extra-regional powers. Improves undersea domain awareness, a critical component of naval deterrence and sea control strategies. Supports India’s SAGAR vision by ensuring secure and stable maritime neighbourhood and safeguarding economic interests. Indigenisation & Economic Impact Over 80% indigenous content promotes domestic defence manufacturing, reduces import dependency, and enhances technological self-reliance. Generates employment, supports MSMEs, and strengthens defence industrial base through supply chain participation. Aligns with Defence Acquisition Procedure priorities promoting indigenous design, development, and manufacturing. Technological Aspects Indigenous sonar systems enable better detection in complex shallow water acoustic conditions compared to deep-sea environments. Integration of modern weapon systems supports network-centric warfare and real-time operational coordination. Demonstrates advancements in indigenous ship design, propulsion, and combat system integration. Challenges Limited number of vessels relative to expanding maritime threats and increasing submarine deployments in the region. Dependence on certain imported critical components and advanced technologies remains a constraint. Integration challenges with emerging technologies like underwater drones and AI-based surveillance systems. Way Forward Expand ASW fleet size and accelerate production timelines to match evolving maritime threat landscape. Invest in indigenous development of advanced sonar, torpedoes, and underwater surveillance technologies. Strengthen integration with aerial and unmanned systems for comprehensive anti-submarine warfare grid. Enhance public-private partnerships in defence manufacturing to improve efficiency and innovation. Prelims Pointers ASW SWC designed for shallow water anti-submarine operations with sonar, torpedoes, and rocket launchers. Built by GRSE, Kolkata with waterjet propulsion enhancing manoeuvrability and stealth characteristics. Classified under Indian Register of Shipping standards ensuring safety and quality compliance.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 31 March 2026

Content A flame the state cannot guarantee Ensuring federalism within delimitation A flame the state cannot guarantee  Why in News ? LPG supply disruption triggered by West Asia conflict affecting Strait of Hormuz, exposing fragility of India’s clean cooking ecosystem. Revealed structural gaps in Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana despite high coverage. Relevance GS II (Governance / Welfare) PMUY: flagship DBT-based welfare scheme. Gap between access provisioning and service delivery continuity. Crisis preparedness in welfare design. GS III (Economy) Import dependence (~60% LPG) → external vulnerability. Inflationary impact of fuel price shocks. Energy–household expenditure link. GS III (Environment) Clean cooking transition vs biomass reversion. Indoor air pollution (major public health issue). Practice Question   Q. “Access without assurance undermines welfare.” Critically examine this statement in the context of India’s clean cooking transition under PMUY, highlighting structural gaps exposed by recent LPG supply disruptions. Suggest reforms. (250 words) Background PMUY (2016): Provided 10.5 crore LPG connections to poor households. Expanded LPG coverage to ~32.83 crore households. Objective: Replace biomass cooking → improve health, gender equity, environment. Transition: Shift from PDS kerosene (state-controlled) → market-based LPG system. Nature of the Crisis India imports: ~60% LPG, with ~90% via Strait of Hormuz Strategic reserves: Crude reserves: ~9.5 days (64% filled) No dedicated LPG buffer Result: External disruption → domestic welfare failure Key Structural Issues 1. Supply vs Welfare Disconnect Welfare scheme ensured access (connections) but not continuity (supply security). State withdrew from direct provisioning role after kerosene phase-out. 2. Import Dependence & Chokepoints Heavy reliance on Hormuz → single-point vulnerability. Lack of diversified import routes or domestic buffers. 3. Absence of Strategic LPG Storage No equivalent of petroleum reserves for LPG. Welfare system dependent on real-time global supply chains. 4. Affordability Constraints One-fourth PMUY households: One or zero refill annually Price rise (₹60/cylinder) → immediate reversion to biomass. 5. Social Inequities SC/ST households: 10–30% lower LPG access Distributor networks replicate: Caste and spatial hierarchies in supply allocation 6. Gendered Burden Women are nominal beneficiaries but lack control over: Pricing Supply availability Crisis → reversal to biomass → increased drudgery 7. Administrative Design Gap Mandatory refill gaps: 45 days (rural), 25 days (urban) No crisis protocols: No prioritisation or emergency allocation mechanisms Overview Access ≠ Energy Security: Connection-based welfare ignores supply resilience. Marketisation without safeguards: Transition replaced state-backed system with volatile global market dependence. Sovereign signalling vs capacity gap: Branding and DBT imply state guarantee, but no physical backup exists. Equity distortion under stress: Crisis amplifies existing caste, gender and income inequalities. Implications Economic Increased import bill volatility Inflationary pressure on household energy consumption Social Reversion to biomass: Health risks (indoor air pollution) Loss of time savings (IISD: ~1 hour/day earlier saved) Governance Weak crisis preparedness in welfare design Over-reliance on DBT without supply-side assurance Energy Security Highlights gap between: Energy transition goals vs infrastructure readiness Way Forward Supply Security Create strategic LPG reserves (minimum 2 months buffer) Diversify import routes beyond Strait of Hormuz Welfare Redesign Shift from: Connection-based metrics → continuity-based metrics Introduce: Crisis allocation protocols Priority supply for vulnerable households Affordability Measures Targeted subsidy redesign for poorest quintiles Dynamic pricing buffer during global shocks Decentralised Alternatives Scale up: GOBARdhan Scheme (community biogas) Piped Natural Gas in urban areas Institutional Strengthening Integrate energy welfare with: National energy security planning Real-time monitoring of: Consumption, refill gaps, supply disruptions Prelims Pointers PMUY launched in 2016 LPG import dependence ~60% Hormuz route accounts for ~90% imports No strategic LPG reserve exists in India GOBARdhan promotes biogas-based rural energy Ensuring federalism within delimitation Why in News ? Impending delimitation exercise post-Census 2026 raises concerns over population-based seat redistribution vs federal fairness. Debate intensified due to divergent fertility trends across States. Relevance GS II (Polity / Constitution) Article 81: proportional representation. 84th Constitutional Amendment (freeze till post-2026). Role of Delimitation Commission. GS II (Governance) Federal balance vs majoritarian representation. Incentive structures in public policy (population control). Practice Questions Q. Delimitation based solely on population may undermine cooperative federalism in India. Examine this statement and evaluate the feasibility of incorporating demographic performance as a criterion. (250 words) Constitutional & Legal Basis Article 81 mandates Lok Sabha seat allocation proportional to population, ensuring uniform representation ratios across States as far as practicable. 84th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2002: Froze seat allocation till post-2026 Census. Objective: Incentivise population stabilisation efforts by States. Delimitation conducted by Delimitation Commission: Independent body; decisions have force of law and are non-justiciable. Background: Demographic Divergence In 1951–1971: Population growth relatively uniform → minimal inter-State imbalance. Current scenario: Significant divergence in Total Fertility Rate (TFR). NFHS Trends: 2005–06: Only 9 States achieved replacement TFR (≤2.1). 2019–21: Most States achieved except: Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Meghalaya, Manipur. Gap persists: Low-TFR States: ~1.64 High-TFR States: ~2.38 (~45% higher) Core Issue Pure population-based delimitation: Benefits high population growth States (mainly northern belt). Penalises States with successful population control. Raises concern: Violation of cooperative federalism and equity principles. Proposed Solution: Demographic Performance (DemPer) Inspired by Finance Commission formula balancing equity and efficiency. Key Features: Existing 543 seats remain unchanged. DemPer applied only to additional seats after expansion. Weightage: 10% → Early achievement of replacement TFR (before 2005). 90% → Rate of decline in TFR (2005–2021). Outcome: All States gain seats. High population States gain more in absolute terms. Better-performing States retain relative share stability. Overview Democratic Representation Population principle ensures “one person, one vote, one value”. However, strict adherence ignores policy effort and governance outcomes. Federal Balance States are political units, not just demographic aggregates. Disproportionate seat shift risks: Regional alienation North-South political tensions Incentive Structure Without DemPer: States may be disincentivised from population control. With DemPer: Rewards governance and long-term policy success. Governance Quality Balanced representation improves: Policy deliberation Inclusive decision-making Concerns & Challenges Constitutional validity of introducing non-population criteria in delimitation. Political resistance from high-population States. Complexity in designing objective DemPer indicators. Risk of: Over-politicisation of delimitation process Perception of bias or manipulation Way Forward Maintain population as primary criterion, with calibrated DemPer adjustment for additional seats. Expand Lok Sabha size moderately: Cap at ~700 seats to maintain deliberative efficiency. Institutionalise: Transparent formula (like Finance Commission) Data-based, non-political criteria Strengthen federal dialogue: Inter-State Council consultations before delimitation Ensure: Balanced representation without undermining democratic equality Prelims Pointers Article 81→ Seat allocation based on population 84th Amendment (2002) → Freeze till post-2026 Census Delimitation Commission → Independent, decisions final Replacement TFR = 2.1  

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 31 March 2026

Content Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026) – Right to Die with Dignity Falcon 9 Re-entry Pollution – Emerging Environmental Challenge in the Second Space Age Andhra Pradesh Declared “Naxal-Free” (2026) – Milestone in Left Wing Extremism (LWE) Eradication CMS COP15 ends in Brazil with 40 new species being accorded protection FATF Report on Offshore VASPs – India’s Emerging “Digital Border Enforcement” Framework Great Indian Bustard (GIB) Conservation – “Jumpstart Approach” Success in Gujarat Lights off at India Gate for a cause Bhavasagara” Referral Centre Designated as India’s National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna Harish Rana v. Union of India (2026) – Right to Die with Dignity Why in News? In 2026, the Supreme Court in Harish Rana v. Union of India allowed withdrawal of Clinically Assisted Nutrition and Hydration (CANH) for the first time in India. The judgment reaffirmed that Right to Die with Dignity is part of Article 21, marking a shift from life preservation at all costs → dignity and autonomy-based approach. The Court declared the term “passive euthanasia” as legally imprecise, preferring “withholding/withdrawing life-sustaining treatment (LST)”. Patient details: Case involved a 31–32-year-old man in Persistent Vegetative State (PVS) for ~13 years (no living will; family petitioned). Relevance GS II (Polity / Constitution) Article 21: expansion to include dignity in death and bodily autonomy. Judicial evolution of euthanasia jurisprudence and living wills. GS II (Governance) Institutional protocols: medical boards, hospital ethics frameworks. Reduced judicial intervention → faster decision-making. GS III (Health) Palliative care integration and end-of-life care systems. Reducing futile medical expenditure. Practice Question Q. Critically examine the implications of the Supreme Court’s recognition of the “Right to Die with Dignity” under Article 21. Discuss ethical concerns and necessary safeguards in end-of-life decision-making. (250 words) Evolution of Jurisprudence (2011–2026) Aruna Shanbaug v. Union of India (2011) recognised passive euthanasia for the first time, placing decision-making under High Court supervision as parens patriae. Common Cause v. Union of India (2018) declared Right to Die with Dignity as a Fundamental Right under Article 21, and legally recognised Living Wills (Advance Directives). Common Cause v. Union of India (2023) simplified procedures by removing excessive bureaucratic hurdles and easing validation of living wills. Harish Rana (2026) marks the final doctrinal shift, expanding scope to include withdrawal of CANH and eliminating conceptual confusion around “passive euthanasia”. Constitutional and Legal Basis Article 21 – Expansive Interpretation Article 21 guarantees Right to Life and Personal Liberty, judicially expanded to include: Right to dignity Right to privacy Right to refuse medical treatment Court held that: Right to live with dignity includes right to die with dignity in terminal conditions, ensuring autonomy over bodily integrity. Legal Clarification by the Court Distinction made between: Active euthanasia (illegal) → direct act to end life Withholding/withdrawing treatment (permissible) → allowing natural death Court emphasised: Doctor is not causing death, but removing artificial prolongation of life Ethical Framework Underlying the Judgment 1. Autonomy Recognises patient’s right to: Accept or refuse medical treatment Execute Living Will/Advance Directive Shifts locus of decision-making from State → Individual 2. Beneficence Doctors must act in best interest of patient, including relief from prolonged suffering in terminal illness. 3. Non-Maleficence Continuing futile treatment causing prolonged agony may itself amount to harm, violating medical ethics. 4. Justice Ensures decision is: Not influenced by poverty, neglect, or social discrimination Equitable and ethically justified 5. Doctrine of Double Effect (Thomas Aquinas) Withdrawal of treatment has: Intended effect → relief from suffering Foreseen but unintended effect → death Action remains ethical if primary intent is alleviation of suffering, not causing death. Procedural Safeguards (Post-2023/2026 Framework) Primary Medical Board: Minimum three experts with ~20 years experience certify terminal condition Review Board: Independent confirmation within hospital, ensuring medical consensus No mandatory judicial approval: Courts intervene only in case of disputes, reducing delays Mandatory palliative care: Withdrawal of life support does not mean abandonment; comfort care must continue Significance of the Judgment Legal Significance Completes transition from: Sanctity of life doctrine → dignity-centric jurisprudence Clarifies ambiguity around euthanasia terminology and strengthens legal certainty Governance and Medical Practice Provides clear operational guidelines for hospitals and doctors, reducing fear of legal liability Enables ethical decision-making within structured institutional safeguards Human Rights Perspective Reinforces: Bodily autonomy Right against cruel and inhuman treatment (prolonged suffering) Aligns with global jurisprudence on end-of-life care rights Economic and Social Context Addresses reality of: Catastrophic health expenditure in terminal illness cases, especially in lower-income households Prevents: Financial ruin of families due to prolonged futile treatment Concerns and Criticism Risk of Misuse Vulnerable groups (elderly, disabled, poor) may face: Coercion or indirect pressure to withdraw treatment Ethical Dilemmas Conflict between: Religious/moral beliefs (sanctity of life) Secular rights-based approach (autonomy and dignity) Socio-economic Inequality Decision-making may be influenced by: Financial constraints rather than genuine patient choice Slippery Slope Argument Fear that acceptance of withdrawal of treatment could gradually lead to: Acceptance of active euthanasia Institutional Capacity Need for: Robust hospital ethics committees Trained palliative care systems Way Forward Strengthen palliative care infrastructure across public healthcare system to ensure dignified end-of-life care. Create standardised national guidelines and training modules for medical professionals on end-of-life decisions. Ensure strict monitoring mechanisms to prevent coercion or misuse in vulnerable populations. Promote awareness about: Living wills Patient rights Integrate ethical decision-making into medical education and hospital governance systems. Prelims Pointers Right to Die with Dignity: Part of Article 21 Living Will: Advance directive refusing life-sustaining treatment Active euthanasia: Illegal in India Withdrawal of life support: Legally permitted under strict safeguards Falcon 9 Re-entry Pollution – Emerging Environmental Challenge in the Second Space Age Why in News? A February 2026 study in Communications Earth & Environment provided the first empirical evidence linking rocket re-entry (Falcon 9) to chemical alteration of the upper atmosphere. Researchers detected a metal vapour plume (especially lithium) at ~96 km altitude, confirming that space traffic is actively polluting the mesosphere–thermosphere region. The findings shift global concern from orbital debris (Kessler Syndrome) to atmospheric pollution from satellite burn-up, especially due to mega-constellations like Starlink. Relevance GS III (Environment) Emerging pollution in upper atmosphere (mesosphere–thermosphere). Ozone depletion and climate implications. GS III (Science & Technology) Satellite ablation, atmospheric chemistry, space sustainability. GS II (International Relations) Regulatory vacuum in global space governance. Practice Question Q. Space activities are increasingly posing environmental challenges beyond Earth’s surface. Analyse the issue of rocket re-entry pollution and suggest a governance framework. (250 words) Static Background Second Space Age and Satellite Proliferation The world is witnessing a “Second Space Age”, characterised by rapid expansion of: Satellite-based communication, navigation, and Earth observation systems Thousands of satellites already in orbit, with tens of thousands more planned (mega-constellations) Typical satellite lifespan: ~5 years, after which they de-orbit and burn in atmosphere Atmospheric Layers Involved Re-entry occurs mainly in: Mesosphere (50–85 km) Lower Thermosphere (~85–100 km) These regions are: Crucial for atmospheric chemistry Poorly understood compared to lower layers Key Scientific Findings 1. Direct Detection of Metal Vapour Plume Researchers tracked a Falcon 9 re-entry (Feb 2025) using resonance lidar in Germany. Observations showed: Lithium concentration spike at 96 km altitude, about 10 times higher than natural background levels Backward trajectory modelling confirmed: The plume travelled ~1600 km from Ireland to Germany within ~20 hours 2. Chemical Signature – Anthropogenic vs Natural Natural meteors contribute: Only ~80 grams of lithium globally per day In contrast: A single Falcon 9 stage releases ~30 kg lithium, along with large quantities of aluminum Indicates a massive anthropogenic override of natural atmospheric chemistry 3. Atmospheric Dispersion Dynamics Metallic vapours: Do not remain localised Spread rapidly through upper atmospheric circulation (mesospheric jet streams) Creates a globalised pollution footprint from individual re-entry events 4. Ablation Physics During re-entry (~7.5 km/s): Satellites and rocket stages atomise into fine metallic aerosols rather than simply burning Composition: Lithium-aluminum alloys (structural materials) Lithium-ion batteries Result: Formation of metallic clouds in upper atmosphere Environmental Implications 1. Ozone Layer Depletion Risk Aluminum oxide particles act as catalysts for chlorine activation, accelerating ozone breakdown reactions. Similar mechanism observed in: Volcanic aerosols CFC-induced ozone depletion Raises concerns about long-term stratospheric ozone stability 2. Climate and Radiative Forcing Metallic particles may contribute to formation of: Noctilucent clouds (highest clouds in atmosphere) These can alter: Earth’s albedo (reflectivity) Heat trapping and radiation balance Current climate models do not adequately account for metal-induced radiative forcing 3. Chemical Transformation of Upper Atmosphere Transition from: Naturally iron-dominated meteoric input To aluminum-lithium dominated anthropogenic input Could fundamentally alter: Atmospheric chemistry Ionisation processes Space-weather interactions 4. Scale of the Problem (Mega-Constellations) Starlink and similar projects plan 40,000+ satellites With ~5-year lifespan: ~20–25 satellites re-enter daily in future scenarios By 2030: Human-made metal input may equal or exceed natural meteoric input, marking a tipping point Significance Environmental Governance Highlights a new dimension of space pollution, beyond orbital debris, requiring regulatory attention. Scientific Advancement Demonstrates ability to: Track upper atmospheric pollutants Attribute them to specific re-entry events Opens new field: Atmospheric Ablation Science Policy Implications Challenges “green” narrative of reusable rockets and satellite internet systems. Necessitates integration of space activities into environmental governance frameworks. Strategic Relevance As India expands its space programme (Gaganyaan, satellite constellations), similar concerns will arise. Requires proactive approach in: Space sustainability Environmental impact assessment Challenges Regulatory Vacuum No comprehensive global framework governing: Atmospheric pollution from space re-entry Outer Space Treaty focuses primarily on space debris, not atmospheric chemistry Scientific Uncertainty Limited long-term data on: Ozone depletion effects Climate impacts Upper atmosphere remains under-researched domain Commercial Pressure Private space companies prioritise: Cost efficiency and rapid deployment Environmental considerations remain secondary Monitoring Limitations Tracking requires: Advanced lidar systems Global observational networks Currently limited to a few research centres Way Forward Develop international regulatory norms under UNCOPUOS for managing re-entry pollution. Mandate Environmental Impact Assessments (EIA) for large satellite constellations. Promote research on: Alternative materials with lower atmospheric impact Establish global monitoring networks for upper atmosphere chemistry. Encourage controlled re-entry and recovery mechanisms to minimise atmospheric ablation. Integrate space sustainability into climate governance frameworks (UNFCCC, IPCC studies). Prelims Pointers Mesosphere: 50–85 km altitude Thermosphere: Above ~85 km Lidar: Laser-based atmospheric sensing technology Noctilucent clouds: Highest clouds, visible in mesosphere Falcon 9: Reusable rocket by SpaceX Andhra Pradesh Declared “Naxal-Free” (2026) – Milestone in Left Wing Extremism (LWE) Eradication Why in News? Andhra Pradesh was officially declared “Naxal-free” on March 30, 2026, following the surrender of key Maoist leaders including a Central Committee member of CPI (Maoist). The announcement came just before the Union Government’s March 31, 2026 deadline for eliminating Left Wing Extremism nationwide. The surrender of Chelluri Narayana Rao (alias Suresh), a top leader of CPI (Maoist), marks the collapse of the Andhra-Odisha Border Special Zonal Committee (AOBSZC). Relevance GS III (Internal Security) Decline of Left Wing Extremism and counter-insurgency strategies. GS II (Governance) Development-security synergy and Centre-State coordination. Practice Question Q. Evaluate the role of integrated security and development strategies in the decline of Left Wing Extremism in India. (250 words) Static Background Left Wing Extremism (LWE) in India LWE refers to Maoist insurgency inspired by Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, aiming to overthrow the Indian state through armed struggle. Origin traced to Naxalbari Uprising, which triggered the Naxalite movement. Strongholds historically: Red Corridor spanning Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Odisha, Maharashtra Organizational Structure Main outfit: Communist Party of India (Maoist) Armed wing: People’s Liberation Guerrilla Army (PLGA) Hierarchical structure: Central Committee → Zonal Committees → Area Committees Legal and Policy Framework Activities classified under Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA), 1967 Key initiatives: SAMADHAN doctrine (Smart leadership, Aggressive strategy, Motivation, etc.) Security Related Expenditure (SRE) scheme Aspirational District Programme for development Key Event Details 1. Collapse of AOBSZC Andhra-Odisha Border Special Zonal Committee was: One of the last operational Maoist strongholds in the region Its dismantling indicates: Loss of territorial and operational depth Breakdown of cross-border insurgency networks 2. Meaning of “Naxal-Free” Indicates: No active underground Maoist cadre operating within state boundaries However: Does not imply ideological elimination, but operational neutralisation Continued vigilance required against: Cross-border infiltration Urban sleeper cells Data and Evidence (Decline of LWE) LWE-related incidents reduced by ~89% between 2010 and 2026 Affected districts reduced from 120+ to less than 25 core districts Andhra Pradesh: Neutralised 18 Maoists in recent operations Recovered 120+ weapons (INSAS, .303 rifles) Indicates a clear long-term downward trajectory of insurgency Factors Behind Success 1. Security Strategy Effective deployment of elite forces like: Greyhounds (Andhra Pradesh) known for intelligence-driven operations Improved coordination with: Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs) Focus on: Targeted strikes rather than large-scale combing operations 2. Intelligence and Technology Use of: Drone surveillance Real-time intelligence networks Penetration of Maoist communication channels weakened organisational secrecy 3. Surrender and Rehabilitation Policy Attractive incentives: Immediate financial assistance (₹20,000 + rewards) Skill development and reintegration support Reduced appeal of insurgency by offering mainstream livelihood alternatives 4. Developmental Interventions Expansion of: Roads, telecom connectivity, banking access in tribal areas Welfare schemes: Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), PDS, education, healthcare Reduced alienation of tribal populations, historically the Maoist support base 5. Loss of Ideological and Social Support Maoists losing legitimacy due to: Violence against civilians and public representatives Tribal communities increasingly aligning with state-led development initiatives Significance A.Internal Security Marks a major achievement in counter-insurgency operations, reducing one of India’s longest-running internal security threats. B.Governance Enables deeper state penetration into previously inaccessible areas, improving service delivery and administrative reach. C.Economic Development Opens up tribal and forest regions for: Infrastructure development Investment and livelihood generation D.Federal Cooperation Demonstrates success of Centre-State coordination in internal security management. Challenges Ahead Residual Threats Maoist presence still persists in: Parts of Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Odisha Risk of regrouping in border areas Socio-Economic Vulnerabilities Core issues remain: Land alienation Tribal displacement Forest rights implementation gaps Human Rights Concerns Allegations of: Excessive force Need for balanced approach between security and rights Ideological Persistence Maoist ideology may continue in: Urban networks (“Urban Naxals” debate) Requires long-term counter-radicalisation efforts Way Forward Shift focus from security-centric to development-centric consolidation phase in former LWE areas. Strengthen implementation of: Forest Rights Act, 2006 PESA Act for tribal self-governance Enhance border area coordination between states to prevent resurgence. Promote: Education, skill development, and local employment generation Institutionalise community policing and trust-building mechanisms. Prelims Pointers Naxalbari uprising: 1967 (West Bengal) CPI (Maoist): Main LWE organisation Greyhounds: Elite anti-Naxal force of Andhra Pradesh Red Corridor: LWE-affected belt across central-eastern India SAMADHAN doctrine: India’s counter-LWE strategy CMS COP15 ends in Brazil with 40 new species being accorded protection Why in News? At the 15th Conference of Parties (COP15) to the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS), held in Brazil (March 2026), 40 new migratory species were added to protected lists. The decision was based on alarming findings from the “State of the World’s Migratory Species: Interim Report (2026)”, which shows accelerating decline and extinction risks across taxa. Species such as the Cheetah, Striped hyena, Snowy owl, Giant otter, and Great hammerhead shark were included due to mounting threats across migratory routes. Relevance GS III (Environment) Conservation of migratory species and ecosystem connectivity. GS II (International Relations) Multilateral environmental agreements and cooperation. Practice Question Q. Conservation of migratory species requires transboundary and ecosystem-based approaches. Discuss in light of recent CMS developments. (250 words) Static Background Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) CMS (also called Bonn Convention, 1979) is a UN-backed environmental treaty aimed at conserving migratory species across national boundaries. It operates through two appendices: Appendix I: Species threatened with extinction requiring strict protection measures. Appendix II: Species needing international cooperation for conservation management. India is a signatory and hosts CMS COP13 (Gandhinagar, 2020), indicating active global engagement. Migratory Species – Ecological Importance Migratory species traverse multiple ecosystems and national jurisdictions, linking habitats across continents and oceans. They play critical roles in: Pollination, seed dispersal, and pest control Maintaining ecosystem connectivity and resilience Conservation requires transboundary cooperation, unlike sedentary species. Key Outcomes of CMS COP15 (2026) 1. Addition of 40 Species to Protected Lists Species were added to CMS Appendices based on scientific evidence of rapid population decline and increasing extinction risk. Examples with threats: Cheetah: Habitat fragmentation and human-wildlife conflict reducing movement corridors. Great hammerhead shark: Overfishing and bycatch in international waters affecting migratory routes. Giant otter: Habitat degradation and mercury pollution in Amazon basin ecosystems. Snowy owl: Climate-induced prey fluctuations impacting survival and breeding cycles. This expansion reflects a shift toward precautionary conservation based on emerging scientific evidence rather than post-extinction crisis response. 2. Interim Report (2026) – Data of Decline Nearly 49% of CMS-listed migratory species are experiencing population decline, indicating systemic conservation failures. About 24% of migratory species face extinction risk, highlighting urgency of intervention. Total 188 migratory species are at high extinction risk, including: 103 bird species 26 fish species 28 terrestrial mammals 23 aquatic mammals Additionally, 26 CMS-listed species (including 18 shorebirds) have been uplisted to higher threat categories, indicating worsening conservation status. 3. Key Biodiversity Areas (KBA) Gap Over 9,000 Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) have been identified globally as critical for migratory species survival. However, 47% of these KBAs remain outside formal protection frameworks, exposing them to development pressures. This highlights a major implementation gap between scientific identification and policy protection. 4. Emerging Threats Highlighted COP15 emphasised new-age threats beyond traditional habitat loss: Deep-sea mining disrupting marine migratory pathways and ecological balance Underwater noise pollution affecting navigation and communication of marine species Plastic pollution and marine debris impacting ingestion and habitat quality Linear infrastructure (roads, railways, power lines) fragmenting terrestrial corridors Recognition of these threats indicates a shift toward holistic ecosystem-based conservation approaches. 5. Multi-Species Conservation Plans Adoption of regional multi-species action plans, especially for the Amazon, recognising ecosystems as interconnected migratory corridors. Emphasis on: Protecting entire migratory routes rather than isolated habitats Integrating freshwater, terrestrial, and marine ecosystems Significance Ecological Significance Reinforces the concept that species survival depends on connectivity of habitats rather than isolated conservation zones. Protects ecosystem services such as pollination, nutrient cycling, and marine food chains. Governance Significance Strengthens global environmental governance through collective action and treaty-based obligations across countries. Highlights need for policy convergence across sectors such as infrastructure, fisheries, and climate policy. Scientific Significance Demonstrates increasing reliance on data-driven conservation using global biodiversity monitoring frameworks. Promotes adaptive conservation strategies based on real-time ecological evidence and risk assessment. India-Specific Relevance Many CMS species overlap with Indian biodiversity hotspots (e.g., migratory birds, marine species), requiring: Strengthening of flyway conservation (Central Asian Flyway) Integration with national programmes like Project Dolphin and Project Tiger India’s infrastructure expansion (roads, renewables) must align with wildlife corridor protection. Challenges and Gaps Implementation Deficit Listing species under CMS does not automatically ensure protection unless backed by strong national-level enforcement mechanisms. Habitat Fragmentation Increasing infrastructure development leads to disruption of migratory corridors, reducing survival and breeding success. Climate Change Impacts Alters migration timing, breeding patterns, and food availability, causing phenological mismatches. Weak Transboundary Coordination Conservation efforts vary across countries, leading to inconsistent protection along migratory routes. Funding and Capacity Constraints Many developing countries lack resources for monitoring, enforcement, and habitat restoration. Way Forward Shift from species-centric to corridor-based conservation, ensuring protection of entire migratory pathways. Integrate biodiversity considerations into infrastructure planning using tools like Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA). Strengthen international cooperation through data sharing, joint monitoring, and funding mechanisms. Expand protected area networks to cover critical KBAs and ecological corridors. Promote community participation and indigenous knowledge in conservation of migratory habitats. Align CMS implementation with CBD targets and SDG 15 (Life on Land) and SDG 14 (Life Below Water). Prelims Pointers CMS: Also called Bonn Convention (1979) Two appendices: I (strict protection), II (cooperation) India hosted CMS COP13 in Gandhinagar (2020) Key concept: Key Biodiversity Areas (KBAs) = critical habitats for species survival New threats: Deep-sea mining, underwater noise, plastic pollution FATF Report on Offshore VASPs – India’s Emerging “Digital Border Enforcement” Framework Why in News? A March 2026 report by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) highlighted India’s proactive measures to mitigate risks posed by offshore Virtual Asset Service Providers (oVASPs). The report acknowledged enforcement actions by agencies such as Financial Intelligence Unit – India, Enforcement Directorate, and National Investigation Agency against money laundering and terror financing via crypto channels. It noted India’s transition from tax-centric regulation (post-2022 VDA regime) to active surveillance and enforcement of cross-border crypto flows. Relevance GS III (Economy) Regulation of virtual digital assets and financial systems. GS III (Security) Money laundering and terror financing via crypto. GS II (Governance) Digital sovereignty and cross-border regulatory enforcement. Practice Question Q. Discuss the challenges posed by offshore Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs) to financial regulation and examine India’s response. (250 words) Static Background What are Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs)? VASPs are entities that facilitate exchange, transfer, custody, or issuance of virtual digital assets (VDAs) such as cryptocurrencies. Offshore VASPs (oVASPs) operate outside India’s jurisdiction but provide services to Indian users, often bypassing domestic regulatory compliance. FATF Framework on Virtual Assets FATF introduced global AML/CFT standards for virtual assets in 2019, including: Travel Rule (sharing originator and beneficiary details) Customer Due Diligence (CDD) and KYC norms Countries are required to regulate VASPs under Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Countering Financing of Terrorism (CFT) frameworks. India’s Regulatory Context VDAs taxed since 2022: 30% tax on gains 1% TDS on transactions Brought under Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 in 2023, mandating compliance with AML norms. Regulatory oversight primarily through FIU-India under the Ministry of Finance. Key Findings of FATF Report 1. Emergence of Offshore Crypto Risk Ecosystem Offshore platforms are increasingly used to: Convert illicit funds into crypto assets Route them through compliant Indian exchanges into legitimate banking channels Example: Scam compounds in Myanmar–Thailand border, Cambodia, Laos exploiting trafficked individuals for cyber fraud operations 2. “Flight to Offshore” After Tax Regime Post-2022 taxation, a significant proportion of Indian crypto users migrated to offshore exchanges to avoid compliance burdens. Estimated $3.8 billion (~₹32,000 crore) trading volume shifted offshore, weakening domestic regulatory oversight. Offshore platforms encourage: Use of VPNs Shell companies No-KYC trading 3. Typologies of Illicit Activities Crypto used for: Money laundering through layering and integration stages Gambling platforms acting as laundering channels (“win-loss” mechanism) Terror financing through anonymous wallets Caribbean-based gambling platform case exposed AML blind spots in cross-border transactions. India’s Enforcement Architecture 1. Financial Intelligence and Surveillance Financial Intelligence Unit – India leverages Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) from registered VASPs to detect abnormal patterns. Detection of: Unusual deposit flows from offshore wallets Conversion of illicit crypto into fiat money via Indian banking system 2. Virtual Asset Lab (Emerging Tool) Proposed high-tech analytical hub for continuous monitoring of crypto ecosystem. Key capabilities: Heuristic clustering to identify linked wallet networks Automated web surveillance scanning social media and dark web platforms Open-source intelligence (OSINT) mapping offshore infrastructure 3. Principal Officer (PO) Mandate Mandatory requirement for VASPs to appoint a Principal Officer based in India with full legal accountability. Ensures: Direct regulatory interface Personal liability in case of AML violations Ends anonymity of offshore platforms operating in Indian market indirectly. 4. Sahyog Portal – Digital Enforcement Tool Launched by the Ministry of Home Affairs to coordinate with intermediaries for content takedown and enforcement actions. FIU has used it to: Block 85 URLs of non-compliant offshore VASPs Enables faster response to: Illegal crypto platforms Fraud-linked digital infrastructure 5. Multi-Agency Coordination Mechanism Virtual Assets Contact Sub-Group (2023) under Department of Revenue ensures: Coordination among enforcement, intelligence, and regulatory bodies Sharing of typologies, trends, and case studies Agencies involved: FIU, ED, NIA, CBI, Income Tax Department Significance of India’s Approach Financial Security Strengthens ability to detect and disrupt illicit financial flows, including terror financing and organised cybercrime. Regulatory Sovereignty Extends India’s regulatory reach beyond borders through “digital perimeter enforcement”, targeting offshore entities serving Indian users. Technological Governance Adoption of advanced analytics and surveillance tools reflects shift toward data-driven financial regulation in digital economy. Global Leadership Aligns with FATF standards, enhancing India’s credibility in global financial integrity and compliance frameworks. Challenges and Concerns Jurisdictional Limitations Offshore entities operate beyond India’s direct legal jurisdiction, making enforcement dependent on intermediaries and international cooperation. Regulatory Arbitrage Users can still exploit: VPNs Decentralised exchanges (DEXs) Creates persistent enforcement gaps Innovation vs Regulation Trade-off Excessive regulation and taxation may: Drive innovation offshore Reduce competitiveness of Indian crypto ecosystem Data Privacy and Surveillance Concerns Increased monitoring through OSINT and web surveillance raises concerns regarding: Privacy rights Potential misuse of data Capacity Constraints Need for specialised expertise in: Blockchain forensics Cyber intelligence Institutional capacity still evolving Way Forward Develop a comprehensive Virtual Digital Asset regulatory framework balancing innovation and risk mitigation. Enhance international cooperation mechanisms for cross-border enforcement and data sharing. Promote RegTech and SupTech tools for real-time monitoring of crypto transactions. Rationalise taxation to reduce incentive for offshore migration of users. Strengthen capacity building in blockchain analytics and cyber forensics across agencies. Encourage regulated domestic crypto ecosystem to improve compliance and investor protection. Prelims Pointers FATF: Intergovernmental body for AML/CFT standards VASPs: Entities dealing in virtual digital assets FIU-India: Nodal agency for financial intelligence under Ministry of Finance PMLA, 2002: Covers virtual digital assets since 2023 Sahyog Portal: Used for takedown of illegal online platforms Great Indian Bustard (GIB) Conservation – “Jumpstart Approach” Success in Gujarat Why in News? A Great Indian Bustard (GIB) chick was successfully hatched in Gujarat’s Kutch region in March 2026 using a novel “jumpstart approach”, marking the first such success in nearly a decade. The initiative involved inter-state transfer of a fertile egg from Rajasthan to Gujarat, coordinated by the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, State Forest Departments, and the Wildlife Institute of India. This breakthrough is significant as Gujarat had only three surviving female GIBs, all laying infertile eggs due to absence of males, creating a critical reproductive bottleneck. Relevance GS III (Environment) Species conservation and innovative techniques. GS II (Governance) Inter-state cooperation in biodiversity management. Practice Question Q. Discuss the role of innovative conservation strategies in preventing extinction of critically endangered species in India. (250 words) Static Background About Great Indian Bustard (GIB) Scientific name: Ardeotis nigriceps; among the heaviest flying birds in the world, endemic to the Indian subcontinent. Habitat: Arid and semi-arid grasslands, especially Thar Desert ecosystems Distribution: Primarily Rajasthan (~90% population), with remnant populations in Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh Conservation Status IUCN Status: Critically Endangered Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I species (highest protection) CMS (Convention on Migratory Species): Appendix I species Estimated population: <150 individuals globally, indicating extreme extinction risk Project GIB Launched in 2016, envisioned earlier in 2011 Objective: Habitat protection Predator control Captive breeding and reintroduction Key centres: Sam and Ramdevra (Rajasthan) Current captive population: ~73 birds, serving as a genetic “insurance population” “Jumpstart Approach” – Technical Explanation Conceptual Basis A foster-parenting conservation strategy, used when wild populations are too small to reproduce naturally. Designed to overcome reproductive isolation and absence of males in fragmented populations. Operational Steps Identification Stage: Monitoring of the remaining female GIBs in Kutch to identify those biologically capable of incubation. Egg Replacement Strategy: A naturally laid infertile egg was replaced with a fertile, captive-bred egg from Rajasthan, ensuring continuity of maternal behaviour. Logistics and Precision Handling: Egg transported over 770 km in ~19 hours using a portable incubator, maintaining precise temperature (~37.5°C) and humidity conditions. Successful Hatching and Rewilding: Chick hatched on March 26, 2026, and is being raised by a wild foster mother, ensuring natural behavioural imprinting. Significance of the Development Ecological Significance Addresses local extinction risk in Gujarat, effectively restarting the reproductive cycle of the population. Enables in-situ conservation with natural behavioural learning, unlike purely captive breeding approaches. Scientific and Conservation Innovation Demonstrates application of assisted reproduction and behavioural ecology integration in wildlife conservation. Establishes a replicable model for other critically endangered species with fragmented populations. Inter-State Cooperative Federalism First example of inter-state biological resource transfer for species recovery, showcasing coordination between Rajasthan and Gujarat. Strengthens cooperative federalism in biodiversity conservation governance. Rewilding and Genetic Conservation Ensures that captive-bred individuals contribute to wild population recovery, preventing genetic stagnation. Bridges gap between ex-situ conservation (breeding centres) and in-situ conservation (natural habitats). Strategic Conservation Value Creates a “biological bridge” between isolated populations, enabling future repopulation of former habitats in other states. Reinforces India’s commitment to species recovery under global biodiversity frameworks. Data and Evidence Total GIB population: <150 individuals globally Rajasthan captive breeding centres: ~73 birds Gujarat population prior to event: only 3 females, no breeding males Egg transfer distance: 770 km (one of the longest embryo transfers in India) Incubation conditions: ~37.5°C constant temperature requirement   Legal and Policy Context Supreme Court has actively intervened in GIB conservation, especially in: Mandating undergrounding of power lines in GIB habitats, which are the leading cause of mortality. GIB conservation linked to: National Biodiversity Action Plan India’s commitments under CMS and CBD Reflects increasing role of judiciary in species-specific conservation governance Challenges Ahead Habitat Degradation Grasslands often misclassified as “wastelands”, leading to diversion for agriculture, infrastructure, and renewable energy projects. Power Line Mortality Overhead high-tension wires cause frequent collisions, which is the leading cause of adult GIB deaths. Predation and Survival Risks Ground-nesting behaviour exposes chicks to feral dogs, foxes, and other predators, reducing survival rates. Genetic Bottleneck Extremely small population leads to: Low genetic diversity Increased inbreeding risks Institutional and Implementation Gaps Delays in implementing Supreme Court directives on power line mitigation Coordination challenges across multiple states and agencies Way Forward Scale up the jumpstart approach to other GIB habitats such as Maharashtra and Karnataka for population revival. Ensure time-bound undergrounding or bird diverters on power lines in all critical habitats. Legally recognise grasslands as ecologically sensitive ecosystems, preventing their diversion. Strengthen community-based conservation models, involving local pastoral communities as stakeholders. Enhance funding and research for genetic diversity management and assisted reproductive technologies. Integrate GIB conservation into renewable energy planning, ensuring biodiversity-sensitive infrastructure development. Prelims Pointers Great Indian Bustard: Scientific name: Ardeotis nigriceps Status: Critically Endangered (IUCN) Schedule I (Wildlife Protection Act) Project GIB launched in 2016 Major threat: Collision with power lines Habitat: Arid grasslands (Thar Desert) Jumpstart approach: Foster incubation using captive-bred eggs in wild nests Lights off at India Gate for a cause Why in News? Earth Hour 2026 marked 20 years (2007–2026) of the global environmental movement initiated by World Wide Fund for Nature, highlighting its evolution from symbolic participation to measurable climate action frameworks. In India, major landmarks including India Gate switched off lights, reflecting strong institutional and citizen engagement in climate awareness activities. Introduction of the “Hour Bank” concept signifies a transition towards quantifying citizen-led environmental actions, making climate participation measurable and policy-relevant. Relevance GS III (Environment) Demand-side energy efficiency and climate action. GS IV (Ethics) Behavioural change and environmental responsibility. Practice Question Q. Behavioural change is critical for achieving climate goals. Evaluate the role of citizen-led initiatives in environmental governance. (250 words) Static Background Origin and Evolution of Earth Hour Earth Hour began in Sydney in 2007 as a symbolic “lights-off” event to raise awareness about climate change and unsustainable consumption patterns. Over time, it has expanded into a global grassroots movement spanning over 190 countries, making it one of the largest environmental participation initiatives globally. The movement has evolved from awareness generation to behavioural transformation and policy influence, aligning with global sustainability and climate action frameworks. Conceptual Basis and Philosophy Earth Hour is rooted in the principle that collective small-scale individual actions can generate significant macro-level environmental impact over time. It reflects behavioural economics insights, where nudging citizens towards sustainable habits can complement regulatory and technological climate interventions. Closely aligned with India’s Lifestyle for Environment (LiFE) initiative, which promotes sustainable consumption and responsible living practices globally. Key Features of Earth Hour 2026 1. Energy Savings and Grid-Level Impact Delhi recorded an approximate 216 MW reduction in electricity demand during the one-hour switch-off period, demonstrating tangible outcomes of collective citizen action. Within the BSES distribution network, nearly 174 MW of electricity savings were observed, indicating significant participation at the urban consumer level. Historical trend analysis shows increasing engagement, with ~206 MW savings in 2024 and ~269 MW in 2025, reflecting growing awareness and responsiveness. Such reductions highlight the role of Earth Hour in peak load management and demand-side energy efficiency strategies, reducing stress on electricity grids. 2. “Hour Bank” – Quantification of Climate Action The 2026 edition introduced the “Hour Bank” framework, encouraging individuals to dedicate at least one hour to environmentally beneficial activities beyond switching off lights. Globally, over 2.9 million hours of pro-environment actions were recorded across 118 countries, marking a shift toward measurable behavioural contributions. India logged approximately 359,652 hours of activities, including urban gardening, sustainable cooking, and community awareness initiatives. The Philippines led globally with over 1.37 million hours, demonstrating the scalability and competitiveness of citizen-driven climate engagement. This approach transforms Earth Hour into a data-driven participatory platform, enabling better tracking of grassroots environmental actions. 3. Heritage and Institutional Participation For the first time, 100% of monuments under the Archaeological Survey of India participated, indicating unprecedented institutional coordination and commitment. Major heritage sites such as Qutub Minar, Red Fort, and Gateway of India switched off illumination simultaneously. Electricity distribution companies such as BSES, BRPL, and BYPL actively encouraged consumer participation, integrating Earth Hour with urban energy governance. This widespread participation reflects the growing institutionalisation of climate awareness across government agencies and public infrastructure systems. 4. Policy and Sustainability Linkages Earth Hour aligns with India’s international commitments such as Panchamrit targets announced at COP26 and the Net Zero 2070 goal, reinforcing climate diplomacy efforts. The initiative complements renewable energy expansion by promoting energy conservation and efficiency on the demand side, reducing reliance on fossil fuel-based generation. Utilities leveraged the event to promote Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) and rooftop solar adoption, aiming for a 50% green energy portfolio by FY 2026–27. Demonstrates how behavioural initiatives can complement structural energy transitions and policy reforms in the power sector. 5. Biodiversity and Global Environmental Context Earth Hour 2026 aligns with WWF’s Living Planet Report, which indicates a 73% decline in monitored wildlife populations globally, highlighting ecological urgency. Supports global conservation targets such as the 30×30 goal (protecting 30% of land and oceans by 2030) under international biodiversity frameworks. Expands the scope of Earth Hour from climate awareness to integrated biodiversity conservation and ecosystem restoration efforts. Significance for India Governance Perspective Encourages participatory climate governance, where citizens become active stakeholders rather than passive recipients of environmental policies. Provides valuable behavioural data that can inform urban planning, energy efficiency policies, and sustainability programmes at local and national levels. Economic Perspective Demonstrates that energy savings through behavioural change can complement infrastructure investments, reducing the need for costly peak power generation capacity. Supports long-term reduction in electricity subsidies and fossil fuel dependence, contributing to fiscal sustainability in the energy sector. Social and Ethical Perspective Promotes environmental ethics by fostering a sense of collective responsibility and intergenerational equity in resource use and conservation practices. Encourages community-level engagement, strengthening social capital around sustainability initiatives and ecological awareness campaigns. Environmental Perspective Contributes to reduction in carbon emissions and ecological footprint, especially when behavioural changes are sustained beyond the symbolic one-hour period. Reinforces sustainable consumption patterns, supporting global commitments under SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption) and SDG 13 (Climate Action). Challenges and Limitations The initiative remains largely symbolic for many participants, with limited evidence of sustained behavioural change beyond the event duration. Participation tends to be urban-centric, with relatively lower awareness and engagement in rural and peri-urban regions. The Hour Bank data lacks robust verification mechanisms, raising concerns regarding accuracy and standardisation of reported environmental actions. There is limited integration of Earth Hour outcomes with formal climate policy frameworks and institutional decision-making processes. Risk of “performative environmentalism,” where participation is driven by visibility rather than genuine commitment to sustainable practices. Way Forward Integrate Earth Hour metrics into national climate monitoring systems, enabling data-driven policy formulation and evaluation of citizen engagement. Expand the “Hour Bank” into a continuous year-long platform for tracking environmental actions, rather than limiting it to a single annual event. Introduce incentive mechanisms such as green credits, carbon points, or tax rebates to encourage sustained behavioural change among citizens. Strengthen rural outreach through Panchayati Raj Institutions, self-help groups, and local governance structures, ensuring inclusive participation. Leverage digital technologies and AI to verify and aggregate citizen actions, improving credibility and usability of environmental data. Prelims Pointers Earth Hour was launched in 2007 in Sydney by WWF as a climate awareness campaign involving voluntary switching off of lights. Observed annually on the last Saturday of March, with participation from over 190 countries worldwide. The 2026 edition introduced the “Hour Bank” concept, focusing on measurable environmental actions beyond symbolic participation. It is a non-governmental global initiative led by WWF, not a UN-mandated programme. “Bhavasagara” India’s First National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna Why in News? On 30 March 2026, the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change formally designated the “Bhavasagara” Referral Centre (Kochi), operated by Centre for Marine Living Resources and Ecology under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, as a National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna. The designation has been granted under provisions of the Biological Diversity Act, 2002, giving it statutory recognition. This development reflects India’s attempt to institutionalise deep-sea biodiversity governance amid expanding ambitions in the blue economy and deep ocean exploration. Relevance GS III (Environment / Science & Tech) Deep-sea biodiversity and blue economy. GS II (Governance) Biodiversity conservation under Biological Diversity Act, 2002. Practice Question Q. Examine the importance of deep-sea biodiversity governance in the context of expanding blue economy initiatives. (250 words) Static Background Deep-Sea Ecosystems: Nature and Importance Deep sea refers to oceanic zones beyond 200 meters depth, constituting nearly 65% of Earth’s surface, making it the largest biome on the planet. Characterised by: Absence of sunlight (aphotic zone) High pressure and low temperature Unique adaptive features such as bioluminescence and extremophilic metabolism Ecological functions: Acts as a major carbon sink, contributing to global climate regulation Supports nutrient cycling and marine food webs Houses genetically unique species with high evolutionary value India’s Maritime Jurisdiction and Resources India’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) spans about 2.37 million sq. km, providing sovereign rights over marine living and non-living resources. Key deep-sea resource zones: Central Indian Ocean Basin (CIOB) – rich in polymetallic nodules (nickel, cobalt, manganese) Growing focus on deep-sea mining, biodiversity exploration, and ocean services Legal and Institutional Framework Biological Diversity Act, 2002: Ensures conservation, sustainable use, and equitable sharing of biological resources Mandates establishment of designated repositories for biological specimens National Biodiversity Authority (NBA): Regulates access to biological resources and associated knowledge CMLRE (MoES): Nodal scientific institution for marine biodiversity assessment in India’s EEZ Key Features of “Bhavasagara” Repository The repository currently maintains over 3,500 taxonomically identified and geo-referenced specimens, collected over decades of deep-sea expeditions. Biodiversity spectrum includes: Invertebrates: cnidarians, annelids, molluscs, arthropods, echinoderms Vertebrates: elasmobranchs (sharks and rays) and teleost fishes Core functions: Secure preservation of voucher specimens along with associated metadata (location, depth, DNA sequences) Custodianship of Type Specimens (reference specimen for newly discovered species) Development of taxonomic expertise and training capacity Creation of a centralised, standardised biodiversity database Strategic Importance Scientific and Knowledge Leadership Addresses the global “taxonomic deficit”, where scientific capacity to identify species lags behind discovery. With nearly 90% of deep-sea species still undiscovered (UN estimates), the repository positions India as a future hub of marine taxonomy and systematics. Enables long-term ecological research and biodiversity baselining. Blue Economy and Resource Governance Directly complements India’s Deep Ocean Mission (~₹4,000 crore). Ensures that economic activities such as deep-sea mining are informed by: Baseline biodiversity data Environmental impact assessments Supports sustainable utilisation rather than extractive exploitation. Biodiversity Sovereignty and Legal Control Mandatory deposition of specimens ensures: National ownership of biological and genetic resources Compliance with Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) principles Reduces reliance on foreign institutions like Smithsonian or NHM London for species verification. Strengthens India’s position against biopiracy and genetic resource exploitation. Climate Change and Environmental Monitoring Deep-sea organisms are highly sensitive to temperature and chemical changes, making them ideal indicators of climate change. Repository acts as a historical baseline archive to track: Ocean warming Acidification Biodiversity shifts in Indian Ocean Biotechnology and Innovation Potential Deep-sea organisms possess extreme adaptations (extremozymes). Applications include: Drug discovery (anti-cancer, anti-microbial compounds) Industrial enzymes (high-pressure, low-temperature conditions) Opens pathway for Blue Biotechnology sector growth in India. Global Commitments and Diplomacy Aligns with: UN Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainable Development Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) SDG 14 (Life Below Water) Enhances India’s profile as a responsible ocean power Data, Facts and Value Addition India’s EEZ: ~2.37 million sq km Deep sea share of Earth: ~65% Undiscovered species: ~90% (UNESCO estimates) Bhavasagara collection: 3500+ specimens Deep Ocean Mission: ₹4,000+ crore outlay Deep-sea ecosystems contribute significantly to global carbon sequestration (~30% oceanic carbon storage) Challenges and Limitations Scientific and Human Resource Constraints Acute shortage of trained taxonomists (“taxonomic crisis”) Limited interdisciplinary expertise combining biology, oceanography, and genetics Technological and Financial Constraints Deep-sea exploration requires: High-cost submersibles Remote Operated Vehicles (ROVs) Continued reliance on foreign technology increases strategic vulnerability Governance and Coordination Issues Institutional fragmentation across: MoES, MoEFCC, Fisheries Ministry Weak integration of scientific data into policymaking Environmental Risks Deep-sea mining can cause: Irreversible biodiversity loss Habitat destruction with long recovery cycles Lack of globally standardised deep-sea EIA frameworks Data Accessibility and Sharing Limited integration with global biodiversity platforms like OBIS, GBIF Need for open-access, interoperable databases Way Forward Launch a National Mission on Taxonomy and Marine Biodiversity to bridge human resource gaps Develop indigenous deep-sea technologies (e.g., Matsya-6000 submersible) Establish a Unified Ocean Governance Authority for better coordination Adopt a precautionary approach to deep-sea mining with strong EIAs Build AI-enabled biodiversity databases for real-time species identification Strengthen international partnerships with International Seabed Authority (ISA) Promote blue biotechnology startups through policy incentives Prelims Pointers “Bhavasagara” → National Repository for Deep-Sea Fauna (Kochi) Hosted by → CMLRE under Ministry of Earth Sciences Legal basis → Biological Diversity Act, 2002 Key roles → Voucher specimens, Type specimens, DNA data storage Linked initiative → Deep Ocean Mission  

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 30 March 2026

Content Tele-Law Initiative & National Consultation 2026 IONS Maritime Exercise (IMEX) TTX 2026 Tele-Law Initiative & National Consultation 2026 Introduction   The Department of Justice organized National Consultation 2026 under the DISHA Scheme to strengthen technology-enabled access to justice, promote stakeholder engagement, and advance inclusive, citizen-centric legal service delivery mechanisms across India. The consultation highlights innovations such as Nyaya Setu AI chatbot, legal literacy tools, and a policy white paper, aligning with Digital India and aiming to bridge persistent gaps in last-mile justice accessibility. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Access to justice, Article 39A, legal aid institutional framework Role of NALSA, e-governance in justice delivery GS II (Social Justice) Inclusion of vulnerable groups, digital divide Practice Questions Q1.“Technology-enabled legal aid has the potential to transform access to justice in India, but structural challenges persist.”Examine with reference to the Tele-Law initiative. (250 words) Overview   Article 39A mandates equal justice and free legal aid, and Tele-Law operationalizes this directive by combining digital platforms, institutional mechanisms, and grassroots outreach to make justice accessible and affordable. Judicial interpretations in Hussainara Khatoon and subsequent cases elevated legal aid into a fundamental right, reinforcing the State’s obligation to ensure timely and equitable justice delivery for marginalized populations. The National Legal Services Authority complements Tele-Law by institutionalizing legal aid under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, ensuring structured and scalable access to justice nationwide. Tele-Law, implemented under the DISHA Scheme, leverages Common Service Centres and Village Level Entrepreneurs to deliver pre-litigation legal advice, enhancing administrative efficiency and decentralized governance. By reducing litigation costs and improving access to dispute resolution, Tele-Law contributes to economic efficiency, strengthens contract enforcement, and supports MSMEs and informal sector participants dependent on accessible legal systems. Socially, the initiative targets vulnerable groups including women, rural populations, and marginalized communities, promoting legal empowerment, reducing exclusion, and advancing substantive equality in justice delivery. Legal literacy innovations such as comic books and awareness campaigns simplify complex legal concepts, encouraging citizen participation and fostering a culture of rights awareness and proactive legal engagement. The Nyaya Setu AI chatbot represents technological advancement by providing real-time legal information, reducing information asymmetry, and integrating with broader digital justice initiatives like e-Courts and online dispute resolution systems. Technological integration improves transparency and efficiency but raises concerns regarding algorithmic bias, data privacy, and the need for ethical AI governance frameworks within the justice delivery ecosystem. Enhanced access to legal remedies supports environmental justice and land rights enforcement, while digital platforms necessitate strong cybersecurity safeguards to protect sensitive personal and legal data. Data & evidence Tele-Law has served millions of beneficiaries through the Common Service Centre network, demonstrating scalability and effectiveness in extending legal services to underserved and remote populations across India. The CSC network, with more than five lakh centres nationwide, provides a robust infrastructure backbone for digital governance initiatives, including delivery of legal aid and citizen-centric services. NALSA’s extensive use of Lok Adalats for dispute resolution complements Tele-Law by reducing case backlog and promoting alternative dispute resolution mechanisms within the justice system. Challenges / Gaps / Criticisms Digital Literacy Barrier: Despite the FutureSkills Prime program enrolling over 15 lakh candidates, 85% of these are from Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities. True rural, grassroots digital literacy remains a bottleneck, as the “usage gap” (people who have access but don’t know how to use it for services) is estimated to be significantly higher in aspirational districts (Source: MeitY/PIB 2025) Inter-Agency Sync: Tele-Law operates through Common Service Centers (CSCs) under MeitY, but is funded by the Department of Justice. Evaluation reports suggest that when technical glitches occur at the CSC level, the “ticket resolution” time can lag because the judicial authorities lack direct administrative control over the private VLEs (Village Level Entrepreneurs) (Source: Eurokd Study on Tele-Law 2024). The “Handshake” Gap: Data from 2025 indicates that while over 1.12 crore beneficiaries received pre-litigation advice, the conversion rate from advice to actual legal representation through NALSA (National Legal Services Authority) is often slowed by manual paperwork between digital portals and physical legal aid clinics (Source: Department of Justice Year Ender 2025). Training Saturation: Between January and December 2025, 638 district-level workshops were conducted, but they reached only 37,514 participants out of a total network of over 5.6 lakh CSCs. This leaves a significant portion of the network operating without recent standardized training on new legal protocols or tech updates (Source: PIB, Jan 2026) Regulatory Lag: While the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act 2023 provides a broad framework, it does not specifically address algorithmic bias in legal AI or the accountability of “automated legal advice” (Source: IJCRT Analysis 2025). Way forward Develop standardized guidelines and regulatory frameworks for digital legal aid, ensuring quality assurance, accountability, and seamless integration with judicial and alternative dispute resolution systems. Strengthen capacity-building initiatives for panel lawyers and Village Level Entrepreneurs to improve service delivery quality and ensure effective utilization of digital platforms at the grassroots level. Promote multilingual and user-friendly technological interfaces, ensuring inclusivity for non-English speakers and digitally disadvantaged populations, thereby enhancing accessibility and adoption. Expand legal literacy campaigns through schools, panchayats, and community institutions to increase awareness, trust, and participation in digital justice delivery mechanisms. Implement robust monitoring frameworks with measurable indicators such as resolution rates and user satisfaction to ensure transparency, efficiency, and continuous improvement in service delivery. Prelims pointers Tele-Law operates under the DISHA Scheme, which is a Central Sector Scheme implemented by the Department of Justice to provide digital legal aid services. Common Service Centres function as the primary delivery platform for Tele-Law, enabling access to legal advice at the grassroots level across rural and remote areas. Article 39A provides the constitutional basis for free legal aid and equal access to justice within India’s governance framework. National Legal Services Authority is a statutory body established under the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, to coordinate legal aid services nationwide. Nyaya Setu is an AI-powered chatbot designed to provide legal awareness, guidance, and access to Tele-Law services through digital platforms. IONS Maritime Exercise (IMEX) TTX 2026 Introduction   The Indian Navy hosted IMEX TTX 2026 at Kochi under the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium framework, focusing on non-traditional maritime security challenges and strengthening regional cooperation in the Indian Ocean Region. Conducted as a table-top exercise in a simulated environment, it aimed to enhance interoperability, coordination mechanisms, and strategic understanding among participating navies without the logistical constraints of live deployments. Relevance GS II (International Relations) India’s leadership in IOR, maritime diplomacy, Indo-Pacific strategy GS III (Internal Security) Maritime security, non-traditional threats (piracy, trafficking) Practice Question Q1.“Non-traditional maritime threats are redefining naval cooperation in the Indian Ocean Region.” Discuss in the context of IMEX TTX 2026. (250 words) Overview IMEX TTX 2026 reinforces India’s maritime security strategy aligned with SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region), emphasizing cooperative security, regional stability, and collective responses to emerging non-traditional threats. As India assumes chairmanship of the Indian Ocean Naval Symposium for 2026–2028, the exercise enhances its leadership role in shaping maritime governance and security architecture in the Indian Ocean Region. Participation of diverse countries including France, Indonesia, Kenya, and Maldives reflects growing multilateralism and trust–building, strengthening India’s diplomatic outreach and maritime partnerships across littoral and extra-regional powers. The exercise focuses on non-traditional threats such as piracy, trafficking, illegal fishing, maritime disasters, and climate-induced risks, highlighting the shift from conventional naval warfare to comprehensive maritime security frameworks. Strengthening information sharing, decision-making processes, and operational coordination enhances maritime domain awareness, which is critical for safeguarding sea lanes of communication and ensuring regional security stability. The Indian Ocean Region handles nearly 80 percent of global oil trade and significant maritime commerce, making such exercises crucial for protecting economic lifelines and ensuring uninterrupted global supply chains. The table-top format enables cost-effective capacity building, strategic simulations, and doctrinal alignment among navies, fostering interoperability without the financial and logistical burden of full-scale naval exercises. Technologically, simulated exercises improve readiness for complex multi-scenario contingencies, integrating data-driven decision-making and enhancing preparedness for hybrid and asymmetric maritime threats. Data & evidence The Indian Ocean Region accounts for a major share of global trade and energy flows, including critical chokepoints such as the Strait of Hormuz and Malacca Strait, underscoring its strategic importance.Ex: Chokepoint Density: Over 36 million barrels of oil per day pass through the Strait of Hormuz and the Malacca Strait. As of 2025, container traffic through the Malacca Strait has exceeded 90,000 ships annually (Source: UNCTAD Maritime Transport Report 2025). IONS currently consists of 25 Member Nations and 8 Observer Nations, representing approximately 35% of the global population (Source: IONS Official Secretariat, 2026). Exercise Frequency: India’s maritime exercises (e.g., MILAN, MALABAR, VARUNA) saw a 40% increase in participation in 2024–25 compared to the 2020–22 cycle (Source: Ministry of Defence Year End Review 2025). Mission-Based Deployments: Since early 2024, the Indian Navy has maintained a constant presence of 10–12 warships in the Arabian Sea and Gulf of Aden to counter a resurgence in piracy and drone attacks, successfully escorting over 1.5 million tonnes of cargo (Source: Indian Navy Information Fusion Centre – IOR, 2026). Challenges / Gaps / Criticisms The Evidence: While members agree on “low–politics” issues like HADR (Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief), they remain split on “high–politics” such as the South China Sea disputes. In 2025, discussions on a “Unified Code for Unplanned Encounters at Sea” saw friction as some littoral states prioritized bilateral defense pacts with extra-regional powers over a collective IONS framework (Source: IWG-MARSEC 2025 Proceedings). The Gap: There is a stark contrast between “Tier-1” navies (India, Australia, France) using AI-enabled P-8I surveillance and smaller littoral navies that lack basic AIS (Automatic Identification System) coverage for their full EEZs. The Criticism: Without a Permanent Secretariat or a legally binding charter, IONS cannot enforce maritime law. For example, agreements on tracking “Dark Shipping” (vessels with turned-off transponders) are currently non-binding, leading to a 20% rise in unidentified vessel sightings in 2025 (Source: IFC-IOR Data 2025). Increasing geopolitical competition, particularly from China’s expanding presence in the Indian Ocean, complicates cooperative security efforts and introduces strategic tensions. Non-traditional threats such as climate change, maritime pollution, and illegal fishing require broader multi-sectoral coordination beyond naval forces, posing governance challenges.Eg.:Climate & Pollution: In 2024–25, the IOR saw a 15% increase in maritime disaster call-outs related to extreme weather. However, most member navies allocate less than 2% of their budget to environmental monitoring or oil-spill response tech (Source: IPCC Regional Update 2025). Way forward Strengthen IONS institutional architecture by developing more formalized frameworks, standard operating procedures, and regular joint exercises to enhance coherence and operational effectiveness. Expand capacity-building initiatives, training programs, and technology sharing to reduce asymmetries among member navies and improve collective maritime security capabilities. Enhance integration with other regional mechanisms such as ASEAN-led forums and Indo-Pacific initiatives to ensure comprehensive and coordinated maritime governance. Invest in advanced maritime domain awareness technologies, including satellite surveillance and AI-driven analytics, to improve real-time information sharing and threat response capabilities. Promote inclusive maritime diplomacy, balancing strategic competition with cooperation, and reinforcing India’s role as a net security provider committed to a free, open, and stable Indo-Pacific. Prelims pointers IONS is a voluntary maritime security cooperation forum comprising navies of the Indian Ocean Region. IMEX is a table–top exercise conducted under IONS focusing on non-traditional maritime security challenges. India holds IONS chairmanship for the 2026–2028 cycle. SAGAR doctrine emphasizes cooperative maritime security and regional stability in the Indian Ocean Region. Table-top exercises involve simulated scenarios rather than actual deployment of naval assets.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 30 March 2026

Content A missed opportunity to guarantee minimum wages How to secure India’s supply chains A missed opportunity to guarantee minimum wages Basics & Static Background MGNREGA Design: Provides 100 days of guaranteed unskilled employment per rural household with legal enforceability, unemployment allowance provisions, and transparency tools like social audits and MIS-based tracking systems. Wage Evolution: From 2006–09, wages were aligned with State agricultural minimum wages under Section 6(2); post-2009, central notification under Section 6(1) delinked wages from statutory minimum wage regimes. VB-G RAM G Shift: Enacted in December 2025, increases guarantee to 125 days but introduces fiscal restructuring (60:40 cost sharing) and retains centralized wage-setting power under Section 10. Structural Change: Unlike MGNREGA’s demand-driven model, VB-G RAM G introduces implicit ceilings via budgetary allocation and administrative controls, weakening the legal guarantee of employment on demand. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Article 39A, legal aid vs economic justice linkages Federalism issues in Centrally Sponsored Schemes GS II (Social Justice) Wage inequality, rural distress, labour rights GS III (Economy) Rural wages, consumption demand, labour markets Practice Questions Q1.“Decoupling MGNREGA wages from statutory minimum wages has undermined its role as a rural wage floor.”Critically examine. (250 words) Overview Constitutional Conflict: Payment below minimum wages may violate Article 23 (forced labour jurisprudence in PUDR case) and Article 39(d), as inadequate remuneration under a state programme can amount to coercive labour conditions. Legal Vulnerability: MGNREGA’s non–obstante clause allowed deviation from Minimum Wages Act, but VB-G RAM G lacks such protection, making sub-minimum wages legally indefensible and open to constitutional challenge. Federal Imbalance: Under VB-G RAM G, States bear 40% wage costs but lack wage-setting authority, creating fiscal stress and undermining cooperative federalism principles. Wage Floor Collapse: Early MGNREGA strengthened rural wage floors by aligning with minimum wages; post–2009 decoupling reversed this effect, weakening bargaining power of agricultural labourers. Economic Signal: Wage suppression reduces labour demand for the scheme, weakens its multiplier effect on rural consumption, and limits its role as a counter-cyclical safety net during economic distress. Labour Market Divergence: By 2014, MGNREGA wages were only ~60% (men) and ~75% (women) of market wages; continued stagnation further widened this gap, reducing programme attractiveness. Administrative Control: Wage stagnation acts as “silent rationing,” reducing participation without changing statutory provisions, enabling fiscal consolidation without explicit policy rollback. Payment Risk Premium: Delays of 15–30+ days effectively reduce real wages compared to market wages paid daily, creating a negative incentive structure for workers. Corruption Feedback Loop: Lower participation reduces social audit vigilance, increasing ghost entries, fake muster rolls, and diversion of wages through Aadhaar-linked fraud mechanisms. Technological Exclusion: Aadhaar-based Payment System (ABPS) and NMMS introduce transaction failures, biometric mismatches, and digital exclusion, disproportionately affecting elderly and migrant workers. Data & Evidence Wage Rate Trends: As of April 1, 2025, average MGNREGA wage stands at ₹370/day (≈6% annual increase), but several States saw sub-inflation hikes, resulting in real wage decline. Interstate Variation: Haryana records highest wage (~₹400/day), while Chhattisgarh remains among lowest (~₹261/day), reflecting uneven wage floors across States. Minimum Wage Gap: In most States, MGNREGA wages are ₹50–₹150 below agricultural minimum wages in 2025–26, reversing early parity and weakening legal compliance. Inflation Mismatch: In Uttar Pradesh, wage hike of ~3.04% in 2025–26 lagged behind CPI-AL inflation, effectively reducing real wages despite nominal increase. Budgetary Signal: Union Budget 2026 allocates ₹95,692 crore for VB-G RAM G and ₹30,000 crore for MGNREGA arrears, far below estimated ₹2.3 lakh crore required for full 125-day guarantee implementation. Employment Evidence: PLFS 2025 shows rural unemployment at ~2.4% but stagnant casual labour share, indicating weak employment expansion despite official claims of high persondays generation. LibTech Findings: Telangana (2025) recorded ~47.6% decline in persondays; nearly 40% workers faced Aadhaar/ABPS failures in at least one of last five transactions. Structural Comparison Feature MGNREGA (Old) VB-G RAM G Act (2026) Days Guaranteed 100 days 125 days Wage Funding 100% Central (unskilled) 60:40 (Centre:State) Wage Authority Central (Section 6(1)) Central (Section 10) Demand Nature Fully demand-driven Implicit ceilings via allocation Budget 2026 ₹30,000 Cr (arrears) ₹95,692 Cr Challenges / Gaps / Criticisms Real Wage Compression: CPI-AL indexation without real wage growth leads to declining purchasing power, reducing scheme attractiveness and undermining its wage floor function. Normative Allocation Crisis: Budget ceilings under VB-G RAM G restrict actual workdays, converting a legal guarantee into a supply-driven programme dependent on fiscal limits. Legal Contradiction: Absence of non-obstante clause makes payment below minimum wages potentially unconstitutional and violative of labour laws. Fiscal Offloading: 40% State contribution discourages wage hikes and limits expansion, especially for fiscally constrained States. Digital Barriers: ABPS and e-KYC requirements create exclusion errors, delays, and non-payment, weakening trust in digital governance systems. Way Forward Minimum Wage Benchmarking: Mandate wages equal to or above State minimum wages to restore legality, strengthen labour markets, and revive worker participation. Real Wage Reform: Introduce productivity-linked or rural wage-indexed revisions instead of CPI-AL-only adjustment to ensure real income growth. Budget Realignment: Align allocations with statutory guarantee (125 days), avoiding normative ceilings that dilute demand-driven nature of employment guarantee. Payment System Overhaul: Ensure T+15 payments, automatic delay compensation, and hybrid payment systems to reduce Aadhaar-based exclusion risks. Federal Rebalancing: Provide States flexibility in wage-setting or increase central share to avoid fiscal disincentives and ensure uniform implementation. Prelims Pointers MGNREGA initially followed State minimum wages under Section 6(2), later replaced by central notification under Section 6(1). CPI-AL is used for wage indexation under MGNREGA. VB-G RAM G Act (2025) increases guarantee to 125 days and introduces 60:40 cost sharing. Aadhaar-based Payment System (ABPS) and NMMS are used for wage disbursement and attendance monitoring. Non-obstante clause allows overriding of Minimum Wages Act; present in MGNREGA but absent in VB-G RAM G. How to secure India’s supply chains Introduction Strategic Exposure: Recent West Asia geopolitical disruptions revealed how India’s deep integration with global supply chains transmits shocks into inflation, trade deficits, and production slowdowns across sectors. Core Issue: Excessive dependence on imported energy, food inputs, and industrial intermediates creates systemic vulnerabilities, necessitating a transition from efficiency-driven globalization to resilience-driven economic strategy. Relevance GS III (Economy) Supply chain resilience, import dependence, industrial policy GS II (International Relations) Strategic partnerships, Indo-Pacific, resource diplomacy Practice Questions Q1.“India must shift from efficiency-driven globalization to resilience-driven supply chain strategy.” Discuss in the context of recent geopolitical disruptions. (250 words) Basics & Static Background Supply Chain Logic: Modern manufacturing depends on globally fragmented value chains where disruption in upstream raw materials or intermediates can halt downstream production and reduce industrial output. Import Structure: India’s imports constitute ~19% of GDP, dominated by raw materials (34%), intermediates (31%), and capital goods (24%), indicating structural dependence on external ecosystems. Policy Context: Initiatives like PLI, Atmanirbhar Bharat, and National Logistics Policy aim to reduce dependence but remain skewed toward final assembly rather than upstream ecosystem development. Overview   Energy Dependence: India imports ~85% of crude oil and ~50% of gas; in 2025–26, crude import bill surged despite diversification, reflecting vulnerability to geopolitical shocks. Diversification Strategy: India now imports crude from 39 countries (up from 27 in 2022), including Russia (~35% share), reducing concentration risk but not overall import dependence. Strategic Buffering: Phase II of Strategic Petroleum Reserves adds 6.5 MMT capacity at Chandikhol and Padur, shifting from “just-in-time” to “just-in-case” energy security strategy. Macroeconomic Sensitivity: A $10/barrel crude price rise increases import bill by $13–14 billion, raises inflation by 30–40 bps, and reduces GDP growth by 0.2–0.3 percentage points. Renewable Transition: India targets 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030; however, intermittency challenges require storage investments and grid modernization to ensure reliability. Food Security Gap: Domestic edible oil production meets only ~44% of demand, leading to an annual import bill of ~₹1.5 lakh crore, exposing inflation and external vulnerability. Oil Palm Mission: Under NMEO-OP, oil palm cultivation reached 5.2 lakh hectares (2026) with a target of 10 lakh hectares by 2030 to reduce import dependence structurally. Fertilizer Dependence: High reliance on phosphatic and potassic fertilizers exposes agriculture to global shocks; Nano-DAP scaled to 5 crore bottles annually, reducing imports by ~15%. API Dependence: India historically imported ~65–70% of APIs from China; PLI 2.0 has localized 35 critical APIs, reducing supply chain vulnerability in pharmaceuticals. Semiconductor Ecosystem: India’s first 28nm fab (Tata-PSMC) and ATMP units began pilot production in 2026, reducing import risks for electronics, automotive, and strategic sectors. Industrial Structure Gap: Continued dependence on high-end machinery and electronic components from East Asia limits domestic value addition and technological depth. Critical Minerals Risk: Lithium, cobalt, and rare earths are globally concentrated; India’s domestic auctions (2025) and overseas acquisitions aim to secure long-term supply. Strategic Partnerships: Khanij Bidesh India Ltd (KABIL) acquired lithium assets in Argentina and exploration rights in Australia, enabling diversification of critical mineral supply chains. Circular Economy Role: Formal e-waste recycling reached ~35% (2025), enabling recovery of gold, silver, and copper, reducing dependence on primary mineral imports. Geopolitical Dimension: Supply chain diversification towards Africa, Latin America, and Indo-Pacific aligns with India’s strategic autonomy and reduces overdependence on specific regions. Technological Re-engineering: Adoption of input-efficient processes, alternative materials, and direct conversion technologies can reduce structural import intensity over time. Data & Evidence Energy Exposure: ~85% crude and ~50% gas import dependence; imports diversified to 39 countries with Russia as major supplier (~35%). Edible Oil Gap: Domestic output meets ~44% demand; import bill ~₹1.5 lakh crore annually; oil palm area expanded to 5.2 lakh hectares (2026). Fertilizer Reform: Nano-DAP scaled to 5 crore bottles, reducing traditional DAP imports by ~15%. API Localization: 35 high-dependence APIs localized under PLI 2.0, reducing reliance on China. Semiconductor Milestone: First domestic 28nm fab and multiple ATMP units operational (pilot stage, 2026). Critical Minerals: Lithium block auctions initiated domestically; KABIL secured overseas assets in Argentina and Australia. Recycling Progress: Formal e-waste recycling rate reached ~35%, supporting urban mining and reducing raw material imports. Strategic Snapshot  Sector Import Dependence Resilience Milestone (2025–26) Energy 85% crude / 50% gas 39 import sources; SPR Phase II expansion Electronics High (chips, displays) 28nm fab pilot + ATMP units operational Pharma ~70% APIs (earlier) 35 APIs localized under PLI Fertilizers High (P&K) Nano-DAP scaled; ~15% import reduction Minerals Near 100% (Li, Co) KABIL acquisitions; domestic auctions Challenges / Gaps / Criticisms Structural Dependence: Continued reliance on imports for critical sectors such as semiconductors, rare earths, and energy limits strategic autonomy. Assembly Bias: Industrial policies still prioritize final assembly, delaying development of upstream and midstream manufacturing ecosystems. Capital Intensity: Building domestic capabilities in semiconductors, mining, and energy storage requires high upfront investment and long gestation periods. Global Concentration Risk: Critical supply chains remain dominated by few countries, making diversification complex and geopolitically sensitive. Coordination Deficit: Fragmented policymaking across sectors reduces effectiveness of a unified supply chain resilience strategy. Way Forward Deep Industrialization: Shift focus from assembly to full value chain integration, including intermediates, capital goods, and raw material processing ecosystems. Strategic Diversification: Expand partnerships in Africa, Latin America, and Central Asia for energy, minerals, and agricultural inputs to reduce geographic concentration risks. Energy Transition: Accelerate renewable energy, green hydrogen, and storage technologies while expanding domestic exploration and strategic reserves. Agricultural Reforms: Scale oilseed missions, improve productivity, and expand bio-fertilizer adoption to reduce import dependence sustainably. Technological Capability: Invest in R&D, semiconductor ecosystems, and advanced manufacturing technologies to enhance domestic competitiveness. Circular Economy: Promote recycling, urban mining, and resource efficiency to reduce primary import requirements and ensure sustainable supply chains.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 30 March 2026

Content Grameen Credit Score (GCS) Emergency Cardiac Care in India Motor Accident Compensation Crisis (MACT) Artificial Water Harvesting Structures in India in 11 Years Extracellular RNA (exRNA) Balirajgarh Excavation (ASI) LPG vs LNG & India’s Energy Vulnerability Artemis II & New Lunar Exploration Phase Grameen Credit Score (GCS) Why in News? Government has developed Grameen Credit Score (GCS) post Union Budget 2025–26, urging banks to adopt it as default rural credit assessment tool. RBI regulatory changes (15-day reporting; weekly by July 2026) and PSL revisions are enabling real-time, inclusive rural credit evaluation through GCS. Relevance GS III (Economy) Financial inclusion, rural credit deepening, fintech GS II (Governance) Digital Public Infrastructure, RBI regulation, PSL Practice Question Q1.“Grameen Credit Score marks a paradigm shift from collateral-based to data-driven rural credit assessment.”Examine its potential and limitations. (250 words) Overview GCS is a rural-specific credit scoring framework designed for farmers, SHGs, MSMEs using behavioural, transactional, and welfare-linked financial data. Introduced in Budget 2025–26, led by PSBs with CICs (CIBIL, Experian), ensuring institutional coordination and standardisation of rural credit metrics. Targets “credit invisible” population (~160 million individuals) lacking formal borrowing history, addressing structural exclusion from formal banking channels. Phase I uses agri-loans, KCC, PSL data; upcoming phases integrate utility bills, DBT receipts, UPI transactions, and scheme enrolment. Incorporates SVAMITVA land mapping data, allowing property records to act as proxy collateral, improving creditworthiness of landholding rural households. Supports new ₹5 lakh micro-enterprise credit card scheme (2025) where GCS acts as primary eligibility metric for rural entrepreneurs. Enables cash-flow based lending, capturing seasonal agricultural incomes rather than fixed monthly income models used in conventional scoring systems. Integrated with India Post network (1.5 lakh post offices) for last-mile verification and physical outreach in digitally underserved regions. Leverages Digital Public Infrastructure (Aadhaar, UPI, Jan Dhan) to build digital financial footprints for rural households. Evidence-based impact: Villages with high UPI penetration saw 42% rise in women enterprises and 53% fall in informal borrowing (NPCI/Emerald 2025). Static Background Credit Information Ecosystem Credit scores assess repayment behaviour and default risk, traditionally based on formal credit history, disadvantaging informal rural borrowers. India has 4 CICs (CIBIL, Experian, Equifax, CRIF High Mark) regulated under CIC Act, 2005; GCS builds a rural-specific layer over these systems. Rural Credit Structure & Gaps NABARD Rural Economic Conditions Survey (Dec 2025): 58.3% rural households access formal credit (up from 48.7% in 2024). Still 20–30% borrowing from informal sources, indicating persistent last-mile exclusion. Structural issues: lack of collateral, tenancy without land titles, seasonal incomes, high transaction costs. Financial Inclusion Ecosystem PMJDY (500+ million accounts), MUDRA loans (>₹20 lakh crore), SHG-Bank linkage (largest globally) expanded access but credit deepening remains limited. GCS complements these by shifting from account access → credit access → credit quality. Alternative Data & DPI Integration Welfare Data as Income Proxy: PM-Kisan transfers, state DBT schemes used to estimate income stability and repayment capacity. Digital Transactions: UPI usage patterns incorporated; higher transaction density correlates with improved creditworthiness assessment. Utility Payment Records: Electricity, water, mobile recharges used as proxies for financial discipline and repayment behaviour. Peer Group Data: SHG/JLG repayment records used to assess social collateral and collective credit discipline. Regulatory & Policy Backing (2025–26) RBI mandated 15-day credit reporting (Jan 2025), moving to weekly reporting by July 2026, enabling near real-time credit score updates. Priority Sector Lending (PSL) revision (April 2025) increased loan limit to ₹2 lakh for women/SHGs, incentivising GCS adoption. Introduction of Data Quality Index (DQI) by RBI to ensure accuracy and reliability of rural credit data reported by banks. Comparative Snapshot: Conventional Score vs GCS Conventional scores rely on formal loan/credit card history, excluding informal rural borrowers with no prior records. GCS incorporates alternative data (UPI, DBT, utilities, SHG records), expanding credit eligibility beyond traditional financial footprints. Conventional models emphasise collateral/asset backing, whereas GCS focuses on cash-flow and seasonal income patterns. GCS includes field-level verification via India Post, unlike purely digital verification in conventional credit scoring systems. Challenges / Criticisms Data Quality Risks: Inaccurate or incomplete rural data may distort scores; hence RBI introduced DQI framework to monitor reporting quality. Algorithmic Bias: Models may penalise borrowers for context-specific events (e.g., drought-induced payment delays), leading to exclusion. Digital Divide: Limited smartphone/internet penetration may reduce effectiveness of DPI-based data capture in remote regions. Privacy Concerns: Integration of welfare and utility data raises issues under Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023. Institutional Capacity: Banks and CICs require technological upgrades for real-time data processing and interoperability. Way Forward Develop context-aware algorithms incorporating climate shocks, crop cycles, and regional income variability to avoid exclusion errors. Strengthen consent-based data sharing via Account Aggregator framework, ensuring privacy and user control over financial data. Expand SVAMITVA coverage and land digitisation to improve collateral proxies for rural borrowers. Scale up financial literacy programmes via SHGs, NRLM, Panchayats to build trust and improve responsible borrowing behaviour. Enhance DPI penetration (internet, UPI, mobile access) to ensure comprehensive and inclusive data capture. Promote fintech innovation and public-private partnerships to refine rural credit analytics and reduce cost of lending. Prelims Pointers GCS announced in Union Budget 2025–26 for rural credit scoring. Uses alternative data (UPI, DBT, utilities, SHG records). Linked with SVAMITVA scheme and India Post network. RBI introduced 15-day reporting (2025) → weekly reporting (2026). NABARD (Dec 2025): 58.3% formal credit access; 20–30% informal borrowing persists. Emergency Cardiac Care in India Why in News? Evidence highlights systemic delays in emergency cardiac care, with patients reaching treatment centres 5–6 hours post-symptom onset, causing preventable deaths. Despite schemes like AB-PMJAY, gaps in infrastructure, affordability, and timely response continue to undermine cardiac survival outcomes. Relevance GS II (Health Governance) Public health infrastructure, Ayushman Bharat GS III (Social Sector) Healthcare access, affordability, human capital Practice Question Q1.“Time-sensitive healthcare delivery remains a major challenge in India’s health system.”Examine in the context of emergency cardiac care. (250 words) Overview  Cardiovascular diseases cause 28.6 lakh deaths annually, making them India’s leading cause of mortality with earlier onset (45–55 years) than global averages. Critical concept: “Time is muscle”—delays in restoring blood flow lead to irreversible cardiac damage and increased mortality risk. Global standard: ECG within 10 minutes, angioplasty within 90 minutes (door-to-balloon time); Indian reality averages 300–360 minutes delay, extending to 12 hours in hilly regions. Survival exceeds 90% if treated within 1 hour, but every 30-minute delay increases 1-year mortality by 7.5% (Indian Heart Journal, 2025). Only 11% patients reach appropriate facility within 1 hour (Faridabad study, 2023) due to lack of awareness, transport, and misdiagnosis at first contact points. Rural PHCs often lack ECG machines (<25% functional availability) despite National Essential Diagnostic List mandate. India has ~2,500 cath labs, with 70% concentrated in 5 states and ~90% in private sector, creating rural “cardiac care deserts.” Severe human resource gap: ~5,500 cardiologists (≈0.45 per 100,000 population), heavily urban-centric, limiting emergency response capacity. Patients face high out-of-pocket expenditure (₹1.5–3.5 lakh per procedure); nearly 50% households incur catastrophic health expenditure. Despite Ayushman Bharat (AB-PMJAY), reimbursement gaps and private hospital refusal reduce effective financial protection. Static Background Cardiac Emergency Care Basics Heart attack (Acute Myocardial Infarction) occurs due to blockage of coronary arteries, requiring immediate restoration of blood flow via angioplasty or thrombolysis. Key timelines: Golden Hour (first 60 minutes) and 1–3 hour critical window determine survival and long-term cardiac function. Health System Structure Primary Health Centres (PHCs) → first contact, but lack diagnostics. Community/District Hospitals → limited specialists and infrastructure. Tertiary Hospitals → cath labs and cardiologists, mostly urban/private. Policy Context Ayushman Bharat (PMJAY) aims to provide ₹5 lakh health cover, but implementation gaps persist. National Essential Diagnostic List mandates ECG availability at PHC level, yet compliance remains poor. Key Structural Gaps Identified Pre-hospital delay due to low symptom awareness, poor ambulance networks, and geographic barriers in rural/hilly regions. Diagnostic gap at PHC level due to absence of ECG machines and trained personnel for interpretation. Treatment infrastructure gap with uneven distribution of cath labs and cardiologists across states. Underutilisation of thrombolysis due to fear among non-specialist doctors and lack of protocol-based decision systems. Financial barriers despite insurance schemes, leading to delayed or forgone treatment. Innovative Solution: Hub-and-Spoke Model Spokes (PHCs/CHCs) equipped with portable ECG devices and trained nurses for first-level diagnosis. Hub (district/private hospitals) provides real-time ECG interpretation via telemedicine platforms. Enables early thrombolysis (Tenecteplase) at peripheral centres if angioplasty facility is >2 hours away. Proven impact: STEMI Karnataka & Tamil Nadu TAEI reduced treatment delays by ~40%, improving survival outcomes. Integration with digital platforms and AI-based ECG interpretation enhances scalability and cost-efficiency. Challenges / Criticisms Geographic inequality: Remote and hilly regions face extreme delays due to terrain and poor connectivity. Digital divide limits effectiveness of telemedicine-based solutions in low-connectivity regions. Human resource shortages in cardiology and emergency care weaken last-mile implementation. Insurance inefficiencies: Denial of treatment or informal payments reduce trust in public schemes. Protocol gaps: Lack of standardised emergency response systems across states leads to inconsistent care delivery. Behavioural barriers: Low awareness and cultural hesitation delay decision to seek immediate care. Way Forward Ensure universal ECG availability at PHC level with AI-enabled interpretation to overcome specialist shortage. Scale up hub-and-spoke cardiac networks nationally, integrating telemedicine and emergency transport systems. Strengthen ambulance infrastructure (108 services) with GPS tracking and cardiac care protocols. Expand public cath lab infrastructure in underserved districts to reduce geographic disparities. Reform AB-PMJAY reimbursement rates and enforcement mechanisms to ensure private sector participation. Promote mass awareness campaigns on heart attack symptoms and urgency (like “Act FAST” campaigns). Integrate cardiac care into Health and Wellness Centres (HWCs) under Ayushman Bharat for preventive and early detection strategies. Prelims Pointers Door-to-balloon time: <90 minutes (global standard). Golden hour: first 60 minutes critical for survival. India: 28.6 lakh annual CVD deaths. ~2,500 cath labs; 90% private sector. <25% rural PHCs have ECG facilities. 50% households face catastrophic expenditure in cardiac care. Motor Accident Compensation Crisis (MACT) Why in News? Report by Crashfree India highlights ₹96,000+ crore compensation pending in MACTs with over 10.7 lakh claims, exposing systemic gaps in legal awareness and post-crash response. Supreme Court (2024) flagged negligible claims in hit-and-run cases, indicating failure of compensation mechanisms despite legal provisions. Relevance GS II (Polity & Governance) Access to justice, quasi-judicial bodies GS III (Internal Security) Road safety, accident management Practice Question Q1.“Delay in motor accident compensation undermines its role as a social security mechanism.” Critically analyze. (250 words) Overview India faces a dual crisis of pendency and awareness, with 10.73 lakh pending MACT cases (2025–26) involving ~₹96,257 crore, rising to ~₹1.05 lakh crore with accruals. Nearly 25% cases pending over 5 years, effectively denying timely justice and pushing affected families into debt traps. 70% low-income and 63% high-income households unaware of compensation rights (World Bank, 2021), indicating systemic communication failure. Hit-and-run paradox: Despite ~70,000 annual cases, <0.5% claim utilisation, reflecting poor awareness of Solatium Scheme managed by General Insurance Council. Compensation under MV Act (2019): ₹2 lakh (death), ₹50,000 (grievous injury), yet access remains minimal due to procedural and awareness gaps. Emergence of “unregulated intermediaries” charging 20–40% commission, exploiting victims due to absence of institutional legal support. District Legal Services Authorities (DLSAs) underutilised; only ~12% victims aware of free legal aid (NALSA Survey, 2025). Police stations and hospitals—the first contact points—lack structured legal awareness systems, failing to inform victims of rights and procedures. e-DAR portal digitises accident reporting but fails to integrate victim-facing communication, limiting its effectiveness in claim initiation. Average settlement time 3.5–5 years, leading to prolonged financial insecurity for families dependent on compensation. Static Background  Legal Framework Governed by Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 (amended 2019), providing statutory right to compensation via MACTs. MACTs are quasi-judicial bodies for speedy adjudication of accident compensation claims. Solatium Scheme provides compensation in hit-and-run cases, funded through General Insurance Council. Institutional Mechanisms District Legal Services Authorities (DLSAs) under Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 provide free legal aid to vulnerable sections. e-DAR (Electronic Detailed Accident Report) system aims to digitise FIR, insurance, and claim processes to reduce delays. Social Protection Context Road accidents cause significant economic shocks, often pushing families into poverty due to sudden income loss and medical expenses. Compensation is intended as social security mechanism, not merely legal remedy. Key Structural Issues Awareness deficit: No mandatory system to inform victims about compensation rights at police stations or hospitals. Procedural delays: Overburdened MACTs, adjournments, and documentation complexities increase pendency. Institutional vacuum: Weak integration between police, hospitals, insurers, and legal aid authorities. Exploitation risk: Informal intermediaries dominate due to lack of accessible formal assistance. Digital gap: e-DAR lacks last-mile connectivity and victim-centric interface. Equity concern: Poor households disproportionately affected due to low awareness and high dependence on compensation. Challenges / Criticisms Justice delayed = justice denied: 5-year pendency nullifies purpose of compensation as immediate relief mechanism. Fragmented governance: Lack of coordination between MoRTH, judiciary, insurance sector, and legal services institutions. Implementation deficit: Strong legal provisions exist but weak enforcement and outreach mechanisms. Urban bias in legal aid: DLSA services concentrated in cities, leaving rural victims dependent on informal networks. Insurance sector inefficiencies: Delays in claim verification and settlement contribute to backlog. Way Forward Mandate “Compensation Rights Form” at FIR stage, ensuring victims receive clear, multilingual information on claim procedures. Establish legal help desks with para-legal volunteers in trauma centres and district hospitals for immediate assistance. Implement fast-track MACT procedures (6-month resolution) for clear-liability cases to reduce pendency. Strengthen e-DAR integration with SMS/IVR alerts, automatically informing victims about compensation eligibility and process. Expand outreach and capacity of DLSAs, ensuring proactive engagement rather than passive availability. Regulate or formalise intermediary ecosystem to prevent exploitation while ensuring assistance. Introduce performance metrics for MACTs and insurance companies to reduce delays and improve accountability. Prelims Pointers MACT established under Motor Vehicles Act, 1988. Solatium Scheme covers hit-and-run compensation (₹2 lakh death, ₹50,000 injury). e-DAR portal digitises accident reporting and claim processing. NALSA oversees free legal aid through DLSAs. Pending claims: 10.73 lakh+; ₹96,000 crore+ (2025–26). Artificial water harvesting structures in India in 11 years Why in News? Prime Minister highlighted creation of ~50 lakh water harvesting structures and 70,000 Amrit Sarovars over 11 years, signalling shift toward decentralised water management. Statement comes amid early summer heatwaves (2026) and rising groundwater stress, reinforcing urgency of conservation-based strategies. Relevance GS I (Geography) Water resources, groundwater crisis GS III (Environment) Water conservation, climate resilience Practice Question Q1.“Decentralised water harvesting is key to addressing India’s groundwater crisis.”Discuss with reference to recent initiatives. (250 words) Overview India has created ~50 lakh decentralised water harvesting structures (2015–2026) including check dams, farm ponds, recharge shafts to enhance groundwater recharge. Under Mission Amrit Sarovar (2022–), over 70,000 lakes developed/rejuvenated, exceeding target of 75 per district, focusing on ecological restoration and community assets. Complementary initiative “Catch the Rain” promotes localised water conservation with slogan “where it falls, when it falls,” strengthening seasonal preparedness. These initiatives reflect a paradigm shift from large dam-centric model to decentralised, community-led water governance. Groundwater remains critical: ~60% irrigation and 85% drinking water depend on it, making recharge-focused interventions essential. Nearly 14% of groundwater blocks classified as ‘over-exploited/critical’ (2023); these initiatives aim to reverse this trend. Amrit Sarovars are geo-tagged and monitored digitally, improving transparency, accountability, and maintenance tracking. Standardised design: minimum 1 acre area, ~10,000 cubic metre capacity, ensuring functional storage and recharge potential. Social dimension: Sarovars act as community spaces (plantation, recreation, flag hoisting), enhancing local ownership and sustainability. Static Background Water Stress in India India hosts 18% population but only 4% freshwater resources, making it water-stressed. Per capita water availability declined from 5,177 m³ (1951) to ~1,486 m³ (2021), approaching water-scarcity threshold. Groundwater Crisis India is largest groundwater extractor globally, accounting for ~25% of global extraction. Over-extraction driven by subsidised electricity, MSP-driven cropping patterns, and lack of regulation. Decentralised Water Management Emphasises local storage, recharge, watershed management, aligning with Gandhian principle of “local self-sufficiency in resources.” Key mechanisms: check dams (slow runoff), farm ponds (store rainwater), recharge shafts (aquifer replenishment). Significance / Impact Enhances water security by increasing groundwater recharge and reducing dependency on erratic monsoons. Supports climate resilience, mitigating drought risks and stabilising agricultural productivity. Promotes community participation and behavioural change, key for sustainable resource management. Reduces flood-drought cycle intensity by improving local water retention and reducing runoff losses. Strengthens rural livelihoods through improved irrigation availability and allied activities (fisheries, plantations). Challenges / Criticisms Maintenance deficit: Many structures face siltation and neglect, reducing long-term effectiveness. Uneven regional impact: High-performing states vs lagging regions due to governance and capacity differences. Quality concerns: Rapid construction may compromise design standards and recharge efficiency. Data gaps: Limited scientific assessment of actual groundwater recharge impact at basin level. Institutional fragmentation: Multiple ministries (Jal Shakti, Rural Development, Agriculture) with weak convergence. Behavioural inertia: Continued over-extraction undermines conservation gains. Way Forward Institutionalise annual desilting and maintenance audits with community participation and MGNREGA convergence. Strengthen aquifer mapping (NAQUIM) and data-driven planning to align structures with hydrogeological realities. Promote water budgeting at Panchayat level, linking usage with recharge capacity. Integrate conservation efforts with crop diversification and micro-irrigation (PMKSY) to reduce demand-side pressure. Enhance real-time monitoring using remote sensing and GIS dashboards for impact evaluation. Encourage community ownership through Water User Associations (WUAs) and local governance institutions. Prelims Pointers Mission Amrit Sarovar (2022): 75 water bodies per district target. Jal Sanchay Abhiyan: Focus on decentralised water harvesting structures. Catch the Rain campaign: Seasonal conservation initiative. Groundwater dependency: ~60% irrigation, ~85% drinking water. Over-exploited blocks: ~14% (CGWB classification). Extracellular RNA (exRNA) Why in News? A 2026 study (journal Clean Water) shows exRNA persists in disinfected drinking water, enabling identification of bacterial survival strategies post-disinfection. Opens scope for next-generation disinfectants and advances in non-invasive diagnostics (liquid biopsy). Relevance GS III (Science & Tech) Biotechnology, genomics, diagnostics GS III (Environment) Water quality monitoring Practice Question Q1.“Extracellular RNA has the potential to revolutionize diagnostics and environmental monitoring.”Discuss its applications and challenges. (250 words) Overview  exRNA refers to RNA molecules present outside cells, found in fluids like blood, saliva, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, and even treated water. Earlier belief: RNA degrades rapidly outside cells; new evidence shows cells actively export RNA in protective vesicles, enabling stability and signalling. exRNA acts as a long-distance communication tool, transferring genetic instructions that regulate immune response, tissue repair, and development. Study shows exRNA remains detectable even after bacterial death, acting as a “molecular snapshot” of pre-death activity. Unlike DNA (which shows identity), exRNA reveals functional state—what genes were active under stress conditions. Enables mapping bacterial stress responses (heat-shock proteins, efflux pumps) under disinfectant exposure. Helps design synergistic disinfection strategies combining multiple methods (e.g., chlorine + UV) to block survival pathways. exRNA stability ensured via extracellular vesicles (EVs) and protein binding, preventing enzymatic degradation. Has dual role: beneficial (immune signalling) and harmful (cancer metastasis via gene signalling). Static Background RNA Basics RNA (Ribonucleic Acid) is involved in protein synthesis and gene regulation (mRNA, tRNA, rRNA, microRNA). Traditionally considered intracellular molecule, degraded quickly outside due to ribonucleases. Extracellular Vesicles (EVs) Membrane-bound particles secreted by cells carrying RNA, proteins, lipids, enabling intercellular communication. Includes exosomes and microvesicles, crucial for transport and protection of exRNA. Applications / Significance Water Treatment Innovation: exRNA analysis enables precision disinfection, targeting bacterial resistance pathways rather than generic killing. Public Health Surveillance: Detects microbial stress and resistance in water systems, improving safety standards. Medical Diagnostics (Liquid Biopsy): Cancer: Early detection through RNA signatures before tumour visibility. Cardiology: microRNAs act as early indicators of cardiac stress, more sensitive than traditional biomarkers like troponin. Neurology: Tracks diseases like Alzheimer’s via cerebrospinal fluid RNA markers. Therapeutics: Potential to use synthetic exRNA for gene therapy, enabling targeted activation/suppression of genes. Precision Medicine: Enables personalised disease monitoring using non-invasive sampling techniques. Challenges / Risks Stability vs contamination: Persistence in water raises concerns about unintended biological signalling or environmental impacts. Technological complexity: Requires advanced sequencing and bioinformatics, limiting scalability in developing regions. Regulatory gaps: Lack of guidelines on use of exRNA in diagnostics and therapeutics. Ethical concerns: Genetic information profiling via liquid biopsy raises privacy and data protection issues. Cancer risk: exRNA-mediated signalling can promote metastasis (seed and soil hypothesis). Way Forward Integrate exRNA-based monitoring in water quality frameworks for real-time microbial risk assessment. Promote R&D in RNA therapeutics and diagnostics under initiatives like Biotechnology Industry Research Assistance Council (BIRAC). Develop standardised protocols for exRNA sequencing and interpretation for clinical and environmental use. Strengthen bioethics and data governance frameworks for genetic data handling. Encourage interdisciplinary research (microbiology + genomics + public health) for scalable applications. Prelims Pointers exRNA = RNA outside cells, transported via extracellular vesicles. Found in body fluids and environment (including water). Used in liquid biopsy (non-invasive diagnostics). Reveals functional activity of cells (unlike DNA). Balirajgarh Excavation (ASI)   Why in News? Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) has launched large-scale excavation (March 2026) at Balirajgarh, Bihar, aiming to establish earliest habitation layers and verify links with ancient Videha Kingdom. Use of modern technologies (satellite mapping, scientific trenching) marks a shift toward evidence-based archaeology to bridge mythological and historical narratives. Relevance GS I (History & Culture) Archaeology, early urbanisation, NBPW culture GS I (Art & Culture) Heritage conservation, tourism Practice Question Q1.“Archaeological excavations play a crucial role in bridging the gap between textual traditions and material history.”Discuss with reference to Balirajgarh. (250 words) Overview  Balirajgarh (Madhubani, Bihar) is a 176-acre fortified archaeological mound, one of the largest in eastern India, declared protected site in 1938. Excavations aim to reach “virgin soil” (undisturbed base layer) to determine earliest human settlement, potentially dating back to Iron Age (1000–800 BCE). Site shows continuous habitation across 5 major phases: Mauryan (NBPW), Sunga, Kushan, Gupta, and Pala periods, indicating long-term urban continuity. Presence of Northern Black Polished Ware (NBPW) suggests advanced urban culture during Mauryan era, associated with early historic cities. Massive brick fortifications indicate strategic administrative/military significance, possibly as gateway to ancient Mithila region. Artefacts recovered: punch-marked coins, terracotta figurines, copper objects, beads, bone tools, reflecting economic, cultural, and technological sophistication. Objective includes validating link with Videha Kingdom (Janaka’s kingdom in Vedic/Upanishadic texts), integrating archaeology with textual traditions. ASI deploying ~20 scientific trenches, supported by satellite imagery and mapping to overcome earlier challenges like high water table. Planned on-site museum (modelled on Patna Museum) to promote heritage tourism and regional economic development. Static Background Videha Kingdom & Mithila Ancient kingdom of Videha (c. 1000–600 BCE) located in north Bihar, associated with King Janaka and philosophical traditions of Upanishads. Mithila region known for early urbanisation, philosophical schools (Nyaya, Vedanta), and cultural continuity. Archaeological Indicators NBPW (700–200 BCE) signifies urbanisation, trade networks, and state formation in early historic India. Fortified settlements indicate state control, administrative hubs, and strategic importance. Dynastic Layers Mauryan: Political integration, urban growth. Sunga–Kushan: Regional consolidation, trade expansion. Gupta: Cultural and economic “Golden Age”. Pala: Buddhist influence and regional power centre. Significance Potential to push back chronology of urban settlement in eastern India, filling gap between Vedic texts and archaeological evidence. Strengthens understanding of Second Urbanisation (600 BCE onwards) and earlier proto-urban phases. Provides evidence for continuity of civilisation, rather than isolated cultural phases. Enhances cultural diplomacy and heritage tourism, similar to Nalanda and Bodh Gaya models. Supports integration of mythology with material evidence, important for reconstructing ancient Indian history. Challenges / Criticisms Myth-history overlap: Risk of over-attributing archaeological findings to epic traditions without conclusive evidence. Environmental constraints: High water table and soil conditions complicate excavation and preservation. Funding and continuity issues may affect long-term excavation and conservation efforts. Site management challenges: Risk of encroachment, looting, and inadequate conservation post-excavation. Interpretation bias: Need for multidisciplinary validation (archaeology, carbon dating, textual correlation). Way Forward Use advanced dating techniques (C14, thermoluminescence) to establish precise chronology of habitation layers. Promote interdisciplinary research (archaeology + history + geology + remote sensing) for holistic interpretation. Develop Balirajgarh as heritage circuit integrated with Mithila art, culture, and tourism infrastructure. Ensure community participation and site protection mechanisms to prevent degradation and encroachment. Digitise findings through 3D mapping and open-access archives for global academic collaboration. Prelims Pointers Balirajgarh: 176-acre fortified site in Madhubani, Bihar. Associated with Videha Kingdom (Iron Age). Evidence of NBPW culture. Continuous habitation across Mauryan, Sunga, Kushan, Gupta, Pala periods. ASI uses satellite mapping + trench excavation. LPG vs LNG & India’s Energy Vulnerability  Why in News? Closure of Strait of Hormuz (2026) disrupted India’s energy imports, severely affecting LPG (household fuel) and LNG (industrial fuel) supplies. Government pushing PNG transition policy to manage shortages and prioritise rural energy security. Relevance GS III (Economy) Energy security, import dependence GS III (Environment) Clean energy transition GS II (IR) Geopolitics of energy (Hormuz) Practice Question Q1.“India’s energy security remains vulnerable to geopolitical chokepoints.”Discuss with reference to LPG and LNG supply disruptions. (250 words) Overview  LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas) is propane–butane mix, derived from crude refining; LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) is methane-rich natural gas liquefied at -160°C. India is 3rd largest LPG consumer (31.3 million tonnes) and 6th largest producer (12.7 million tonnes) globally. LPG has 60% import dependency, with ~90% imports via Hormuz, causing ~54% supply disruption after closure. LNG has ~50% import dependency, but only ~30% effective supply hit, due to diversified sourcing and domestic production. LPG is primary cooking fuel for ~33 crore households, while PNG (natural gas) covers only ~1.5 crore households. LNG supports fertiliser plants, power generation, petrochemicals, making it critical for industrial economy. LPG storage limited (~25 days), increasing vulnerability; LNG requires cryogenic infrastructure and regasification terminals. Core Differences   LPG liquefies under moderate pressure, easy to store in cylinders; LNG requires cryogenic cooling (-160°C), making storage energy-intensive. LPG volume reduces to 1/260th, LNG to 1/600th, making LNG more efficient for long-distance transport. LPG distributed via cylinders (road-based logistics); LNG transported via cryogenic ships and pipelines (PNG/CNG). LPG is heavier than air (higher explosion risk); LNG (natural gas) is lighter than air (disperses quickly, safer). Impact of Hormuz Crisis LPG crisis affects household energy security, with price rise (~₹60 per cylinder) due to Brent crude surge ($120–130/barrel). LNG disruption impacts fertiliser production, power supply, and industrial output, potentially affecting inflation and growth. LPG disruption more severe due to higher dependency + limited substitutes in rural areas. LNG relatively resilient due to pipeline networks and partial domestic production (35.6 BCM). Policy Response: LPG → PNG Transition Government mandated switch to PNG in pipeline-connected urban areas, discontinuing LPG supply if not adopted. Objective: Reallocate LPG to rural/remote regions, where pipeline infrastructure is absent. Priority allocation: 100% supply to PNG households and CNG transport ~80% supply to industries/commercial users Reflects shift toward urban gas-based economy and efficient resource allocation. Significance Highlights India’s energy security vulnerability to geopolitical chokepoints (Hormuz). Reinforces need for fuel diversification and infrastructure expansion (pipelines, storage). Demonstrates transition from portable fuels (LPG) → network-based fuels (PNG/LNG) in urban areas. Aligns with clean energy goals, as natural gas is a transition fuel (lower emissions than coal/oil). Challenges / Criticisms Infrastructure constraints: PNG requires extensive pipeline networks; rural areas remain excluded. Equity concerns: Forced transition may burden urban consumers with installation costs. Import dependence persists: Both LPG and LNG heavily reliant on West Asia. Storage limitations: Inadequate strategic reserves for LPG and LNG increase vulnerability. Policy rigidity: Mandating PNG may face resistance due to consumer preference and logistical issues. Way Forward Diversify import sources beyond Gulf (e.g., US, Russia, Africa) to reduce chokepoint dependency. Expand strategic LPG and LNG storage capacity to cushion short-term shocks. Accelerate National Gas Grid expansion for wider PNG/CNG coverage. Promote renewable alternatives (biogas, green hydrogen, solar cooking) to reduce fossil fuel dependence. Strengthen energy diplomacy and long-term contracts for supply stability. Encourage demand-side efficiency and behavioural change to reduce consumption pressure. Prelims Pointers LPG = propane + butane; LNG = methane. LNG liquefaction at -160°C; LPG under moderate pressure. LPG heavier than air; LNG lighter than air. Strait of Hormuz = critical global energy chokepoint. India: 60% LPG import dependence; ~50% LNG import dependence. Artemis II & New Lunar Exploration Phase  Why in News? NASA preparing for Artemis II (2026)—first crewed lunar mission since 1972, marking transition from exploration to permanent human presence on Moon. Announcement of long-term lunar roadmap including base establishment and nuclear propulsion signals next phase of space competition. Relevance GS III (Science & Tech) Space technology, ISRU, propulsion GS II (IR) Space geopolitics, global competition Practice Question Q1.“Artemis programme marks a shift from exploration to sustained human presence in space.” Analyze its significance. (250 words) Overview Artemis programme aims to establish sustainable human presence on Moon, shifting objective from “flags and footprints” (Apollo) to long-term habitation. Artemis II: 4 astronauts, ~10-day lunar flyby mission, testing life-support and deep-space systems before landing missions. Launch vehicle: Space Launch System (SLS) with ~8.8 million pounds thrust (15% more than Saturn V), enabling deep-space missions. NASA targeting biannual lunar missions (every 6 months) to build logistics chain for sustained presence. Focus on Lunar South Pole due to presence of water ice, critical for oxygen, fuel (hydrogen), and life support. Plan includes Lunar Gateway (orbital station) + Base Camp on surface, enabling continuous astronaut presence similar to ISS. Requires In-Situ Resource Utilisation (ISRU)—using lunar soil (regolith) to extract water, oxygen, and fuel. Marks shift from exploration → infrastructure building → deep space launchpad (Mars, asteroids). Static Background Apollo vs Artemis Apollo (1969–72): Short-term missions, 12 astronauts landed, no sustained presence. Artemis (2022–): Long-term habitation model, integration of robotics, private sector, and international partners. International Space Station (ISS) Operational since ~2000, at ~400 km altitude, continuously inhabited for ~25 years. Demonstrated human survival in space, microgravity experiments, but limited to Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Scheduled retirement by 2030, transitioning toward lunar and private space stations. Technological & Strategic Innovations ISRU (Living off the land): Extracting water/oxygen from lunar regolith reduces dependence on Earth-based supplies. Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP): Twice as efficient as chemical rockets. Reduces Mars travel time from 9 months → 4–6 months, lowering radiation risks. Cryogenic fuel storage and logistics chains critical for sustained missions. Integration of AI, robotics, and autonomous systems for habitat construction and resource extraction. Global Space Competition  USA (NASA): Artemis + Gateway + Base Camp, aiming permanent presence by 2030s. China (CNSA): International Lunar Research Station (ILRS), crewed landing target ~2029. India (ISRO): Post-Chandrayaan success, targeting human spaceflight (Gaganyaan) and future lunar missions. Japan (JAXA) & Europe: Key collaborators in lunar logistics and rover development. Emergence of multi-polar space race, unlike US-USSR bipolar competition of Cold War. Role of Private Sector (Space Economy) Space economy valued at >$600 billion globally, driving innovation and cost reduction. SpaceX (Starship): Human Landing System (HLS) for Artemis missions. Blue Origin, Intuitive Machines: Cargo delivery under Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS). Shift from state-led → public-private partnership model in space exploration. Significance Moon as strategic launchpad for Mars and deep-space missions, reducing cost and energy requirements. Enhances scientific research (lunar geology, space biology) and technological advancements. Drives space economy growth, including mining (helium-3, rare earths), tourism, and manufacturing. Strengthens geopolitical influence and technological leadership in emerging domain of space. Challenges / Criticisms High cost and sustainability concerns of long-term lunar missions. Space militarisation risks due to strategic competition among nations. Technological uncertainties in ISRU, radiation shielding, and long-duration human survival. Governance gaps: Outer Space Treaty lacks clarity on resource extraction and ownership. Environmental concerns: Space debris and lunar ecological disturbance. Way Forward Develop international governance framework for lunar resource utilisation under UN mechanisms. Strengthen global collaboration (Artemis Accords, ILRS partnerships) to avoid conflict. Invest in advanced propulsion (nuclear, electric) and life-support technologies. Encourage private sector innovation with regulatory oversight for sustainable space economy. India should accelerate Gaganyaan, lunar missions, and BAS (space station) to remain competitive. Prelims Pointers Artemis II: First crewed lunar mission since Apollo. SLS: Most powerful rocket (~8.8 million pounds thrust). ISS altitude: ~400 km; Moon distance: ~400,000 km. ISRU: Use of local resources (water ice → fuel/oxygen). Lunar South Pole: Water ice presence.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 28 March 2026

Content Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) Annual Report, 2025 [January, 2025 – December, 2025] Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) Annual Report, 2025 [January, 2025 – December, 2025] Why in News? PLFS Annual Report 2025 (MoSPI) released; first calendar-year survey with revamped methodology, expanded sample (~2.7 lakh households) and higher-frequency labour market estimates. Relevance GS III (Economy) Employment, unemployment, and labour market indicators (LFPR, WPR, UR) Informal sector dominance and structural transformation Skill mismatch and human capital development Sectoral shift: agriculture → manufacturing → services Practice Question “India’s labour market shows improving indicators but persistent structural weaknesses.” Analyse in light of PLFS 2025.(250 Words) Static Background PLFS (since 2017, NSO) provides employment data using two approaches: Usual Status (365 days) and Current Weekly Status (7 days) for comprehensive labour analysis. Core Indicators Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR): Percentage of population working or actively seeking/available for work; indicates labour market participation intensity. Worker Population Ratio (WPR): Percentage of population actually employed; reflects real job absorption capacity of the economy. Unemployment Rate (UR): Percentage of unemployed among labour force; excludes those not seeking jobs. Key Findings & Data-Based Insights (PLFS 2025)  Labour Market Indicators LFPR at 59.3% (male 79.1%, female 40.0%), indicating stable participation but persistent gender gap driven by socio-cultural constraints and unpaid care burden. WPR at 57.4%, closely tracking LFPR, suggesting most labour force participants are employed, but quality of employment remains questionable. UR at 3.1%, marginal decline from 2024, indicating improved labour absorption but masking informal and low-productivity employment. Youth & Educated Unemployment Youth unemployment declined to 9.9%, but urban youth unemployment remains high at 13.6%, reflecting structural skill mismatch and job market rigidity. Educated unemployment reduced to 6.5%, signalling modest improvement but persistent gaps in high-skill job creation and employability. Employment Structure Regular salaried employment rose to 23.6%, indicating gradual formalisation, though still limited compared to developed economies. Self-employment declined to 56.2%, yet remains dominant, often reflecting disguised unemployment and subsistence activities. Sectoral Shifts Agriculture share reduced to 43.0%, but still disproportionately high, indicating incomplete structural transformation. Manufacturing (12.1%) and services (13.1%) expanded, signalling slow transition towards non-farm employment. Gender & Labour Dynamics Female wage growth outpaced male across categories (self-employed +8.8%, salaried +7.2%), indicating narrowing wage growth gap. Female labour force exclusion largely due to unpaid care (44.4%), highlighting structural gender barriers rather than lack of jobs. Education & Skills Average schooling ~10 years, with urban-rural divide (~11 vs ~9.3 years), impacting productivity and job readiness. Vocational training extremely low (4.2%), indicating weak skilling ecosystem despite policy emphasis. NEET & Workforce Size NEET (15–29 years) at ~25%, signalling major demographic risk and underutilisation of youth workforce. Total workforce ~61.6 crore, with stark gender disparity (41.6 crore male vs 20 crore female workers). Analytical Overview Economic Stable LFPR + low UR suggests employment generation exists, but dominance of self-employment reflects low productivity and informal economy trap. Structural shift aligns with Lewis dual-sector model, but slow pace limits industrial growth and income transformation. Governance PLFS redesign improves data granularity, frequency, and policy relevance, enabling real-time labour monitoring. However, methodological changes reduce comparability, complicating long-term policy evaluation. Social Gender gap in LFPR reflects patriarchal norms, safety issues, and unpaid work burden, not just labour demand constraints. High NEET levels indicate risk of demographic liability instead of dividend. Human Capital Low vocational training confirms skill mismatch problem, consistent with Economic Survey observations. Education expansion without employability leads to educated unemployment paradox. Challenges High informality despite rise in salaried jobs; social security coverage remains limited. Disguised unemployment in agriculture continues despite declining share. Urban labour market inefficiencies reflected in higher unemployment rates. Gender inequality in participation and working hours persists. Data comparability issues post-2025 redesign. Low skilling penetration undermines Industry 4.0 readiness. Way Forward Promote labour-intensive manufacturing + MSMEs to absorb surplus workforce. Expand care economy (creches, maternity support) to improve female LFPR. Reform skilling ecosystem with industry-linked vocational training (dual model). Incentivise formalisation via EPFO/ESIC expansion and ease of compliance. Introduce urban employment schemes to tackle urban unemployment. Ensure data integration (PLFS + EPFO + GST) for real-time labour analytics. Prelims Pointers LFPR includes employed + unemployed (seeking work); WPR includes only employed → key conceptual difference. UR excludes those not willing to work. PLFS shifted to calendar year (Jan–Dec) from 2025. Conducted by NSO under MoSPI. Sample size increased ~2.65 times in 2025 redesign. Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha Why in News? Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha; proposes large-scale decriminalisation of minor offences to improve Ease of Doing Business and governance efficiency. Relevance GS II (Polity / Governance) Legal reforms and decriminalisation of minor offences Administrative reforms and ease of compliance Role of adjudicatory mechanisms and quasi-judicial bodies GS III (Economy) Ease of Doing Business and regulatory environment Impact on investment climate and entrepreneurship Reduction of compliance burden and transaction costs Practice Questions  “Decriminalisation of minor offences is essential for improving governance and economic efficiency.” Discuss.(250 Words) Static Background Decriminalisation reforms aim to replace criminal liability with civil penalties, reducing over-criminalisation and improving regulatory compliance environment. Builds on Jan Vishwas Act, 2023, which decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 Acts, marking shift toward trust-based governance and proportional regulation. Key Provisions & Data-Based Highlights  Scale of Reform Amendment of 784 provisions across 79 Central Acts under 23 Ministries, making it one of India’s largest regulatory rationalisation exercises. 717 provisions decriminalised, reducing imprisonment clauses for procedural/technical defaults, signalling shift toward investor-friendly legal ecosystem. Ease of Living Component 67 provisions amended in laws like Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 and NDMC Act, 1994, simplifying compliance and improving citizen service delivery. Focus on municipal taxation, vehicle compliance, reducing procedural complexity and transaction costs for individuals. Nature of Decriminalisation Replacement of imprisonment with monetary penalties or warnings, especially for minor and technical violations. Introduction of graded penalties (warning → fine → higher penalty), ensuring proportionality and reducing excessive state coercion. Institutional Mechanisms Provision for Adjudicating Officers and Appellate Authorities, enabling faster dispute resolution and reducing judicial burden. Strengthens administrative adjudication, aligning with principles of natural justice and efficiency. Consultative Process Based on inter-ministerial consultations, NITI Aayog-led committees, industry bodies, civil society inputs, ensuring stakeholder-driven reforms. Select Committee (49 sittings) expanded scope, recommending decriminalisation across additional 62 Central Acts. Analytical Overview   Constitutional / Legal Aligns with Article 21 (due process, proportionality) by avoiding excessive criminalisation for minor offences. Reflects principle of “minimum criminal law intervention”, endorsed in various Law Commission reports. Governance / Administrative Reduces compliance burden, inspector raj, and rent-seeking, promoting transparent and predictable regulatory environment. Administrative adjudication improves speed, efficiency, and reduces pendency in courts. Economic Enhances Ease of Doing Business, reduces fear of criminal liability, encouraging entrepreneurship and investment. Aligns with global best practices (OECD risk-based regulation), improving India’s attractiveness for global capital. Social / Ethical Prevents criminalisation of citizens for minor procedural lapses, ensuring fairness and reducing harassment. Promotes trust-based governance, shifting state-citizen relationship from coercive to facilitative. Institutional / Legal Reform Context Continuation of legal system modernisation, complementing reforms like commercial courts, IBC, faceless tax assessments. Challenges  Risk of regulatory dilution, where absence of criminal penalties may reduce deterrence in certain sectors (environment, labour safety). Administrative capacity constraints: adjudicating officers may face overload, affecting timely enforcement. Potential discretion misuse in penalty imposition without robust safeguards. Lack of uniform criteria for identifying “minor offences” may lead to inconsistencies. Concerns over federal implications if similar reforms not adopted by states. Way Forward Develop clear classification framework for offences (minor vs serious) to ensure consistency. Strengthen capacity and training of adjudicating authorities for fair, transparent decisions. Integrate digital compliance systems to reduce human interface and discretion. Ensure sector-specific safeguards (e.g., environment, public safety) where criminal penalties remain necessary. Encourage states to adopt similar decriminalisation reforms for holistic regulatory improvement. Prelims Pointers Bill proposes decriminalisation of 717 provisions and amendment of 784 provisions across 79 Acts. Introduced by Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Builds on Jan Vishwas Act, 2023. Introduces graded penalties and adjudication mechanisms. Focus includes Ease of Doing Business + Ease of Living.