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Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 20 March 2026

Content Aadhaar is the world’s largest biometric identity system with approximately 134 crore live Aadhaar holders Bharat Electricity Summit 2026 & power sector transformation  Aadhaar is the world’s largest biometric identity system with approximately 134 crore live Aadhaar holders Context PIB (March 2026) highlights Aadhaar scale (134 crore users, 17,000+ crore authentications) and privacy safeguards, amid debates on data protection, digital identity governance, and India’s DPI global model. Relevance GS 1 (Indian Society): Social inclusion through legal identity Digital divide and exclusion of vulnerable groups GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Welfare delivery reforms (DBT, JAM Trinity) Privacy vs State power (Article 21) Data protection, role of UIDAI Practice Question Q. “Aadhaar has enhanced governance efficiency but raises critical concerns regarding privacy and exclusion.” Critically analyse.(250 Words) Static background Evolution & legal basis Aadhaar (2009) introduced by UIDAI to provide unique identity; given statutory backing through Aadhaar Act, 2016, later refined post Puttaswamy judgment (2018) ensuring privacy safeguards. Supreme Court (Puttaswamy, 2018) upheld Aadhaar with restrictions, emphasising proportionality, data minimisation, and limited mandatory usage (welfare + taxation), balancing state efficiency and individual rights. Key features World’s largest biometric ID system with ~134 crore Aadhaar holders, ensuring near-universal coverage and enabling identity portability across India’s federal welfare architecture. Uses biometric (fingerprint, iris, face) and demographic data; authentication via OTP, biometrics, demographic verification, ensuring multi-layered identity validation across governance and private services. Institutional framework UIDAI (statutory authority) under MeitY regulates enrolment, authentication, and data security, acting as central regulator of India’s digital identity ecosystem. Entities classified as AUA/KUA must comply with Aadhaar Act provisions, undergo onboarding and audits, ensuring controlled access and accountability in authentication ecosystem. Governance / administrative dimension Backbone of JAM trinity (Jan Dhan–Aadhaar–Mobile) enabling Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT), reducing leakages, ghost beneficiaries, and improving targeted welfare delivery efficiency. Enables real-time authentication and e-KYC, reducing administrative delays, improving service delivery in banking, telecom, fintech, and enhancing ease of living and governance efficiency. Three-tier audit framework (Self, IS Audit, GRCP) ensures compliance, risk mitigation, and accountability among ecosystem players handling sensitive Aadhaar authentication infrastructure. Constitutional / legal dimension Linked to Article 21 (Right to Privacy); Aadhaar must satisfy legality, necessity, proportionality, ensuring protection of informational self-determination and dignity of individuals. Aadhaar Act restrictions prohibit storage of biometrics by entities, enforce purpose limitation, consent-based usage, and controlled data sharing mechanisms. Convergence with Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 strengthens consent, accountability, and data fiduciary obligations, aligning Aadhaar ecosystem with emerging global data governance standards. Economic dimension DBT savings > ₹3 lakh crore (official estimates) due to elimination of duplicates and leakages, improving fiscal efficiency and subsidy targeting. e-KYC cost reduction (~₹100 → ₹5–10) lowered onboarding costs, boosting financial inclusion, fintech innovation, and digital economy expansion. Forms core of Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) along with UPI, DigiLocker, positioning India as global leader in low-cost scalable digital governance systems. Social / ethical dimension Enables inclusion by providing legal identity to marginalised groups, facilitating access to welfare schemes, banking, and mobile connectivity, reducing exclusion from formal systems. Authentication failures (biometric mismatch, connectivity) can exclude vulnerable groups like elderly and labourers, raising concerns on last-mile delivery and equity. Ethical risks include surveillance, profiling, and function creep, raising debate on state power vs individual autonomy in a data-driven governance ecosystem. Technology dimension Face authentication (AI/ML-based) improves accessibility where fingerprints fail, especially for elderly and manual labourers, enhancing authentication success rates. End-to-end encryption (at rest & transit), Aadhaar Data Vault, and certified devices ensure strong data security architecture and minimal data exposure. Data localisation (storage within India) ensures data sovereignty, reducing risks of foreign surveillance and cross-border data misuse. Data & facts ~134 crore Aadhaar holders (near-universal coverage). 17,000+ crore authentication transactions completed. DBT savings > ₹3 lakh crore. e-KYC cost reduced by ~90%. Challenges / criticisms Legal & privacy Concerns over centralised database enabling surveillance, lack of fully independent oversight despite audits, raising issues of accountability and transparency. Instances of data leaks (ecosystem-level) highlight gaps in enforcement of security standards and compliance mechanisms. Governance & implementation Authentication failures due to biometric mismatch or connectivity issues leading to exclusion from welfare benefits, undermining inclusive governance objectives. Federal concerns regarding over-centralisation limiting state autonomy in welfare delivery design and implementation flexibility. Ethical & social Risk of function creep beyond welfare into multiple sectors, potentially violating purpose limitation principle. Digital divide restricts access for rural, elderly, and digitally illiterate populations, creating structural inequities in service access. Way forward Strengthen grievance redressal with compensation framework, ensuring no denial of benefits due to authentication failure. Promote offline Aadhaar, QR-based verification, Virtual ID, reducing dependency on central authentication systems and improving resilience. Establish independent data protection oversight authority, ensuring stronger compliance, transparency, and accountability. Upgrade multi-modal biometrics and AI systems to minimise exclusion errors and improve authentication reliability. Align with privacy-by-design principles (OECD/GDPR standards) to enhance trust and global acceptability of Aadhaar ecosystem. Prelims pointers Aadhaar Act, 2016 → statutory basis. UIDAI → statutory authority under MeitY. Authentication modes → OTP, biometric, demographic. AUA vs KUA → authentication vs e-KYC services. No biometric storage by entities allowed. Logs retention → 2 years + 5 years archive. Bharat Electricity Summit 2026 & power sector transformation  Context Bharat Electricity Summit 2026, inaugurated on 19 March 2026 at Yashobhoomi, New Delhi, by Union Power Minister Manohar Lal, marks India’s largest electricity-focused global platform with 80+ countries participation. Release of National Resource Adequacy Plan (2026) and Transmission Plan (CEA, 2026) targeting 900 GW non-fossil capacity by 2035–36, signals next phase of India’s energy transition strategy. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Electricity Act, 2003 reforms Centre–State coordination in power sector Policy initiatives (RDSS, resource adequacy planning) GS 3 (Economy, Environment, Infrastructure): Energy security and infrastructure development Renewable energy transition (900 GW target) Climate commitments (NDC, net-zero) Practice Question Q. “India’s ambitious renewable energy targets require deep structural reforms in the power sector.” Examine.(250 Words) Static background  Power sector evolution India’s electricity sector governed by Electricity Act, 2003 (enforced 10 June 2003), enabling unbundling, competition, and independent regulation (CERC/SERCs). Transition from power deficit (pre-2014) to power surplus (post-2018) driven by capacity addition, renewable push, and grid integration reforms. Energy transition commitments India’s Nationally Determined Contribution (updated August 2022) targets 50% cumulative installed capacity from non-fossil sources by 2030, achieved ~5 years ahead (around 2025–26). Net-zero commitment announced at COP26, Glasgow (November 2021), targeting net-zero emissions by 2070. Governance / administrative dimension National Resource Adequacy Plan (released 19 March 2026 by Ministry of Power) provides roadmap for meeting future electricity demand through optimal mix of thermal, renewable, storage, and demand-side management. Transmission Plan (CEA, March 2026) envisages 1,37,500 circuit km lines + 8,27,600 MVA capacity with ₹7.93 lakh crore investment, ensuring seamless renewable integration. India operates world’s largest synchronised grid (One Nation One Grid, completed December 2013) with real-time balancing and national load dispatch coordination. Economic dimension Power sector offers ₹200 lakh crore investment potential (2026–2047) across generation, transmission, storage, and green hydrogen, making it a major driver of economic growth. Solar tariffs declined from ₹17/kWh (2010) → ~₹2–2.5/kWh (2024), improving affordability and competitiveness of renewables. Transmission network expanded 72% (2014–2025) to 5 lakh circuit km, supporting industrialisation, urbanisation, and digital economy growth. Technology / infrastructure dimension Deployment of smart meters under Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme (RDSS, launched July 2021) enhances billing efficiency, reduces losses, and enables real-time consumption monitoring. Integration of battery storage, pumped hydro storage, and AI-based demand forecasting ensures grid stability amid renewable intermittency. Initiatives like One Sun One World One Grid (announced October 2018, ISA Assembly) and undersea transmission proposals (2026) aim to position India as global energy hub. Environmental dimension Target of 900 GW non-fossil capacity by 2035–36 aligns with Paris Agreement and SDG-13, reducing carbon intensity and fossil fuel dependence. Renewable expansion reduces air pollution and import dependence on coal/oil, improving environmental sustainability and energy security. Continued role of thermal power (~50% share) ensures grid reliability but raises transition trade-offs and emission concerns. Social / inclusive dimension PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana (launched February 2024) promotes rooftop solar adoption; 32 lakh households and 23 lakh farmers participating in decentralised energy generation. Reliable electricity access supports healthcare, education, livelihoods, contributing to SDG-7 (Affordable and Clean Energy) and human development. Ensuring affordability amid infrastructure expansion is critical to avoid energy poverty and inequality in access. Data & facts Solar capacity: 2.8 GW (2014) → 143+ GW (2026). Peak demand: 250 GW met (FY 2024–25); target 270 GW+. Transmission expansion: 72% → 5 lakh circuit km. Investment in transmission: ₹7.93 lakh crore. 900 GW non-fossil target by 2035–36. Challenges / criticisms Structural & technical High renewable penetration leads to grid instability risks, requiring large-scale storage and balancing infrastructure investments. Land acquisition and environmental approvals delay renewable parks and transmission corridors, affecting timelines. Economic & financial Persistent financial stress of DISCOMs (AT&C losses ~15–20%, subsidy burden) undermines sector sustainability. Massive capital requirement (₹200 lakh crore) necessitates stable policies and private investment mobilisation. Policy & governance Coordination challenges among Centre, States, regulators, and private sector delay implementation of reforms and projects. Policy uncertainty (tariffs, contracts, regulations) may deter long-term foreign investment in power sector. Way forward Implement DISCOM reforms under RDSS (2021) ensuring cost-reflective tariffs, smart metering, and loss reduction. Scale up energy storage (battery + pumped hydro) and green hydrogen (National Green Hydrogen Mission, launched January 2023) for reliable renewable integration. Expand cross-border electricity trade (BBIN, BIMSTEC) and operationalise OSOWOG for global energy connectivity. Promote domestic manufacturing (PLI Scheme for Solar PV, launched April 2021) to reduce import dependence. Ensure just transition policies for coal regions, balancing employment, sustainability, and economic growth. Prelims pointers Electricity Act, 2003 (10 June 2003) → key legislation. CEA → statutory technical body under Ministry of Power. NDC update (August 2022) → 50% non-fossil target. RDSS (2021) → DISCOM reforms + smart meters. PM Surya Ghar (Feb 2024) → rooftop solar scheme.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 20 March 2026

Content Walking back on hard-won rights  AI-powered tax governance in India and its challenges Walking back on hard-won rights  Context Introduced on 13 March 2026 in Lok Sabha, the Bill amends the 2019 Act, raising concerns over restrictive definition, medical certification, and rollback of self-identification rights, criticised by experts and rights advocates. Relevance GS 1 (Indian Society): Gender identity, social inclusion of transgender community Stigma, marginalisation, and intersectional vulnerabilities GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 15, 19, 21) Judicial activism vs legislative rollback Welfare policies and identity certification mechanisms GS 3 (Social Justice / Governance): Inclusion in Census, targeting welfare schemes State capacity and institutional delivery Practice Question Q. “The proposed Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026 marks a shift from a rights-based to a regulatory approach.” Critically examine in light of constitutional morality and global standards.(250 Words) Static background  Constitutional & judicial foundation NALSA v. Union of India (15 April 2014) recognised self-identification of gender as a fundamental right under Articles 14, 19, 21. Puttaswamy (2017) upheld privacy, dignity, and autonomy, directly applicable to gender identity and personal choices. Transgender Persons Act, 2019 provided framework for non-discrimination, identity certification, and welfare measures. Key provisions of the Bill Definition of transgender person Replaces broad definition with restricted category-based classification, excluding trans-men, trans-women, genderqueer, non-binary individuals, narrowing scope of recognition. Retains hijra, kinner, intersex categories, and adds eunuchs and forcibly transitioned persons, shifting focus from identity to coercion-based inclusion. Recognition of identity Introduces mandatory medical board certification, replacing self-identification, increasing bureaucratic control and procedural barriers. Identity certificate issued by District Magistrate based on medical recommendation, undermining autonomy and dignity. Change in gender Makes revised certificate mandatory after surgery, reducing individual agency. Requires medical institutions to report gender-affirming surgeries, raising concerns over privacy and doctor-patient confidentiality. Offences and penalties Enhances punishments for forced transgender identity, exploitation, bonded labour, with penalties up to life imprisonment and ₹5 lakh fine. However, vague terms like “coercion” or “inducement” risk misuse and over-criminalisation. Constitutional / legal analysis Violates NALSA (2014) by diluting self-identification principle, replacing it with medical validation. Contradicts Article 21 (privacy, dignity, autonomy) and Article 14 (equality) due to exclusionary definition. Raises issues of due process and arbitrariness, as medical verification lacks objective standards. International / human rights dimension Violates Yogyakarta Principles (2006) which affirm right to self-defined gender identity without medical or legal coercion, forming global human rights benchmark. Contradicts WHO ICD-11 (2019), which recognises gender identity as non-pathological and not subject to medical diagnosis. Divergence from global norms may affect India’s human rights commitments and international credibility. Governance / administrative dimension Medical boards create bureaucratic hurdles, delays, and discretion, increasing risks of exclusion and harassment. Lack of clear guidelines and trained personnel may result in inconsistent decision-making across districts. Reporting requirements introduce state surveillance over personal identity and healthcare choices. Social / ethical dimension Leads to identity erasure of large sections of transgender community, especially non-binary and gender non-conforming individuals. Reinforces stigma and medicalisation, treating gender identity as a condition requiring validation. May discourage access to healthcare and welfare schemes, worsening marginalisation and vulnerability. Data & evidence Census 2011 recorded ~4.9 lakh transgender persons, widely considered underestimation. High levels of discrimination (>90% employment exclusion) indicate need for inclusive, not restrictive, legal frameworks. Challenges / criticisms Legal : High probability of constitutional challenge due to violation of Supreme Court judgments and fundamental rights. Institutional : Weak administrative capacity to implement medical verification framework effectively and sensitively. Social : Risk of exclusion from welfare schemes, identity documents, and public services, leading to increased marginalisation. Way forward Restore self-identification principle in line with NALSA (2014) and Yogyakarta Principles. Replace medical boards with self-declaration + administrative verification, ensuring dignity and accessibility. Strengthen anti-discrimination enforcement, reservations, and welfare measures for transgender community. Ensure confidentiality and privacy safeguards in healthcare systems. Align law with international standards (WHO, Yogyakarta Principles) and constitutional morality. Prelims pointers NALSA (2014) → self-identification of gender. Yogyakarta Principles (2006) → global human rights framework on gender identity. Puttaswamy (2017) → right to privacy. Transgender Act, 2019 → base legislation. Amendment Bill introduced: 13 March 2026. AI-powered tax governance in India and its challenges Context Editorial highlights AI-driven tax administration (Project Insight) amid concerns of low tax-GDP ratio (16.36%, 2001–22) and tax evasion (~4.3% revenue loss annually), discussed at India AI Impact Summit, February 2026. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Administrative reforms in taxation Transparency, accountability, and due process GS 3 (Economy & Science & Technology): Tax-GDP ratio, revenue mobilisation AI, big data, and digital governance Formalisation of economy Practice Question Q. “AI-driven tax administration enhances efficiency but raises concerns regarding privacy, accountability, and fairness.” Analyse.(250 Words) Static background Tax-GDP ratio & fiscal context Tax-GDP ratio (~16.36%) remains low compared to emerging economies (~18–22%), indicating limited fiscal capacity and narrow tax base. High tax evasion (~4.3% revenue loss) undermines public expenditure, welfare financing, and fiscal consolidation efforts. Project Insight (PI) Launched in 2017; operationalised in 2019 by Income Tax Department, aims to leverage AI, big data analytics, and behavioural insights for improving compliance and tax administration. Core objective: voluntary compliance, risk-based scrutiny, and fair enforcement, shifting from coercive to data-driven governance model. Governance / administrative dimension INTRAC (Income Tax Transaction Analysis Centre) creates 360° taxpayer profiles using data from banks, GST, property, securities, high-value transactions, enabling risk-based assessment. Compliance Management Centralised Processing Centre uses NUDGE strategy (SMS/email alerts) to encourage correction of returns without coercion, improving trust-based compliance. Automation reduces administrative burden, allowing officers to focus on high-risk and complex tax evasion cases, improving efficiency. Economic dimension Improved compliance increases tax buoyancy and revenue mobilisation, strengthening fiscal capacity for infrastructure, welfare, and capital expenditure. Since FY 2020–21, over 1 crore revised returns filed, yielding ₹11,000 crore additional revenue, reflecting success of behavioural compliance strategies. Detection of ₹70,000 crore suppressed turnover (restaurants) demonstrates potential of AI in uncovering large-scale evasion. Technology dimension AI enables pattern recognition, anomaly detection, and predictive analytics, improving identification of high-risk taxpayers and evasion networks. Use of big data (financial transactions, digital payments, GST integration) enhances accuracy and reduces manual intervention. Smart systems (chatbots, automated filing support) improve taxpayer services, grievance redressal, and fraud prevention. Social / ethical dimension Promotes fairness and equity by reducing discretionary enforcement and targeting high-risk evasion instead of blanket scrutiny. However, risks of algorithmic bias may disproportionately target certain regions, professions, or socio-economic groups, affecting equity. Ethical concern: transition toward surveillance-based tax system, potentially undermining trust and voluntary compliance culture. Legal / constitutional dimension Raises concerns under Right to Privacy (Article 21, Puttaswamy 2017) due to large-scale data aggregation and profiling of taxpayers. Lack of transparency in algorithms challenges principles of natural justice (audi alteram partem) and due process in taxation. Absence of clear legal framework for AI accountability and explainability creates regulatory gaps in governance. Data & evidence Tax-GDP ratio: 16.36% (2001–22 average). Tax evasion loss: ~4.3% annually. 1 crore revised returns → ₹11,000 crore additional tax. 62% compliance in foreign asset disclosure campaign. ₹70,000 crore evasion detected (restaurants). Benefits / outcomes Enhances voluntary compliance through nudges, reducing need for coercive enforcement. Improves efficiency, speed (refund time: 93 → 17 days), and accuracy in tax administration. Strengthens risk-based targeting, reducing harassment of compliant taxpayers and improving ease of doing business. Challenges / criticisms Data & technical AI dependent on data quality and provenance; inaccurate or incomplete data may lead to false positives and wrongful scrutiny. Difficulty in distinguishing legitimate financial complexity vs tax evasion, especially in informal and family-based economic structures. Algorithmic & ethical Algorithmic bias may replicate historical inequalities, as seen in global cases (e.g., Dutch benefits scandal). Lack of explainability prevents taxpayers from understanding decisions, undermining trust and accountability. Legal & governance Absence of AI ombudsman, audit mechanisms, and transparency standards weakens oversight of algorithmic decision-making. Weak safeguards on data privacy and cybersecurity increase risk of breaches and misuse of sensitive financial information. Way forward Establish AI governance framework in taxation, including algorithm audits, transparency norms, and explainability standards. Create independent AI ombudsman for grievance redressal and review of contested algorithmic decisions. Ensure human-in-the-loop decision-making for high-impact cases, preserving due process and fairness. Strengthen data protection safeguards under DPDP Act, 2023, ensuring privacy and security of taxpayer information. Promote capacity building in AI and data analytics within tax administration for effective and ethical implementation. Prelims pointers Project Insight (2017) → AI-based tax compliance system. INTRAC → analytical engine of ITD. NUDGE strategy → behavioural compliance tool. Tax-GDP ratio → indicator of fiscal capacity. DPDP Act, 2023 → data protection framework.  

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 20 March 2026

Content Dark Fleet (Shadow Fleet) & India-bound Russian oil Guillotine in Parliament & Demands for Grants 2026–27 Tribal Arts in India – Tribes Art Fest 2026 Menstrual Leave in India: Balancing dignity, equality and labour market realities What is new in transgender rights Bill? UN Child Mortality Report (UNIGME 2025) Before salt, there was water: why Mahad Satyagraha deserves its centenary Tuberculosis & Gender Inequality in India: A Silent Public Health Crisis World Happiness Report 2026: Social Capital, Inequality & Digital Risks Dark Fleet (Shadow Fleet) & India-bound Russian oil Context A Russia-origin tanker “Aqua Titan” (7.7 lakh barrels) diverted mid-route and is heading to New Mangalore Port (arrival expected 21 March 2026), highlighting role of “dark fleet” in sanction evasion. Triggered by temporary U.S. waiver (March 2026) allowing India to import Russian oil already in transit amid West Asia crisis and Strait of Hormuz disruptions. Relevance GS 2 (IR & Governance): India’s strategic autonomy in sanctions regime India–Russia–US geopolitical balancing Global governance gaps (UNCLOS, IMO) GS 3 (Economy, Security, Environment): Energy security and import dependence (~85%) Maritime security and hybrid threats Environmental risks (oil spills, ageing vessels) Practice Question Q. “The rise of ‘shadow fleet’ operations reflects the limits of global sanctions and poses multidimensional risks.” Analyse with reference to India’s energy security.(250 Words) Static background What is Dark / Shadow Fleet ? A shadow (dark) fleet refers to vessels used to bypass international sanctions, especially for transporting oil, using concealment tactics and legal grey zones. Emerged prominently after Russia–Ukraine war (February 2022) when G7/EU imposed $60/barrel price cap and oil embargo on Russia. Estimated 300–600 ageing tankers globally, often with unclear ownership, poor maintenance, and lack of insurance (as per IMO 2023 definition).The IMO/Kpler report (Jan 2026) suggests the “shadow network” has expanded to nearly 1,300–3,300 vessels globally Key features of dark fleet Use of flags of convenience (Panama, Liberia, Gabon, Cameroon) to avoid strict regulation and accountability. Frequent AIS (Automatic Identification System) switch-off or spoofing, making vessels “disappear” from tracking systems. Practices like ship-to-ship oil transfer, identity laundering, and fake documentation to mask origin and destination of crude. India context India is 3rd largest oil importer, meeting ~85% of crude demand via imports, making energy security critical. Russian crude share rose to ~40% (peak post-2022), later declined to 19.3% (Jan 2026) due to geopolitical pressure and trade negotiations. Discounted Russian crude remains economically attractive for refiners like MRPL (18.2 MTPA capacity). Governance / geopolitical dimension India follows strategic autonomy, not formally part of Western sanctions, balancing ties with U.S., Russia, and West Asia. Temporary U.S. waiver (March 2026) reflects pragmatic geopolitics—ensuring global oil supply stability while managing alliances. Diversification via Saudi crude (Yanbu route bypassing Hormuz) indicates adaptive energy sourcing amid regional instability. Security dimension Dark fleet operations undermine global sanctions regime effectiveness, enabling continued revenue flows to sanctioned states (Russia). Pose risks of hybrid warfare, as ships can be used for strategic disruption or covert operations. Weak enforcement due to UNCLOS principle of “freedom of navigation”, limiting interception on high seas. Environmental dimension Dark fleet vessels are typically old (>20 years), poorly maintained, and uninsured, increasing risk of oil spills and maritime accidents. Ship-to-ship transfers in open seas create high probability of environmental disasters, affecting marine ecosystems and coastal economies. Lack of insurance shifts liability to coastal states and taxpayers in case of accidents. Technology / operational dimension Use of AIS spoofing, satellite evasion, and identity laundering reflects growing sophistication of sanction evasion techniques. Increasing reliance on satellite tracking, AI-based monitoring by regulators to detect suspicious maritime behaviour. Data & facts 7.7 lakh barrels (Aqua Titan cargo) diverted to India. Russian oil share: ~40% peak → 19.3% (Jan 2026). 300–600 vessels globally in dark fleet (IMO estimate). Global oil price risk: could reach $200/barrel if Russian supply removed. Challenges / criticisms Global governance Weak coordination among nations reduces sanctions enforcement effectiveness, especially with China, India, UAE continuing trade. Legal constraints under UNCLOS and flag-state control limit ability to inspect or seize vessels. Economic & geopolitical Western dilemma: need to restrict Russian revenue but maintain global oil supply, leading to inconsistent enforcement. Developing countries pursue multi-alignment strategy, reducing effectiveness of sanctions regime. Environmental & safety High risk of collisions, oil spills, engine failures, with multiple incidents reported globally involving shadow vessels. Lack of insurance complicates compensation and environmental remediation mechanisms. Way forward Strengthen international maritime cooperation (IMO-led) for monitoring, information sharing, and enforcement against dark fleets. Mandate stricter AIS compliance, insurance verification, and flag-state accountability mechanisms. Develop global registry transparency norms to curb identity laundering and flag-hopping practices. India should diversify energy basket through renewables, strategic reserves, and green hydrogen, reducing dependence on geopolitically sensitive imports. Enhance coastal surveillance and maritime domain awareness (MDA) to detect risky vessels entering Indian waters. Prelims pointers Shadow/Dark fleet → sanction-evasion maritime network. AIS → ship tracking system (can be switched off/spoofed). Flags of convenience → Panama, Liberia, Marshall Islands. UNCLOS → limits interception on high seas. Guillotine in Parliament & Demands for Grants 2026–27  Why in news ? On 18 March 2026, Lok Sabha passed Demands for Grants worth ₹53 lakh crore for FY 2026–27 using guillotine procedure, with detailed discussion held only for Agriculture and Railways ministries. Relevance GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Parliamentary procedures (Articles 112, 113, 114) Executive dominance vs legislative scrutiny Role of Lok Sabha in financial control Practice Question Q. “Frequent use of guillotine in passing Demands for Grants undermines parliamentary accountability.” Critically examine.(250 Words) Static background  Budgetary process in Parliament Under Article 112, Union Budget is presented; followed by Demands for Grants (Article 113), where each ministry seeks approval for expenditure from Lok Sabha. Only Lok Sabha has power to vote on Demands for Grants; Rajya Sabha can only discuss, not vote, reflecting financial supremacy of Lower House. What is Guillotine? Guillotine is a parliamentary device whereby all pending Demands for Grants are put to vote at once without discussion, due to time constraints. Invoked by Lok Sabha Speaker on last day of budget discussion, ensuring timely passage before start of financial year (1 April). Distinct from “passing in din” (due to disruption); guillotine is a structured, rule-based financial procedure. How the process works Budget presented → General discussion → Department-wise scrutiny → Cut motions moved by MPs to reduce expenditure. Due to limited time, only select ministries are discussed; remaining demands are clubbed and passed via guillotine. After approval, Appropriation Bill (Article 114) is introduced to authorise withdrawal from Consolidated Fund of India. Constitutional / legal dimension Reflects balance between legislative scrutiny and executive necessity, ensuring continuity of government expenditure. However, excessive reliance weakens parliamentary oversight and deliberative democracy, core to basic structure doctrine (parliamentary accountability). Governance / administrative dimension Enables timely budget passage, preventing administrative paralysis and ensuring continuity of government programmes. But limits detailed scrutiny of ministry-wise expenditure, reducing effectiveness of parliamentary committees and debates. Business Advisory Committee (BAC) allocates time, but time compression leads to procedural shortcuts like guillotine. Economic dimension Approval of ₹53 lakh crore expenditure (~Union Budget size) critical for fiscal operations, welfare schemes, infrastructure spending, and macroeconomic stability. Delayed approval could disrupt cash flow, subsidies, salaries, and capital expenditure, affecting economic growth. Political dimension Highlights executive dominance in Parliament, especially with majority government ensuring smooth passage without debate. Opposition criticism centres on lack of accountability, reduced deliberation, and marginalisation of dissenting voices. Reflects broader trend of declining parliamentary sittings and scrutiny time in recent years. Social dimension Reduced scrutiny may affect quality of expenditure decisions, impacting sectors like agriculture, health, education, which directly influence citizens’ welfare. Limited debate on schemes may lead to implementation inefficiencies and exclusion errors. Data & facts ₹53 lakh crore Demands for Grants approved (FY 2026–27). Only 2 ministries discussed (Agriculture, Railways). Remaining demands passed without discussion via guillotine. Challenges / criticisms Democratic deficit Curtails parliamentary deliberation and accountability, weakening role of MPs in scrutinising public expenditure. Institutional Undermines role of Departmentally Related Standing Committees (DRSCs) and detailed financial oversight mechanisms. Governance Risk of inefficient allocation and misuse of public funds, due to lack of debate and scrutiny. Way forward Increase number of parliamentary sitting days and dedicated budget discussion time, strengthening deliberative processes. Empower Standing Committees with binding recommendations, improving pre-legislative scrutiny of expenditure. Introduce digital dashboards and real-time expenditure tracking, enhancing transparency beyond parliamentary debates. Encourage structured prioritisation of key ministries for discussion, ensuring balanced scrutiny. Prelims pointers Article 112 → Union Budget. Article 113 → Demands for Grants. Article 114 → Appropriation Bill. Guillotine → bulk passage of demands without discussion. Lok Sabha → sole authority to vote on grants. Tribal Arts in India – Tribes Art Fest 2026 Why in news ? Tribes Art Fest 2026 (3–13 March 2026, Travancore Palace, New Delhi) organised by Ministry of Tribal Affairs + NGMA + FICCI, showcased 75+ artists, 1,000+ artworks, 30+ tribal traditions, promoting cultural preservation and livelihoods. Relevance GS 1 (Art & Culture): Tribal art forms (Warli, Gond, Bhil, Saura, Pithora) Distinction: Tribal vs Folk art GS 2 (Governance): Role of Ministry of Tribal Affairs, TRIFED Cultural policy and indigenous rights Practice Question Q. “Tribal art is not merely aesthetic but a repository of ecological knowledge and identity.” Discuss with challenges in preservation.(250 Words) Static background  What is Tribal Art ? Tribal art refers to artistic expressions created by indigenous tribal communities, reflecting nature, cosmology, daily life, and oral traditions, passed through generations without formal training. Rooted in animism and nature worship, depicting forests, animals, rituals, and community life, unlike folk art which is often religion-centric and region-based. Tribal vs Folk Art  Tribal art → community-specific (e.g., Gond, Warli, Bhil), strong nature orientation, symbolic representation, and individual expression. Folk art → region-based (e.g., Madhubani, Pattachitra), more structured, religious themes, and codified styles. Key tribal art forms  Warli painting (Maharashtra) One of the oldest art traditions (possibly Neolithic roots ~2500–3000 BCE) using geometric forms (circle, triangle, square) and rice paste pigment. Depicts farming, hunting, Tarpa dance, symbolising human-nature harmony and cyclical life processes. Gond painting (Madhya Pradesh) Known for intricate dots and line patterns, representing animals, trees, folklore, and ecological narratives. Has received GI tag, ensuring legal protection and recognition of indigenous knowledge systems. Bhil painting (Central India) Characterised by thousands of coloured dots, each representing seeds and life forces, reflecting agrarian and forest-based cosmology. Among oldest tribal art traditions, linked with ritual and storytelling practices. Rabha & Tamang masks Used in folk theatre, rituals, and spiritual performances, representing deities, spirits, and mythological beings. Reflect performative dimension of tribal art, merging art, religion, and community identity.  Saura painting (Odisha) Practised by Saura tribe, closely linked to ritualistic wall paintings (Idital). Depicts ancestral spirits, deities, and daily life using linear human figures. Strong similarity with prehistoric cave art, used in ritual invocation of gods. Santhal painting (Jharkhand, West Bengal, Odisha) Created by Santhal tribe, depicting festivals, music, dance, hunting scenes. Reflects collective life and agrarian rhythms, often with bold lines and bright colours. Closely tied to Sohrai and Khovar traditions (also recognised by GI tags). Pithora painting (Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh) Practised by Rathwa, Bhilala tribes, painted on walls as ritual offering to Baba Pithora (deity). Characterised by horses, animals, and divine figures, painted during important life events. Combines religion + art + community rituals → not merely decorative. Thangka (Tamang, Monpa – Himalayan region) Scroll paintings used in Buddhist traditions, especially among Monpa and Tamang tribes. Depicts Buddha, mandalas, deities, used for meditation and ritual purposes. Shows fusion of tribal + religious art traditions. Toda embroidery (Nilgiris, Tamil Nadu) Practised by Toda tribe, not painting but textile-based tribal art. Uses geometric red-black patterns on white cloth, symbolising nature and buffalo culture. Recognised as unique indigenous textile art (GI tagged). Dokra metal craft (Central & Eastern India) Practised by Dhokra Damar tribes, uses lost-wax casting technique (~4000 years old). Produces figurines, deities, animals, reflecting tribal life and mythology. Important example of non-painting tribal art tradition. Cheriyal scroll painting (Telangana – tribal-folk overlap) Narrative scrolls used by itinerant storytellers, depicting epics and local legends. Combines tribal storytelling traditions with folk aesthetics. Sohrai & Khovar art (Jharkhand) Practised by Santhal, Kurmi, Oraon tribes, especially by women. Sohrai → harvest festival art (animals, fertility themes) Khovar → marriage rituals (geometric, symbolic patterns) Both have received GI recognition, highlighting cultural importance. Chittara painting (Karnataka – Deewaru tribe) Created on mud walls using natural dyes, depicting ritual motifs and geometric patterns. Linked to auspicious occasions like weddings. Governance / administrative dimension Organised under Ministry of Tribal Affairs, aligning with TRIFED initiatives and tribal livelihood promotion policies. Platforms like Tribes India, Van Dhan Yojana (2018) support market linkages, value addition, and entrepreneurship in tribal sectors. Collaboration with NGMA, FICCI indicates integration of tribal art into mainstream cultural and economic ecosystems. Economic dimension Tribal art supports livelihood diversification for tribal communities, reducing dependence on forest-based subsistence economy. Festivals provide direct market access, enabling artists to sell works, increasing income security and financial inclusion. Growing demand for A2/Adivasi organic cultural products and art exports boosts India’s creative economy and soft power. Social / cultural dimension Tribal art preserves intangible cultural heritage (ICH), including oral traditions, folklore, and ecological knowledge systems. Encourages inter-generational transmission, especially among youth (e.g., 100+ tribal students mentored in fest). Strengthens identity, dignity, and cultural pride of tribal communities, countering historical marginalisation. Environmental dimension Tribal art reflects deep ecological consciousness, promoting values of sustainability, biodiversity conservation, and coexistence with nature. Use of natural pigments, eco-friendly materials aligns with sustainable production practices. Offers insights for climate-sensitive living and indigenous ecological knowledge systems (IEK). Challenges Economic : Limited market access, branding, and pricing power, leading to exploitation by middlemen. Cultural : Risk of commercialisation diluting authenticity, loss of traditional symbolism and meanings. Institutional : Weak intellectual property protection, despite GI tagging (limited awareness/enforcement). Social : Declining interest among youth due to low income prospects and migration pressures. Way forward Expand GI tagging, IP protection, and digital marketplaces for tribal art products. Strengthen TRIFED, Van Dhan Vikas Kendras, ensuring value addition and direct marketing channels. Integrate tribal art into education, tourism, and cultural diplomacy, enhancing visibility. Provide financial incentives, skill training, and design innovation support, balancing tradition with modern demand. Promote eco-cultural tourism and craft clusters, linking livelihoods with sustainability. Prelims pointers Warli → Maharashtra, geometric forms. Gond → Madhya Pradesh, GI tagged. Bhil → dot-based painting. TRIFED (1987) → tribal marketing federation. Van Dhan Yojana (2018) → value addition to forest produce. Menstrual Leave in India: Balancing dignity, equality and labour market realities Issue in brief Recently, the Supreme Court cautioned that making paid menstrual leave a statutory right could reduce women’s hiring, promotions, and access to leadership roles due to perceived productivity constraints. The Court distinguished between legally enforceable rights and voluntary employer policies, warning that rigid mandates may distort labour market incentives and unintentionally deepen gender-based discrimination in competitive workplaces. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Gender equality, social norms, stigma Women’s health and workforce participation GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 15, 21) DPSP (Article 42) and labour policy gaps GS 3 (Economy): Female Labour Force Participation Labour market distortions and productivity Practice Question Q. “Making menstrual leave a statutory right may advance dignity but risk labour market discrimination.” Discuss.(250 Words) Constitutional / legal dimension Article 21 (Right to dignity): Supreme Court (2026) recognised menstrual health as integral to dignified life, strengthening the normative basis for workplace accommodations and gender-sensitive labour policies. Article 14 (Equality): Debate reflects tension between formal equality (same treatment) and substantive equality (equitable treatment), where differentiated policies may be justified to offset biological disadvantages. Article 15(3): Enables protective discrimination for women; however, excessive protection may lead to paternalism and unintended labour market exclusion, as flagged by judicial observations. Article 42 (DPSP): Mandates humane working conditions, supporting menstrual leave concept, but remains non-justiciable, requiring legislative or executive action for operationalisation. Legal gap: Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 excludes menstrual health, focusing only on pregnancy-related conditions, creating a policy vacuum for recurring biological health needs like dysmenorrhea. Governance / administrative dimension India lacks a uniform national menstrual leave policy, resulting in fragmented implementation through state initiatives, institutional rules, and private sector practices without standardisation or accountability frameworks. Bihar (since 1992) provides 2 days/month menstrual leave, while Kerala universities offer leave and attendance relaxation, demonstrating sub-national policy experimentation in gender-sensitive governance. Private firms like Zomato and Swiggy have adopted menstrual leave, indicating corporate-level innovation, though coverage remains limited to the formal sector. Nearly 90% workforce in informal sector lacks contracts and social security, making implementation of structured leave policies difficult, raising concerns of policy elitism. Economic dimension Mandatory menstrual leave may increase perceived cost of hiring women, leading to statistical discrimination (Gary Becker) where employers prefer male workers to avoid expected absenteeism. Female Labour Force Participation Rate rose from 23.3% (2017-18) to 41.7% (2023-24), but remains fragile; additional regulatory burdens may reverse recent gains. Presenteeism during menstrual pain reduces efficiency, increases fatigue, and raises long-term health costs, suggesting flexible leave models may improve productivity outcomes. In Japan and South Korea, menstrual leave utilisation is below 1%, indicating that legal entitlement does not ensure usage due to stigma and career-related fears. Social / ethical dimension Menstrual leave promotes substantive equality, aligning with Amartya Sen’s capability approach, which emphasises enabling individuals to achieve real freedoms rather than identical treatment. Formal recognition can help destigmatise menstruation, challenging entrenched taboos and fostering open workplace cultures around women’s health issues. Critics argue it may reinforce stereotypes of women as less reliable or less productive, potentially limiting access to high-responsibility roles and leadership positions. Ethical tension exists between protection and paternalism, where overemphasis on biological differences may undermine agency and equal opportunity principles. Health / human development dimension Around 50% women experience menstrual pain, with 15–25% facing moderate to severe dysmenorrhea, significantly affecting daily functioning, productivity, and overall well-being. Menstrual health is linked to SDG 3 (Health) and SDG 5 (Gender Equality), making it essential for inclusive human capital development. Government initiatives like Rashtriya Kishore Swasthya Karyakram, SABLA, and Menstrual Hygiene Scheme focus on awareness and access, but lack workplace integration. Poor menstrual hygiene contributes to school absenteeism, workplace inefficiency, and reproductive health issues, indicating need for systemic policy interventions. Global comparative perspective Spain introduced state-funded paid menstrual leave, representing a progressive model integrating public health with labour rights, though long-term economic impacts are still evolving. Countries like Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan have statutory provisions, yet utilisation remains extremely low (<1%) due to stigma and workplace culture. Countries like the UK rely on voluntary employer policies, reflecting preference for flexible, decentralised approaches over rigid statutory mandates. Challenges / criticisms Informal sector exclusion (≈90%) makes menstrual leave policies largely inaccessible, risking elite bias and limited impact on broader female workforce participation. Lack of reliable national data on menstrual health burden and productivity loss undermines evidence-based policymaking and leads to assumption-driven debates. MSMEs may resist mandatory leave due to cost pressures, potentially leading to reduced hiring of women or informalisation of employment. Feminist critiques warn against biological determinism, where policies centred on menstruation may reinforce perceptions of women as inherently less capable workers. Way forward Introduce a gender-neutral health leave framework (1–2 days/month) covering conditions like dysmenorrhea and migraines, reducing risk of gender-based hiring discrimination. Promote workplace accommodations such as flexible hours, remote work, rest facilities, and lighter duties, aligning with occupational health best practices. Integrate menstrual health into Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020, ensuring institutional recognition without rigid statutory obligations. Provide ESG-linked incentives for companies adopting gender-sensitive policies, improving compliance through market-based mechanisms rather than coercive regulation. Conduct national-level surveys on menstrual health and productivity loss to enable data-driven policymaking and reduce reliance on normative assumptions. Prelims pointers Article 21 includes right to dignity; menstrual health recognised within this ambit by Supreme Court (2026). Article 42 relates to humane working conditions; part of DPSP and non-justiciable. India is a signatory to CEDAW, mandating gender-sensitive and non-discriminatory practices. Maternity Benefit Act, 1961 does not include menstrual leave; labour falls under the Concurrent List. What is new in transgender rights Bill? Issue in brief Recently, the Union government introduced amendments to the Transgender Persons Act, 2019, proposing removal of the right to self-perceived gender identity, triggering nationwide protests from transgender communities. The move comes 12 years after the 2014 NALSA judgment, which recognised self-determination of gender identity as a fundamental right under Article 21, making the amendment constitutionally contentious. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Gender identity, marginalisation, inclusion GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Fundamental Rights (Articles 14, 21) Judicial vs legislative conflict (NALSA vs Amendment) GS 3 (Social Justice): Welfare targeting, Census inclusion Practice Question Q. “The Transgender Amendment Bill, 2026 raises concerns of constitutional morality and rights dilution.” Critically examine.(250 Words) Constitutional / legal dimension Article 21 (Right to dignity & autonomy): NALSA (2014) held that gender identity is integral to personal autonomy, and any denial of self-identification violates dignity and liberty. Article 14 (Equality): Exclusionary definition may violate equal protection of laws, as it restricts recognition only to certain categories, undermining universality of rights. Article 15 & 16 (Non-discrimination): Gender identity interpreted as a ground under “sex”; narrowing definition risks indirect discrimination in employment and public access. NALSA vs Amendment conflict: NALSA explicitly rejected medical or surgical requirements (SRS) for recognition, whereas the Bill introduces medical board certification, raising constitutional inconsistency. CEDAW obligations: India’s commitment requires non-discriminatory recognition of gender identity, and the amendment may dilute compliance with international human rights standards. Key provisions of the Amendment Bill Removal of Section 4(2): Deletes explicit recognition of “right to self-perceived gender identity”, fundamentally altering the rights-based framework of the 2019 Act. Redefined “transgender person”: Focuses on socio-cultural identities (hijra, kinner, aravani) and biological conditions (intersex variations, congenital traits), excluding broader gender-diverse identities. Exclusion clause: Explicitly removes “self-perceived gender identities and sexual orientations”, narrowing the scope and potentially excluding genderqueer and non-binary persons. Omission of categories: Removes trans men, trans women, and genderqueer persons from definition, reversing inclusive language of the 2019 Act. Medical board-based certification: Requires District Magistrate to rely on medical board recommendation, shifting from self-declaration to state-controlled recognition. Mandatory SRS-linked certification: Individuals must obtain revised certificate post Sex Reassignment Surgery, making medical intervention a functional precondition for legal recognition. Data reporting requirement: Medical institutions performing SRS must report to authorities, raising concerns over privacy and surveillance of transgender persons. Enhanced penal provisions: Introduces graded punishments (up to life imprisonment, ₹5 lakh fine) for offences like forced transgender identity or violence against transgender persons. Government’s rationale Government argues existing definition is “vague and unworkable”, making identification of genuine beneficiaries difficult and leading to misuse of welfare provisions. Emphasis on protecting those facing “biological and congenital disadvantages”, rather than individuals with self-perceived or fluid gender identities. Claims need for administrative clarity and compatibility with other laws, suggesting current framework creates implementation challenges across welfare schemes. Governance / administrative dimension Shift from self-identification to medical verification increases bureaucratic control, potentially leading to delays, discretion, and exclusion in certification processes. Introduction of medical boards (headed by CMO/DCMO) may create capacity constraints, especially in rural areas with limited healthcare infrastructure. Role of District Magistrate expanded, increasing administrative burden and risk of inconsistent application across states. Absence of stakeholder consultation, as reported by activists, reflects top-down policymaking, undermining participatory governance principles. Social / ethical dimension Removal of self-identification undermines identity autonomy, forcing individuals to conform to state-defined categories rather than lived experiences. New definition privileging traditional socio-cultural identities (hijra, kinner) may marginalise modern gender identities like non-binary and genderqueer persons. Risk of intra-community fragmentation, as certain groups may lose legal recognition, creating hierarchy within transgender communities. Ethical concern of medicalisation of identity, where gender becomes subject to clinical validation rather than personal self-expression. Economic dimension Legal recognition is crucial for access to education, employment, and welfare schemes; restrictive definition may reduce inclusion in labour markets and social protection systems. India’s transgender population (~4.9 lakh as per Census 2011, likely undercounted) already faces high unemployment and marginalisation, which may worsen with exclusionary policies. Certification barriers may increase transaction costs and delays, discouraging individuals from seeking formal recognition and integration into the economy. Health / human rights dimension Mandatory linkage with Sex Reassignment Surgery (SRS) contradicts global best practices, as many transgender persons do not undergo or cannot afford surgery. WHO and global standards advocate de-medicalisation of gender identity, whereas the Bill reintroduces medical gatekeeping. Reporting requirements for SRS raise concerns about privacy, bodily autonomy, and data protection, especially in absence of robust safeguards. Challenges / criticisms Direct contradiction with NALSA (2014) and principles of self-determination, raising strong grounds for constitutional challenge under Articles 14 and 21. Exclusion of genderqueer and non-binary persons may render many individuals legally invisible, undermining inclusivity achieved by the 2019 Act. Lack of consultation with transgender communities violates principles of participatory democracy and stakeholder engagement. Potential for bureaucratic harassment and corruption in certification process due to increased discretion of medical boards and district authorities. Critics argue alignment with majoritarian socio-cultural categories, raising concerns of ideological bias in defining gender identity. Way forward Restore self-perceived gender identity as a legal right, in line with NALSA judgment and constitutional guarantees of dignity and autonomy. Adopt a hybrid certification model, where self-declaration remains primary, with optional medical support for those seeking it, avoiding coercive medicalisation. Ensure broad, inclusive definition covering trans men, trans women, non-binary, and genderqueer identities, reflecting evolving understanding of gender spectrum. Institutionalise community consultation mechanisms, involving transgender representatives in policy formulation and rule-making processes. Strengthen anti-discrimination enforcement, ensuring access to education, healthcare, and employment rather than focusing narrowly on identity verification. Align policies with global human rights standards and WHO guidelines emphasising de-pathologisation of gender identity. Prelims pointers NALSA v. Union of India (2014) recognised transgender persons as third gender and upheld right to self-identification. Article 21 includes right to dignity, autonomy, and identity. Transgender Persons Act, 2019 allowed self-declaration without medical examination. Census 2011 recorded ~4.9 lakh transgender persons in India. UN Child Mortality Report (UNIGME 2025) Context The UNIGME 2025 report estimates 4.9 million under-5 deaths in 2024, including 2.3 million newborns, highlighting that a large proportion of these deaths remain preventable through low-cost interventions. While under-5 mortality declined by over 50% since 2000, progress has slowed by more than 60% since 2015, raising concerns about achieving SDG Target 3.2. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Demographic indicators (U5MR, NMR) Regional inequalities GS 2 (Governance): Public health systems, NHM, POSHAN State capacity and service delivery GS 3 (Economy & Human Development): Human capital, nutrition, SDG-3 Practice Question Q. “Despite significant decline, child mortality remains a challenge due to systemic inequalities.” Analyse with reference to India and global trends.(250 Words) Key data & global trends Under-5 mortality declined from ~9.9 million (2000) to 4.9 million (2024), reflecting success of global health interventions, yet the pace of decline has significantly slowed post-2015. Neonatal deaths account for ~47% (2.3 million) of under-5 mortality, indicating slower progress in first 28 days of life, compared to post-neonatal improvements. Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for 58% of global under-5 deaths, followed by South Asia (25%), highlighting stark regional inequalities in healthcare access. Around 2.1 million deaths in 5–24 age group occurred in 2024, with self-harm leading among girls (15–19) and road accidents among boys. Causes of child mortality Neonatal causes dominate: Preterm birth complications (36%) Birth asphyxia & delivery complications (21%) Post-neonatal causes: Malaria (17%), pneumonia, diarrhoea remain major killers, especially in low-income and tropical regions. Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM): Causes >1 lakh deaths (5%) directly, with far higher indirect mortality due to weakened immunity. Infectious diseases account for ~54% deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa, compared to <10% in developed regions, indicating inequality in healthcare systems. India’s performance  Neonatal Mortality Rate (NMR) reduced from 57 (1990) to 17 (2024) per 1,000 live births, reflecting improvements in maternal and neonatal healthcare systems. Under-5 Mortality Rate (U5MR) declined from 127 (1990) to 27 (2024), demonstrating significant progress aligned with global trends. Gains attributed to: Expanded immunisation (Mission Indradhanush) Institutional deliveries (JSY, JSSK) Primary healthcare strengthening However, India still contributes significantly to global mortality due to population size and intra-state disparities. Constitutional / governance dimension (India focus) Article 21 (Right to life) encompasses child survival, making reduction of mortality a core state obligation under welfare governance. Public health is a State subject, leading to uneven outcomes across states due to varying administrative capacity and fiscal prioritisation. National programmes: POSHAN Abhiyaan, NHM, Rashtriya Bal Swasthya Karyakram Focus on nutrition, immunisation, maternal care Governance challenge lies in last-mile delivery and data gaps, especially in aspirational and tribal districts. Economic dimension Child mortality reduction is among the most cost-effective investments, with UN estimates suggesting $1 invested yields up to $20 in economic returns. High mortality leads to: Loss of human capital Increased healthcare costs Lower long-term productivity Slowing progress linked to: Global funding constraints Reduced prioritisation post-COVID recovery phase Social / ethical dimension High mortality reflects structural inequalities based on geography, poverty, gender, and conflict, raising issues of distributive justice and equity. Malnutrition-linked deaths highlight intersection of poverty, food insecurity, and maternal health, especially in vulnerable populations. Adolescent mortality trends (self-harm among girls) indicate mental health crisis and gendered vulnerabilities. Ethical imperative: “No child should die from preventable causes” reflects global commitment to human dignity and rights-based development. Health / environmental dimension Child mortality strongly linked to: Primary healthcare access Clean water, sanitation (WASH) Nutrition security Climate change exacerbates risks through: Malaria spread (vector expansion) Food insecurity → malnutrition Conflict-affected regions show 3 times higher mortality risk, due to collapse of healthcare systems and displacement. Challenges / criticisms Slowing progress (post-2015) indicates policy fatigue and insufficient scaling of proven interventions. Data limitations: Underreporting of malnutrition-related deaths Weak civil registration systems in low-income countries Persistent regional inequality: Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia disproportionately affected Financing constraints: Decline in global health aid threatens maternal and child health programmes Health system gaps: Shortage of skilled birth attendants Weak neonatal intensive care infrastructure Way forward Prioritise primary healthcare systems, focusing on maternal care, skilled birth attendance, and neonatal services in high-burden regions. Scale up low-cost high-impact interventions: Vaccination, ORS, nutrition supplementation, malaria prevention Strengthen nutrition programmes, especially targeting Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM) through community-based management. Increase domestic and global financing, ensuring sustained funding for child survival programmes amid shifting global priorities. Improve data systems and civil registration, enabling real-time tracking, accountability, and targeted interventions. Focus on high-risk geographies (Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, conflict zones) through targeted policy and international cooperation. Prelims pointers UNIGME (2004): Led by UNICEF, WHO, World Bank, UN DESA SDG Target 3.2: End preventable deaths of children under 5 years by 2030 Neonatal period: First 28 days of life SAM (Severe Acute Malnutrition) newly quantified as direct cause in 2025 report Before salt, there was water: why Mahad Satyagraha deserves its centenary ? Context The Mahad Satyagraha (20 March 1927) led by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar asserted the right of Dalits to access public water (Chavdar Tank), challenging caste-based exclusion embedded in everyday social practices. The episode, rooted in lived humiliation like “No peon, no water”, highlights that India’s freedom struggle was not only against colonialism but also against internal social oppression. Relevance GS 1 (Modern History): Dalit movements, Ambedkar Social reform vs freedom struggle Practice Question Q. “Mahad Satyagraha represents the moral foundation of constitutional equality in India.” Discuss.(250 Words) Historical / constitutional significance The Bole Resolution (1923) and Mahad municipal order (1924) legally opened public spaces, yet social enforcement failed, showing the gap between law and social reality. Ambedkar’s act of drinking water transformed a civil right into a moral revolution, asserting that citizenship includes access to basic resources like water. The burning of Manusmriti (25 Dec 1927) symbolised rejection of graded inequality, marking a shift from reformist to radical constitutionalism based on rights. The Bombay High Court (1937) upheld Dalits’ right to access the tank, but the 10-year delay reflects deep institutional and societal resistance to equality. Constitutional / legal dimension Article 15(2) explicitly prohibits denial of access to wells, tanks, roads, and public places, directly reflecting the experience of Mahad Satyagraha. Article 17 (Abolition of Untouchability) translates Mahad into constitutional mandate, criminalising caste-based exclusion as a punishable offence. Article 21 (Right to dignity) evolved jurisprudentially from such struggles, recognising that denial of basic resources violates human dignity and life. Mahad represents the foundation of constitutional morality , where rights override custom, tradition, and social hierarchy. Governance / administrative dimension Mahad exposed the failure of local governance institutions to enforce anti-discrimination laws despite formal resolutions, highlighting weak implementation capacity. Even today, incidents of caste-based denial of water access persist in rural India, indicating gaps in administrative accountability and monitoring mechanisms. Schemes like Jal Jeevan Mission aim universal water access, but social barriers often limit equitable utilisation, especially for Dalit and marginalised communities. Effective governance requires not only infrastructure but also social inclusion enforcement, including grievance redressal and local-level sensitisation. Economic dimension Denial of access to basic resources like water historically reinforced occupational immobility and economic marginalisation of Dalits. Social exclusion reduces human capital formation, limiting education, health, and productivity outcomes among marginalised groups. Persistent caste discrimination imposes hidden economic costs, including reduced labour efficiency and exclusion from formal economic opportunities. Inclusive access to public goods is essential for achieving equitable economic growth and demographic dividend. Social / ethical dimension Mahad Satyagraha represents struggle against “graded inequality”, where hierarchy is normalised rather than contested within society. The incident of children denied water reflects dehumanisation, where caste determines access to even basic survival needs, raising profound ethical concerns. Unlike the Salt Satyagraha (1930) targeting colonial rule, Mahad challenged social oppression by fellow Indians, making it a deeper moral confrontation. Ethical transformation requires dismantling social norms and prejudices, not just legal reforms, as discrimination often persists informally. Comparative insight: Mahad vs Dandi Dandi March (1930) targeted an external oppressor (British), while Mahad targeted internal social injustice, demanding reform within Indian society. Salt tax abolition required legislative change, whereas untouchability required societal transformation, making Mahad a more complex and enduring struggle. Mahad laid the “grammar of equality”, while Dandi symbolised political freedom, both essential but addressing different dimensions of justice. Challenges / contemporary relevance Despite Article 17, practices like manual scavenging, caste segregation, and social exclusion persist, indicating incomplete realisation of constitutional promises. Manual scavengers and sanitation workers continue to face conditions similar to historical untouchability, reflecting continuity of structural inequality. Social discrimination often remains invisible and normalised, making enforcement difficult despite legal prohibitions. Gap persists between constitutional ideals and lived reality, especially in rural and marginalised regions. Way forward Strengthen enforcement of SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act and anti-discrimination laws through fast-track courts and accountability mechanisms. Promote social reform campaigns and education, focusing on dismantling caste-based prejudices at school and community levels. Ensure universal access to public goods (water, sanitation, education) with equity audits to identify exclusion patterns. Integrate constitutional values education into curricula, emphasising dignity, equality, and fraternity as lived practices. Encourage community-level participation and monitoring, empowering local bodies to address caste-based discrimination proactively. Prelims pointers Mahad Satyagraha (1927): Led by B.R. Ambedkar for access to Chavdar Tank (Maharashtra). Bole Resolution (1923) allowed depressed classes access to public places. Manusmriti Dahan (1927) symbolised rejection of caste hierarchy. Article 17 abolishes untouchability; Article 15(2) ensures access to public places. Tuberculosis & Gender Inequality in India: A Silent Public Health Crisis Context India accounts for over 25% of global TB burden, with 2.7 million cases and >3 lakh deaths (2024), yet women face disproportionate social and systemic barriers across diagnosis, treatment, and recovery. Despite women constituting 35% of TB cases (WHO 2025), their challenges remain under-recognised, as gendered stigma, delayed care, and limited autonomy distort the true disease burden. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Gender inequality, stigma, health access GS 3 (Economy & Health): Human capital loss, nutrition linkages Practice Question Q. “Tuberculosis in India is not just a medical issue but a gendered social crisis.” Examine.(250 Words) Epidemiological & data insights India achieved a 21% decline in TB incidence (2015–2024), nearly double the global average, reflecting progress under National TB Elimination Programme (NTEP). However, male-to-female ratio in bacteriologically confirmed TB is 3:1, indicating diagnostic bias and under-detection among women. Extrapulmonary TB (EPTB) constitutes 24% of cases (2023) and is more common in women, often leading to missed or delayed diagnosis due to atypical symptoms. Undernutrition remains the leading comorbidity, significantly increasing TB vulnerability, especially among adolescent girls and women of reproductive age. Constitutional / legal dimension Article 21 (Right to life & health) includes access to timely diagnosis, treatment, and dignity; TB-related stigma and exclusion violate this fundamental right. Article 14 & 15 mandate equality and prohibit gender discrimination, yet systemic barriers in healthcare access reflect de facto inequality. India’s commitment to SDG 3 (End TB by 2030) and CEDAW obligations require gender-responsive healthcare policies addressing women’s specific vulnerabilities. Policies like National Strategic Plan for TB Elimination (2017–25) recognise gender concerns, but implementation gaps persist. Governance / administrative dimension Women face restricted mobility and financial dependence, limiting their ability to seek timely diagnosis and treatment, especially in rural and patriarchal settings. Healthcare systems often rely on symptom-based screening, which fails to detect TB in women due to non-classical presentations (fatigue, mild fever). Diagnostic infrastructure gaps: EPTB diagnosis largely confined to tertiary centres Limited training of frontline workers on gender-specific symptoms Government initiatives: TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (2024) using AI-based chest X-rays However, focus remains largely on high-risk groups, not gender-specific barriers Social / ethical dimension TB stigma disproportionately affects women, leading to social isolation, broken marriages, and reduced marriage prospects, as seen in multiple survivor testimonies. Women often hide symptoms due to fear of stigma, resulting in late diagnosis and higher morbidity. Ethical issue of “double burden”: Disease burden + social discrimination Violates principles of dignity, autonomy, and social justice Gender norms force women to continue household work during illness, worsening health outcomes and delaying recovery. Health / medical dimension Women experience atypical TB symptoms, leading to higher chances of misdiagnosis or clinical (non-confirmatory) diagnosis, reducing treatment accuracy. Extrapulmonary TB (genital TB) causes infertility and menstrual irregularities, often misdiagnosed, affecting reproductive health and social status. Delayed diagnosis increases risk of: MDR-TB (drug-resistant TB) Severe complications like lung damage or loss (case example: Meera Yadav) Post-TB lung disease (PTLD) affects nearly 50% survivors, causing chronic respiratory issues and long-term morbidity. Economic dimension TB imposes high out-of-pocket expenditure, and women’s limited financial autonomy restricts access to timely care. Loss of productivity due to TB disproportionately affects women engaged in informal and unpaid labour, which remains unrecognised economically. Social abandonment leads to economic vulnerability, pushing women into cycles of poverty and ill-health. Investment in TB care yields high returns by improving labour productivity and reducing long-term healthcare costs. Structural determinants (gendered vulnerabilities) Undernutrition + anaemia weaken immunity, increasing TB susceptibility among women. Limited decision-making power delays healthcare-seeking behaviour. Low awareness levels about TB symptoms and treatment options exacerbate delays. Intersectionality: Rural women, tribal populations, and urban poor face multiple overlapping disadvantages. Challenges / systemic gaps Diagnostic bias: Women less likely to receive bacteriological confirmation, leading to underreporting and mismanagement. Healthcare access barriers: Mobility restrictions Lack of female-friendly health infrastructure Stigma-driven non-disclosure, leading to treatment interruptions and disease spread. Weak integration of mental health support, despite high psychological trauma among TB-affected women. Limited community engagement and survivor participation in programme implementation. Way forward Adopt a gender-responsive TB strategy, integrating screening, diagnosis, and treatment with women’s health programmes across lifecycle stages. Strengthen active case finding, especially for women, using community health workers and targeted outreach in high-burden areas. Expand access to diagnostic facilities for EPTB, including decentralisation beyond tertiary centres. Provide nutritional and financial support (DBT schemes) tailored for women to address underlying vulnerabilities. Integrate mental health and psychosocial support, leveraging TB survivor networks for counselling and stigma reduction. Enhance capacity building of healthcare providers on gender-specific TB manifestations and management. Promote awareness campaigns addressing stigma, focusing on families and communities to change social attitudes. Prelims pointers India contributes ~25% of global TB cases (WHO Global TB Report 2025). Extrapulmonary TB (EPTB): TB affecting organs other than lungs; constitutes ~24% cases in India. Undernutrition is the leading risk factor for TB in India. TB Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (2024) uses AI-based screening tools. World Happiness Report 2026: Social Capital, Inequality & Digital Risks Context The World Happiness Report 2026 ranks Finland as happiest country, while Afghanistan remains least happy, highlighting widening global disparities in wellbeing and governance outcomes. The report flags negative impact of excessive social media use, linking it to declining youth wellbeing, social comparison, and mental health challenges across regions. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Social capital, inequality, wellbeing GS 2 (Governance): Welfare state, institutional trust Practice Question Q. “Economic growth alone does not ensure happiness; social trust and governance quality matter more.” Discuss.(250 Words) Key data & trends Happiness rankings based on 3-year averages across ~140 countries, using indicators like GDP per capita, social support, life expectancy, freedom, generosity, and corruption perception. Nordic countries dominate top 10, reflecting strong welfare systems, trust, and institutional quality, while Sub-Saharan Africa dominates lowest ranks due to conflict and poverty. No major English-speaking country in top 10, with USA (23rd), UK (29th) indicating declining perceived wellbeing despite high income levels. Determinants of happiness Social trust & low corruption emerge as strongest predictors, with Nordic countries scoring high due to transparent governance and high institutional credibility. Social support systems (healthcare, education, welfare) create security nets, reducing anxiety and improving life satisfaction. Freedom to make life choices strongly correlates with happiness, as seen in both Nordic countries and Costa Rica (rank 4). Income alone insufficient: Countries with moderate GDP but high community cohesion (Costa Rica) outperform richer but unequal societies. Governance / administrative dimension Nordic success linked to universal welfare model, ensuring access to public services, social security, and inclusive growth. High state capacity + accountability leads to efficient service delivery, reducing inequality and enhancing citizen trust. Countries with weak governance face low institutional trust, directly impacting perceived wellbeing and social cohesion. Policy lesson: wellbeing-oriented governance is as critical as economic growth in development paradigms. Economic dimension While GDP per capita remains a factor, diminishing returns observed beyond a threshold, highlighting importance of equity and redistribution. Happiness correlates with inclusive growth, not absolute wealth, emphasising income equality and social mobility. High taxation in Nordic countries is accepted due to visible returns in public services, creating a social contract legitimacy. Economic insecurity and inequality reduce happiness even in developed economies, explaining lower rankings of USA and UK. Social / ethical dimension Community cohesion and social capital are central to happiness, with strong interpersonal trust reducing stress and improving life satisfaction. Ethical dimension of “collective wellbeing vs individualism” evident, where societies prioritising common good perform better. Rising loneliness and social isolation, especially among youth, is emerging as a critical challenge in modern societies. Cultural practices like egalitarianism (Denmark) and community living (Costa Rica) reinforce inclusive social structures. Technology / mental health dimension Report highlights heavy social media use reduces wellbeing, especially among youth, due to comparison-driven anxiety and reduced real-world interaction. Algorithm-driven content exposure increases mental stress, misinformation, and polarisation, affecting societal trust. Excessive screen time linked with decline in happiness indicators, particularly in developed countries with high digital penetration. Need for digital wellbeing frameworks to balance technology use with mental health. Global inequality dimension Sub-Saharan Africa accounts for lowest happiness levels, driven by conflict, poverty, weak institutions, and health crises. Fragile states (e.g., Afghanistan) show lowest rankings due to political instability, economic collapse, and lack of basic services. Inequality between regions highlights need for global cooperation and development assistance. Happiness increasingly reflects multidimensional deprivation, not just income poverty. Challenges / criticisms Subjective nature of happiness measurement may not fully capture cultural differences and expectations. Over-reliance on self-reported wellbeing data may introduce perception bias across societies. Indicators may underrepresent structural inequalities (gender, caste, race) affecting wellbeing in developing countries. Limited focus on environmental sustainability, despite its growing impact on long-term wellbeing. Way forward Shift policy focus from GDP-centric model to wellbeing-based governance, integrating happiness indicators into national planning frameworks. Strengthen social protection systems, ensuring universal access to healthcare, education, and income security. Promote community-building initiatives to enhance social capital and reduce loneliness. Regulate and promote responsible digital ecosystem, addressing mental health impacts of social media. Address global inequality through targeted investments in fragile and low-income regions. Prelims pointers Report produced by UN SDSN, Gallup, Oxford Wellbeing Research Centre. Key indicators include GDP, social support, life expectancy, freedom, generosity, corruption perception. Finland ranks 1st (2026); Afghanistan ranks last. Happiness measured using Cantril ladder (self-reported life evaluation scale).

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 18 March 2026

Content Celebrating the Power of Vaccines 10,000 Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) Celebrating the Power of Vaccines Why in News ? India celebrated National Vaccination Day (16 March), highlighting achievements of Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) and reaffirming commitment towards near-universal immunisation coverage and disease elimination. Launch of HPV vaccination campaign (1.15 crore girls target) and indigenous Td vaccine (55 lakh doses) marks expansion of India’s preventive healthcare architecture and self-reliance in vaccine manufacturing. Relevance GS 1 (Society & Human Development): Health indicators (IMR/MMR decline), demographic dividend, gender equity (HPV vaccination), social inclusion (zero-dose children) GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Right to health under Article 21, Directive Principles (Art 47), UIP implementation, cooperative federalism, last-mile delivery via ASHA/Anganwadi Practice Question Q. Vaccination programmes in India reflect the convergence of governance efficiency, economic rationality, and social justice. Critically analyse. (15 Marks) Significance of Vaccination   Governance / Administrative Dimension Universal Immunisation Programme (UIP) is among the largest globally, covering 2.9 crore pregnant women and 2.54 crore newborns annually, reflecting scale, administrative capacity, and institutional depth in public health delivery. Implementation through NRHM/NHM framework, supported by ASHA, Anganwadi workers, ensures last-mile outreach, community mobilisation, and reduction of exclusion errors in immunisation coverage across rural and urban areas. Mission Indradhanush (2015 onwards) targeted left-out populations, vaccinating 5.46 crore children and 1.32 crore pregnant women, showcasing convergence-driven governance model for improving immunisation equity. Constitutional / Policy Dimension Article 21 (Right to Life) interpreted by Supreme Court includes right to health, making immunisation a constitutional obligation of the State under welfare governance framework. Directive Principles (Article 47) mandate improvement of public health, guiding policies like UIP, Mission Indradhanush, and digital health initiatives aligned with welfare state philosophy. Reflects cooperative federalism, where Union ensures policy, funding, procurement, while States manage implementation and outreach, ensuring contextual adaptation of immunisation strategies. Economic Dimension Vaccination yields high economic returns; WHO estimates $1 investment generates ~$44 returns, through reduced disease burden, increased productivity, and lower healthcare expenditure. Reduces Out-of-Pocket Expenditure (OOPE) on preventable diseases, thereby preventing impoverishment and supporting inclusive growth, especially among vulnerable and low-income populations. Strengthens human capital formation, ensuring healthier workforce participation, improved cognitive development in children, and long-term demographic dividend realisation. Social Dimension Vaccination significantly reduces Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) and Maternal Mortality Ratio (MMR), contributing to improved survival outcomes and better quality of life indicators. Promotes gender equity, as seen in HPV vaccination targeting adolescent girls, addressing cervical cancer burden and advancing women’s health rights. Focus on zero-dose children (0.06%) highlights commitment to inclusivity, ensuring no child is left behind in access to essential public health services. Environmental / Health Security Dimension Immunisation acts as a critical tool for epidemic prevention, reducing incidence of communicable diseases such as measles, Japanese Encephalitis, and tuberculosis. Strengthens pandemic preparedness, as demonstrated during COVID-19 vaccination (200+ crore doses), showcasing India’s capacity for rapid, large-scale health interventions. Supports One Health approach, reducing zoonotic disease risks and contributing to global health security frameworks. Science & Technology Dimension Digital platforms like eVIN (cold chain monitoring), CoWIN (220 crore doses managed), and U-WIN (lifecycle immunisation tracking) enhance transparency, efficiency, and real-time governance. India’s position as ‘Pharmacy of the World’ (60% global vaccine supply) reflects strong biotechnology ecosystem and global leadership in vaccine manufacturing. Indigenous vaccine development (e.g., Td vaccine 2026) strengthens Atmanirbhar Bharat, reducing import dependence and ensuring supply security. Universal Immunisation Programme UIP (1985) provides free vaccination against 12 vaccine-preventable diseases, targeting pregnant women, infants, children, and adolescents through a structured national immunisation schedule. Massive infrastructure includes 30,000 cold chain points, 1.06 lakh storage units, and 1.3 crore annual immunisation sessions, ensuring vaccine potency and last-mile delivery across diverse geographies. Continuous expansion through addition of vaccines like IPV, Rotavirus, MR, PCV, and recent HPV and Td vaccines, reflects adaptive and evolving immunisation policy framework. Achievements & Data Evidence Full immunisation coverage increased from 62% (2015) to 98.4% (2026), indicating successful policy implementation and improved healthcare accessibility. Reduction in zero-dose children from 0.11% (2023) to 0.06% (2024) highlights effective targeting of vulnerable and hard-to-reach populations. Disease milestones include smallpox eradication (1977), polio elimination (2014 certification), and maternal & neonatal tetanus elimination, reflecting long-term success of vaccination strategies. Challenges Persistent regional and socio-economic disparities in immunisation coverage, especially in urban slums, tribal areas, and migratory populations, indicate inequity despite high aggregate coverage levels. Rising vaccine hesitancy due to misinformation, cultural beliefs, and trust deficits poses significant challenge to achieving universal and sustained immunisation outcomes. Infrastructure gaps in cold chain maintenance and workforce capacity, particularly in remote areas, affect vaccine quality and delivery efficiency. Digital divide limits effectiveness of platforms like U-WIN, especially in areas with low digital literacy or connectivity constraints. Expanding vaccine basket increases financial burden on public health system, raising concerns about long-term sustainability of free universal immunisation. Way Forward Transition towards life-cycle immunisation model, expanding coverage to adults and elderly, including vaccines for HPV, influenza, and tuberculosis, ensuring comprehensive preventive healthcare. Adopt data-driven targeting using AI and digital tools to identify zero-dose clusters and optimise resource allocation for improving equity in immunisation coverage. Strengthen last-mile delivery systems through capacity building, better incentives for ASHA workers, and deployment of mobile vaccination units in remote regions. Integrate U-WIN with Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission, enabling seamless health records, improved monitoring, and policy-level decision-making based on real-time data. Promote vaccine R&D and indigenous innovation, including next-generation platforms like mRNA vaccines, through public-private partnerships and increased health sector investments. Prelims Pointers UIP launched in 1985, covers 12 diseases with free vaccination. Mission Indradhanush (2015) aims for 90%+ coverage. eVIN → cold chain, CoWIN → COVID vaccination, U-WIN → routine immunisation. HPV vaccine prevents cervical cancer, JE vaccine limited to endemic districts. 10,000 Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) Why in News ? Government achieved milestone of 10,000 FPOs registered (as on 1st March 2026) under Central Sector Scheme, marking a major institutional reform in farmer collectivisation and agri-market integration. Notably, 1175 FPOs are 100% women-led, with 23.55 lakh women farmers enrolled, highlighting gender inclusion and empowerment in agricultural value chains. Relevance GS 2 (Governance & Polity): Institutional reform in agriculture, Central Sector Scheme implementation, role of CBBOs, cooperative federalism in agri-marketing reforms GS 3 (Economy & Agriculture): Farmer income enhancement, agri-value chain integration, economies of scale, market reforms, agri-entrepreneurship, food security Practice Question Q. Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) represent a shift from subsistence agriculture to market-oriented farming. Analyse their role in enhancing farmers’ income and discuss the challenges in ensuring their sustainability. (15 Marks) Rationale Behind FPO Scheme Economic Dimension Indian agriculture is dominated by small and marginal farmers (≈86%), leading to fragmented landholdings, low economies of scale, and weak market bargaining power. FPOs enable aggregation of produce and inputs, reducing transaction costs, improving price realisation, and facilitating integration with processing, storage, and export markets. Governance / Institutional Dimension FPOs act as formal farmer institutions, bridging gap between farmers and markets, and enabling efficient implementation of schemes like PMFBY, e-NAM, and MSP procurement systems. Central Sector Scheme ensures uniform support, capacity building, and financial assistance, strengthening institutional ecosystem for farmer collectivisation across states. Social / Equity Dimension Promotion of 1175 women-led FPOs with 23.55 lakh women farmers enhances gender inclusion, decision-making power, and financial independence in rural areas. FPOs help reduce rural inequality, enabling marginalised groups to access markets, credit, and technology collectively rather than individually. Food Security & Sustainability Dimension Aggregation through FPOs promotes efficient input use, better crop planning, and diversification, contributing to sustainable agricultural practices and food system resilience. Facilitates adoption of climate-resilient agriculture, organic farming, and resource-efficient practices through collective knowledge dissemination and extension services. Key Features of FPO Scheme Central Sector Scheme (2020) aims to form and promote 10,000 FPOs, providing financial, technical, and managerial support for a period of 5 years. Each FPO is supported by Cluster-Based Business Organisations (CBBOs) for handholding, capacity building, and ensuring business viability and professional management. Financial assistance includes equity grant (up to ₹15 lakh) and credit guarantee support (up to ₹2 crore), enabling access to institutional finance. FPOs function as producer-owned companies/cooperatives, engaged in input procurement, aggregation, processing, marketing, and value addition activities. Significance of FPOs Economic Empowerment of Farmers Enhances farmers’ bargaining power and price discovery, reducing dependence on intermediaries and ensuring better share in consumer price realisation. Strengthening Value Chains Enables integration into agri-value chains, including storage, logistics, processing, branding, and exports, thereby increasing farmers’ income beyond primary production. Women Empowerment Women-led FPOs promote financial inclusion, leadership roles, and livelihood diversification, contributing to gender equality and rural socio-economic transformation. Institutional Reform in Agriculture Represents shift from subsidy-driven agriculture → institution-driven agriculture, focusing on collective action, entrepreneurship, and market orientation. Boost to Rural Economy Generates non-farm employment opportunities in logistics, processing, and marketing, contributing to rural industrialisation and economic diversification. Challenges / Concerns Capacity & Professional Management Gaps Many FPOs lack managerial skills, business expertise, and governance structures, affecting operational efficiency and long-term sustainability. Limited Access to Credit Despite schemes, FPOs face difficulty in accessing institutional finance, due to lack of collateral, credit history, and risk perception by banks. Weak Market Linkages Inadequate integration with markets, processors, and exporters limits FPOs’ ability to realise full value of aggregation and scale advantages. Regional Imbalances Uneven distribution of FPOs across states leads to regional disparities, with weaker penetration in eastern and northeastern regions. Sustainability Concerns Dependence on government support raises concerns about financial viability post handholding period, questioning long-term sustainability of FPOs. Way Forward Strengthening Institutional Capacity Provide continuous training, professional management support, and governance frameworks to ensure FPOs function as sustainable business enterprises rather than subsidy-dependent entities. Improving Credit Access Expand credit guarantee schemes, fintech solutions, and customised financial products, enabling easier and affordable access to institutional finance for FPOs. Enhancing Market Linkages Integrate FPOs with e-NAM, agri-startups, food processing industries, and export markets, ensuring better price realisation and diversified income streams. Promoting Women-Led FPOs Provide targeted incentives, capacity building, and market support to women-led FPOs, strengthening gender-inclusive agricultural growth. Leveraging Technology Use digital platforms, AI-based advisories, and supply chain tracking systems, improving efficiency, transparency, and competitiveness of FPO operations. Prelims Pointers 10,000 FPO Scheme → Central Sector Scheme (2020) Equity Grant: ₹15 lakh, Credit Guarantee: ₹2 crore CBBOs provide handholding support 1175 women FPOs, 23.55 lakh women farmers (2026 data)

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 18 March 2026

Content Parents, companies must act against social media harms A bit of a blur over India’s new carbon credit plan Parents, companies must act against social media harms Why in News ? Editorial highlights growing concern over social media-driven mental health crisis among adolescents, backed by global evidence and Indian trends. India-specific policy momentum: Karnataka (2026) proposed ban under 16, Andhra Pradesh exploring restrictions, and Economic Survey 2025–26 recommending age limits. Relevance GS 2 (Governance & Polity): Regulation of digital platforms (IT Rules 2021, DPDP Act 2023), Centre–State jurisdiction issues, child protection laws, digital governance GS 3 (Science & Technology / Internal Security): Algorithmic harms, dark patterns, cyberbullying, online exploitation, platform accountability Practice Question Q. Social media platforms are increasingly being held responsible for adverse mental health outcomes among adolescents. Discuss the need for a balanced regulatory framework in India. (15 Marks) Nature of the Problem  Mental Health Crisis among Youth Heavy social media use linked to 2–3 times higher risk of self-harm and suicidal ideation (global research cited in editorial), reflecting serious psychological externalities. India shows rising vulnerability with 1.71 lakh suicides (NCRB 2022), with 15–29 age group most affected, indicating broader youth distress ecosystem. Economic Survey 2025–26 flags increasing anxiety, sleep disorders, and reduced attention spans among youth due to excessive screen time. Social Validation & Behavioural Pressure Editorial highlights adolescents’ dependence on “likes and engagement”, reinforced by Indian study showing ~50% adolescents feel distressed over low engagement. Peer pressure drives early adoption; ASER 2024 shows ~90% adolescents (14–16) have smartphone access, making digital participation almost unavoidable. Neurodevelopmental Vulnerability Editorial stresses that prefrontal cortex (decision-making centre) is underdeveloped in adolescents, limiting ability to resist addictive design features. This aligns with scientific evidence (NIH) that impulse control matures in late adolescence, making early exposure risky in India’s high-access environment. Platform Design & Algorithmic Harms Social media platforms rely on algorithms, endless scrolling, and notifications, intentionally designed to maximise engagement rather than user well-being (editorial core argument). Indian policy discussions (Karnataka consultations, 2026) identified “dark patterns” contributing to addiction, reduced academic performance, and behavioural issues. Safety & Exploitation Risks Editorial flags technology-facilitated child sexual exploitation (~300 million globally), indicating severe online safety risks. In India, rising cases of cyberbullying and online abuse (NCRB cybercrime data trends) highlight weak child protection mechanisms in digital spaces. Core Argument of the Editorial (Responsibility Framework) Limitations of Parental Responsibility Editorial argues parents alone cannot regulate exposure due to peer pressure and lack of digital literacy, especially in India where rapid digital adoption outpaces awareness. Indian context: Parents often enable device use for convenience, as noted in Karnataka policy consultations (2026), weakening informal regulation. Corporate Accountability Platforms profit from engagement (e.g., advertising-driven models dominating Big Tech revenues), yet fail to integrate safety-by-design mechanisms proactively. Editorial emphasises that safeguards are reactive rather than preventive, placing disproportionate burden on children and families. Role of Government Editorial supports raising minimum age (13 → 16 years) as a behavioural reset mechanism, now reflected in Karnataka’s policy proposal (2026). Governments must enforce: algorithmic transparency age-appropriate design platform accountability standards Indian Policy Developments  Karnataka Model (2026) Proposed ban on social media for children under 16, citing mental health concerns, addiction, and academic decline among students. Reflects shift from laissez-faire digital access → protective regulatory approach, making Karnataka a policy pioneer in India. Andhra Pradesh Approach (2026) Proposed restriction under 13 with graded access (13–16), indicating a more nuanced regulatory model balancing access and safety. National-Level Signals Economic Survey 2025–26 recommends age-based restrictions and regulation of addictive platform features, marking formal recognition of digital harms. Growing discourse for national policy on child digital safety, indicating transition toward structured governance. Key Issues  Reactive Governance Model Platforms introduce safeguards only after harm (editorial insight), similar to global cases like Instagram reforms post internal reports (Facebook Files 2021). Enforcement Constraints Age restrictions difficult to implement due to lack of robust age verification systems in India, enabling easy circumvention through fake accounts. Federal & Legal Issues Digital regulation falls under Union List (IT Act domain), raising constitutional questions over state-level bans like Karnataka’s intervention. Risk of Digital Exclusion Blanket bans may restrict access to educational resources (YouTube learning, digital classrooms), especially for disadvantaged students. Gender & Social Inequality Risk of widening gender digital divide (female internet usage ~33% vs male ~57%), if families disproportionately restrict girls’ access. Way Forward  Safety-by-Design Regulation Mandate platforms to integrate default privacy, time limits, and content moderation, shifting burden from users to companies as emphasised in editorial. Algorithmic Transparency Require disclosure and audit of recommendation systems, ensuring harmful content is not amplified for engagement gains. National Child Digital Safety Framework Enact comprehensive law integrating IT Rules + DPDP Act, specifically targeting child protection, age verification, and platform liability. Graded Access Model Adopt tiered access (as proposed by Andhra Pradesh) instead of blanket bans, balancing protection with access to digital opportunities. Digital Literacy & Behavioural Change Expand PMGDISHA + school curriculum integration, enabling parents and children to understand risks and adopt responsible usage practices. Multi-Stakeholder Governance Collaboration between government, tech companies, schools, and civil society, ensuring holistic and sustainable digital ecosystem. Prelims Pointers  IT Rules 2021 → intermediary obligations DPDP Act 2023 → parental consent for minors ASER 2024 → ~90% adolescents have smartphone access Economic Survey 2025–26 → digital addiction concerns Karnataka 2026 → social media restriction under 16 Conclusion The editorial underscores a critical shift: social media harms are systemic, not individual failures, rooted in platform design and governance gaps. India’s response, as seen in Karnataka and policy debates, must evolve into a balanced, child-centric digital governance model, ensuring technology empowers rather than harms the next generation. A bit of a blur over India’s new carbon credit plan Why in News ? Union Budget 2026 allocated ₹20,000 crore for a “carbon credit programme”, primarily aimed at Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage (CCUS) in heavy industries. Confusion emerged as media narratives linked the scheme to farmer carbon credits, despite official alignment with DST CCUS Roadmap (Dec 2025) focusing on industrial sectors. Relevance GS 1 (Geography & Environment): Climate change mitigation, land-based carbon sequestration (carbon farming), sustainable agriculture GS 2 (Governance & International Relations): Climate policy, Paris Agreement commitments, policy coordination issues, global trade implications (EU CBAM) Practice Question Q. India’s carbon credit programme reflects a dual challenge of industrial decarbonisation and agricultural sustainability. Analyse the policy gaps and suggest a balanced approach. (15 Marks) Core Policy Reality: CCUS for Industrial Decarbonisation Targeting Hard-to-Abate Sectors CCUS focuses on power, steel, cement, refineries, chemicals, identified as “hard-to-abate” sectors due to process emissions difficult to eliminate. These sectors face EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) risks, making decarbonisation essential for export competitiveness. Scale & Climate Imperative India emits ~2.9 billion tonnes CO₂ annually, with a significant share from industrial sectors, necessitating carbon capture technologies. DST roadmap targets 750 million tonnes CO₂ capture annually by 2050, indicating long-term strategic commitment. Budget 2026 Objective ₹20,000 crore allocation aims to bridge gap between pilot projects and commercial deployment, scaling CCUS technologies across industries. Forms part of India’s Net Zero 2070 pathway, integrating climate policy with industrial growth. Why Agriculture is NOT Part of This Scheme ? Nature of Agricultural Emissions Agriculture emits methane (livestock) and nitrous oxide (fertilisers), which are diffuse and biologically generated, unlike concentrated industrial emissions. Technical Limitation of CCUS CCUS works on point-source capture (chimneys, flue gases), making it unsuitable for dispersed farm emissions across millions of small holdings. Separate Framework: Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) Agriculture contributes through soil carbon sequestration, agroforestry, biochar, classified under CDR, not CCUS, requiring different policy tools. Source of Confusion: “Farmer Carbon Credit Narrative” Misinterpretation of Budget Language Use of generic term “carbon credit programme” created expectation that farmers will directly benefit, despite scheme being industrial-focused. Existing Voluntary Carbon Market Trends India is developing carbon market under Energy Conservation Act 2022, expected to begin trading carbon certificates by 2026. Emerging Farmer-Based Models Private and state-level pilots already allow farmers to earn through soil carbon projects and sustainable practices, reinforcing perception of a national scheme. Media Amplification Articles highlighting “farms as climate solutions” blurred distinction between industrial CCUS funding and agricultural carbon markets, intensifying confusion. Significance of CCUS Programme Industrial Competitiveness Helps Indian exports comply with global carbon standards (EU CBAM), preventing trade disadvantages for carbon-intensive sectors. Energy Transition Realism Allows continued use of coal-dependent infrastructure, which will remain significant in India’s energy mix, while reducing emissions. Technology & Innovation Push Encourages indigenous CCUS R&D and deployment, strengthening India’s clean-tech ecosystem and global positioning. Strategic Climate Policy Integrates climate goals with economic growth, balancing development needs with emission reduction commitments under Paris Agreement. Parallel Opportunity: Carbon Farming in India Huge Land-Based Potential India has ~140 million hectares of agricultural land (FAO), offering massive scope for carbon sequestration through soil and biomass. Income Diversification for Farmers Carbon farming can create additional income streams beyond MSP and crops, especially via FPO-based aggregation models. Policy Alignment Schemes like Natural Farming Mission, PM-PRANAM already promote low-carbon agriculture, which can be integrated into carbon markets. Global Market Opportunity Voluntary carbon market projected to grow rapidly, with India poised to become a major supplier of nature-based carbon credits. Challenges Policy Communication Failure Ambiguity in Budget terminology led to misaligned expectations among farmers and stakeholders, highlighting governance communication gap. High Cost of CCUS CCUS remains capital-intensive, requiring large-scale subsidies and technological breakthroughs for commercial viability. Absence of Agricultural Carbon Framework India lacks robust MRV (Measurement, Reporting, Verification) systems for soil carbon, limiting credibility of farmer carbon credits. Institutional Fragmentation Climate governance spread across DST, MoEFCC, Agriculture Ministry, leading to lack of coordinated approach between industrial and agricultural decarbonisation. Equity Concerns Current scheme benefits large industries, while small farmers remain outside formal carbon market ecosystem, raising distributive justice concerns. Way Forward Dual Climate Strategy Clearly separate CCUS (industrial emissions reduction) and CDR (agriculture-based sequestration) with dedicated schemes and funding streams. Operationalise Indian Carbon Market Fast-track implementation of domestic carbon trading system (Energy Conservation Act 2022) with inclusion of agriculture sector. Dedicated Carbon Farming Scheme Launch national programme for farmers integrating soil health cards, FPOs, and digital MRV systems, ensuring direct income benefits. Strengthen MRV & Digital Systems Use satellite monitoring, AI tools, and blockchain for credible measurement of carbon sequestration and transparent credit issuance. Public-Private Partnerships Encourage collaboration between government, agri-tech firms, and FPOs to scale farmer participation in carbon markets. Prelims Pointers CCUS → industrial carbon capture (point-source) CDR → carbon removal (soil, forests) DST CCUS Roadmap 2025 → industrial sectors focus ₹20,000 crore (Budget 2026) → CCUS funding Energy Conservation Act 2022 → carbon market framework Conclusion Budget 2026 clearly prioritises CCUS-led industrial decarbonisation, supported by DST roadmap and global competitiveness concerns. However, the farmer carbon credit narrative reflects a real but separate opportunity, requiring dedicated policy and institutional backing. India’s success lies in clearly demarcating and simultaneously advancing both ‘smokestack’ and ‘soil’ strategies, ensuring inclusive and sustainable climate action.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 18 March 2026

Content Poisoned promise: India among four major contributors to global pesticide toxicity There is a dragon atop Iran’s Mount Damavand. Here is how its legend is connected to a story from the Rig Veda Supreme Court strikes down age cap on maternity leave for adoptive mothers Government clears 23 institutions to set up ‘quantum labs’ Sahitya Akademi announces literary awards for 2025 The fate of the Washington Consensus, once talisman On scientific collaborations in BRICS Why Transgender Protection (Amendment) Bill 2026 has attracted criticism Poisoned promise: India among four major contributors to global pesticide toxicity Why in News ? A 2026 study (journal Science, University of Kaiserslautern-Landau) shows rising global pesticide toxicity, with India among top contributors. India’s Indo-Gangetic plains and intensive agriculture regions show toxicity levels above global average, raising environmental and health concerns. Relevance GS 1 (Geography & Environment): Biodiversity loss (pollinators, soil organisms), agro-ecosystem degradation, regional hotspots (Indo-Gangetic plains) GS 3 (Economy & Environment): Sustainable agriculture, input-intensive farming crisis, food security vs ecological sustainability, climate-resilient agriculture Practice Question Q. Rising pesticide toxicity in India reflects deeper structural issues in agricultural practices and governance. Examine the causes and suggest sustainable solutions. (15 Marks) Nature of the Problem Environmental / Biodiversity Dimension Study finds India, China, Brazil, and USA contribute 53–68% of global pesticide toxicity, indicating concentration of ecological risk in major agricultural economies. Toxicity impacts pollinators, fish, soil organisms, and arthropods, with insect populations declining globally at ~6.4% annually (Science, 2026). In India, Indo-Gangetic plains, Punjab, Haryana, Maharashtra, Telangana show toxicity levels above global average, threatening agro-ecosystem stability. Agricultural Practices Dimension India’s pesticide consumption increased from 57,353 tonnes (2014-15) to 67,221 tonnes (2024-25) (~20% rise), indicating intensification of chemical-based farming. High toxicity linked to crops like cotton, rice, and sugarcane, with cotton contributing disproportionately due to pest intensity despite smaller acreage. Dominance of few high-toxicity chemicals (20 pesticides contributing >90% toxicity burden) reflects skewed pesticide usage patterns. Human Health Dimension Exposure to pesticides linked to neurological disorders, cancers, and endocrine disruption, as recognised by WHO and FAO studies. Regions with intensive pesticide use show higher incidence of chronic diseases, indicating public health externalities. Economic Dimension Farmers trapped in input-intensive agriculture model, leading to rising costs of pesticides and reduced profitability. Overuse reduces soil fertility and productivity in long run, undermining sustainability of agricultural growth. Governance / Legal Dimension Current framework under Insecticides Act 1968 (to be replaced by Pesticide Management Bill 2025) focuses on safety but lacks strong biodiversity safeguards. Lack of integration between Biological Diversity Act 2002 and pesticide regulation, creating policy silos (as highlighted by PAN India experts). Global Commitments Dimension Under CBD COP15 (2022), countries committed to reduce pesticide risk by 50% by 2030, using Total Applied Toxicity (TAT) metric (adopted at COP16, 2025). Study shows most countries, including India, are not on track, with toxicity trends worsening rather than declining. Key Drivers of Rising Toxicity Shift from Volume to Toxicity Even where pesticide volume stabilises, toxicity increases due to more harmful chemicals, indicating qualitative deterioration (Science study). High-Risk Chemical Classes Organophosphates and pyrethroids dominate aquatic toxicity, while neonicotinoids severely affect pollinators, contributing to biodiversity loss. Herbicide Intensification High-volume chemicals like glyphosate (~518,000 tonnes globally) and paraquat (~44,000 tonnes) significantly contribute to plant and ecosystem toxicity. Weak Extension & Awareness Farmers lack access to scientific pest management knowledge, leading to overuse and misuse of pesticides. Challenges Policy Fragmentation Separation between agriculture policy and biodiversity conservation (NBA vs Agriculture Ministry) prevents holistic regulation of pesticide impacts. Weak Regulatory Standards Draft Pesticide Management Bill 2025 uses broad language (“minimise risk”) without enforceable standards or mandatory biodiversity assessments. Lack of Data Integration Absence of TAT-based monitoring system in India limits ability to assess real ecological impact of pesticide use. Technological & Institutional Gaps Limited adoption of precision agriculture and biological pest control, especially among small and marginal farmers (~86% holdings). Market & Incentive Failure Subsidies and market structures favour chemical-intensive farming, discouraging transition to sustainable alternatives. Way Forward Adopt TAT Framework in India Integrate Total Applied Toxicity (CBD COP16) into national policy for measuring pesticide impact beyond volume metrics. Integrate Biodiversity into Regulation Mandate biodiversity impact assessment (via National Biodiversity Authority) for pesticide approval, renewal, and phase-out decisions. Promote Sustainable Alternatives Scale up Integrated Pest Management (IPM), biological control agents, and natural farming (National Mission on Natural Farming). Strengthen Pesticide Management Bill Introduce strict regulatory thresholds, accountability mechanisms, and inter-ministerial coordination in upcoming legislation. Precision Agriculture & Technology Use AI, drones, and satellite-based advisories to optimise pesticide use and reduce over-application. Farmer Incentives & Behavioural Change Link schemes like PM-PRANAM with reduced pesticide usage and incentivise eco-friendly practices through FPOs. Prelims Pointers TAT (Total Applied Toxicity) → adopted at CBD COP16 (2025) CBD COP15 (2022) → target to reduce pesticide risk by 50% by 2030 Pesticide Management Bill 2025 → to replace Insecticides Act 1968 Neonicotinoids → pollinator toxicity Organophosphates → aquatic toxicity There is a dragon atop Iran’s Mount Damavand. Here is how its legend is connected to a story from the Rig Veda Why in News ? Renewed focus on India–Iran civilisational links amid geopolitical developments, with scholarly attention on mythological parallels between Vedic and Zoroastrian traditions. Article highlights Azi Dahaka (Iranian myth) and Vṛtra (Vedic myth) as symbolic narratives of cosmic struggle and order restoration. Relevance GS 1 (Ancient History & Culture): Indo-European origins, Vedic–Avestan linkages, comparative mythology, concept of Ṛta vs Asha GS 2 (International Relations): Civilisational diplomacy (India–Iran), cultural soft power, historical linkages shaping modern relations Practice Question Q. Mythological parallels between the Rig Veda and Avesta highlight shared civilisational roots of India and Iran. Analyse their significance in understanding ancient societies and contemporary cultural diplomacy. (15 Marks) Core Civilisational Linkages Indo-European Cultural Origins Both Vedic Indians and ancient Iranians belonged to Indo-European linguistic-cultural group, explaining similarities in language (Sanskrit–Avestan) and mythological motifs. Scholars note parallels between Rig Veda (~1500 BCE) and Avesta (~1200–1000 BCE), indicating shared cultural heritage before geographical divergence. Concept of Cosmic Order Vedic concept of Ṛta (cosmic order) parallels Asha in Zoroastrianism, both representing universal law, morality, and balance in nature and society. Mythological battles (Indra vs Vṛtra; Oraētaona vs Azi Dahaka) symbolise restoration of order from chaos, central to both traditions. Dragon-Slaying Myth Motif In Rig Veda, Indra slays Vṛtra, releasing seven rivers (RV X.8.8-9), symbolising fertility and life. In Avesta, Azi Dahaka is defeated by Θraētaona, restoring balance and preventing destruction. Similar myths exist across Indo-European cultures (Greek Zeus vs Typhon), indicating shared proto-myth (~3000 BCE origin hypothesis). Ecological & Anthropological Interpretation Water-Centric Civilisations Indo-Iranian societies depended on rivers like Saraswati (India) and Oxus/Amu Darya (Central Asia), making water central to survival and mythology. Dragon (serpent) symbol often associated with blocking water or causing drought, reflecting ecological anxieties of early agrarian societies. Symbolism of Fertility & Agriculture Release of waters in Vedic myth leads to fertility (cows symbolising abundance), linking mythology with agricultural cycles. Iranian myths similarly connect dragon-slaying with restoration of life, crops, and societal order. Natural Phenomena Interpretation Mount Damavand (Iran), an active volcano (last eruption ~7300 years ago), is linked to myth of imprisoned dragon, reflecting geological memory encoded in folklore. Cultural Continuity & Evolution Zoroastrianism & Indian Parallels Zoroastrian deities like Vāiiu (wind god) resemble Vedic Vayu, showing continuity in religious concepts. Fire worship (Agni in Vedas; Atar in Zoroastrianism) reflects shared ritual traditions. Shahnameh as Cultural Preservation Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh (~10th century CE, 50,000 couplets) preserved pre-Islamic Iranian myths, similar to how Puranas preserved Vedic traditions in India. Story of Zahhak (Azi Dahaka) and Faridun reflects resistance against tyranny and cultural continuity, even after Arab conquest (7th century CE). Indo-Iranian Identity Linkages Genetic and cultural studies show links between Indo-Iranians and present communities (e.g., Yaghnobis, Pamiris), reinforcing shared ancestry narratives. Broader Significance  Cultural Diplomacy & Soft Power Shared heritage strengthens India–Iran civilisational diplomacy, complementing modern ties (e.g., Chabahar Port cooperation). Comparative Mythology as Academic Tool Study of myths helps understand early human societies, ecological dependencies, and evolution of belief systems, relevant for anthropology and history. Philosophical Insights Universal theme of good vs evil, order vs chaos reflects ethical frameworks underlying ancient societies and modern governance ideals. Continuity of Tradition Demonstrates how cultures preserve identity through oral traditions, epics, and texts, even amid political and religious transformations. Critical Analysis Myth vs Historical Reality While myths provide cultural insights, they must not be interpreted as literal history, requiring careful academic distinction. Selective Interpretation Risks Overemphasis on similarities may ignore distinct developments in Indian and Iranian traditions post-divergence (e.g., Zoroastrian dualism vs Vedic pluralism). Limited Public Awareness Despite strong links, India–Iran civilisational connections remain underexplored in mainstream discourse, limiting their potential in cultural diplomacy. Way Forward Promote Comparative Civilisational Studies Encourage research on Indo-Iranian linkages in universities (ICHR, ICCR initiatives) to deepen academic understanding. Cultural Diplomacy Initiatives Use shared heritage for India–Iran cultural exchanges, museum collaborations, and joint heritage projects. Integrate into Education Include comparative mythology and Indo-European studies in curricula to enhance awareness of global cultural linkages. Digital Preservation Digitise texts like Rig Veda, Avesta, Shahnameh, ensuring accessibility and preservation of shared heritage. Prelims Pointers Rig Veda → Indra vs Vṛtra Avesta → Azi Dahaka myth Shahnameh → Ferdowsi, 10th century CE Mount Damavand → highest peak in Iran (5609 m) Ṛta vs Asha → cosmic order concepts Conclusion The tale of Azi Dahaka and Vṛtra is more than mythology—it represents shared civilisational consciousness rooted in ecology, ethics, and survival. Recognising such linkages helps position India not just as a nation-state, but as part of a larger interconnected civilisational continuum. Supreme Court strikes down age cap on maternity leave for adoptive mothers Why in News ? In Hamsaanandini Nanduri v. Union of India (2026), Supreme Court struck down Section 60(4) of Social Security Code 2020, which restricted maternity leave for adoptive mothers to children below 3 months. Court granted 12 weeks maternity leave irrespective of child’s age, and urged government to introduce paternity leave as social security benefit. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Changing family structures, recognition of adoptive motherhood, gender roles in caregiving GS 2 (Polity & Governance): Article 14 & 21 interpretation, judicial activism, social security law (Social Security Code 2020), welfare state Practice Question Q. The Supreme Court’s ruling on maternity leave for adoptive mothers marks a shift towards inclusive social security. Discuss its constitutional basis and socio-economic implications. (15 Marks) Constitutional & Legal Dimensions Violation of Article 14 (Equality) Court held classification based on child’s age (<3 months) lacks rational nexus with objective of maternity benefits, thus violating reasonable classification test under Article 14. Majority of adoptions occur beyond 3 months due to CARA procedures, making provision discriminatory against most adoptive mothers. Expansion of Article 21 (Right to Life & Dignity) Court recognised adoption as part of reproductive autonomy under Article 21, equating it with biological motherhood. Emphasised that childcare, bonding, and emotional adjustment are central to dignity and family life, not childbirth alone. Interpretation of Social Security Code 2020 Struck down restrictive reading of Section 60(4) and reinterpreted it to grant 12 weeks leave to all adoptive and commissioning mothers. Aligns with welfare intent of Maternity Benefit Act 1961 (amended 2017), which expanded leave to 26 weeks for biological mothers. Governance & Policy Dimensions Gap in Adoption Ecosystem Court noted practical issue: due to legal adoption procedures (CARA guidelines), children are rarely adopted before 3 months, making earlier provision “illusory”. Child-Centric Policy Approach Judgment prioritises best interests of child, aligning with UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC), to which India is a signatory. Recognises need for bonding period and psychological integration irrespective of child’s age. Recognition of Diverse Family Structures Expands state recognition beyond traditional families, including adoptive and commissioning mothers (surrogacy cases under Surrogacy Act 2021). Social & Ethical Dimensions Redefining Motherhood Court emphasised that motherhood is not limited to childbirth, but includes caregiving, nurturing, and emotional labour, reflecting evolving societal norms. Gender Equality & Care Economy By urging paternity leave, Court highlights unequal burden of caregiving on women, consistent with Time Use Survey 2019 showing women spend ~5x more time in unpaid care work. Inclusion & Non-Discrimination Earlier provision excluded adoptive mothers of older children, creating hierarchy between biological and adoptive motherhood, now corrected. Economic Dimension Workforce Participation Better maternity benefits improve female labour force participation (FLFP ~37% in 2023-24, PLFS) by supporting work-life balance. Corporate & Social Security Implications Expanding benefits may increase employer compliance costs, but enhances human capital retention and productivity. Criticisms Absence of Paternity Leave Law India lacks statutory paternity leave in private sector; only 15 days for central government employees, reflecting policy gap. Implementation Challenges Informal sector (over 90% workforce) remains outside formal maternity benefits, limiting real impact of judgment. Limited Coverage of Social Security Code Social Security Code 2020 yet to be fully implemented, raising concerns over uniform enforcement of benefits. Employer Resistance Private sector concerns over cost burden and compliance, especially for MSMEs, may affect implementation. Way Forward Enact Paternity Leave Law Introduce statutory paternity leave (2–4 weeks minimum) as recommended by SC, aligning with global practices (ILO standards). Universalise Social Security Extend maternity and parental benefits to informal sector workers via schemes like e-Shram and PMMVY expansion. Gender-Neutral Care Policy Move towards parental leave model instead of gender-specific benefits, promoting shared caregiving responsibilities. Strengthen Adoption Ecosystem Simplify and expedite CARA procedures, reducing delays and improving child welfare outcomes. Corporate Incentives Provide tax incentives/subsidies to employers for compliance, reducing resistance and promoting inclusive workplace policies. Prelims Pointers Social Security Code 2020 → Section 60(4) Maternity Benefit Act 1961 (Amended 2017) → 26 weeks leave CARA (Central Adoption Resource Authority) → adoption regulation Surrogacy Act 2021 → commissioning mothers Article 14 & 21 → equality and dignity Conclusion Frameworks Rights-Based Approach: “Ensuring equal maternity benefits for adoptive mothers reinforces constitutional guarantees of equality and dignity in family life.” Gender Justice Approach: “True gender equality in caregiving requires moving beyond maternity benefits to inclusive parental leave frameworks.” Conclusion The judgment corrects a structural inequity in social security law, affirming that motherhood is defined by care, not biology. It opens the path toward inclusive, child-centric, and gender-equitable family policies, but requires legislative follow-up, especially on paternity leave and universal coverage. Government clears 23 institutions to set up ‘quantum labs’ Why in News ? Government approved 23 quantum teaching labs across institutions, with 100 more proposals under evaluation, indicating expansion of India’s quantum ecosystem (DST, March 2026). NQM targets development of 50–1,000 qubit quantum computers, satellite-based secure communication, and quantum sensors, marking India’s entry into next-gen computing race. Relevance GS 2 (Governance): Science policy, institutional coordination (DST, NRF), strategic technology governance GS 3 (Science & Technology / Security): Quantum computing, quantum communication (QKD), national security, innovation ecosystem Practice Question Q. India’s National Quantum Mission aims to position the country in the global race for next-generation technologies. Evaluate its strategic significance and challenges. (15 Marks) Core Features of National Quantum Mission Financial & Institutional Framework NQM approved with ₹6003.65 crore (2023–2031), implemented by Department of Science & Technology (DST) to create national quantum ecosystem. Establishment of quantum hubs, teaching labs (23 approved), and NRF-linked research funding, strengthening academia–industry collaboration. Quantum Computing Targets Aim to develop intermediate-scale quantum computers (50–1,000 qubits), enabling complex computations beyond classical systems. Current global benchmark: IBM (1000+ qubit roadmap) and China’s superconducting quantum processors, highlighting competitive gap India seeks to bridge. Quantum Communication Focus on satellite-based Quantum Key Distribution (QKD) for ultra-secure communication, resistant to hacking even by quantum computers. Builds on ISRO’s progress, including quantum communication experiments (2022 free-space QKD test). Quantum Sensing & Materials Development of high-precision quantum sensors for applications in navigation, defence, geology, and medical imaging. Advanced materials research to enable quantum devices and superconducting systems. Significance of NQM Strategic & National Security Dimension Quantum communication enables unhackable encryption, critical for defence and intelligence, especially amid cyber warfare threats. Applications in navigation systems (GPS-independent) benefit Indian Navy and defence operations (context: planned navigation satellite launch 2026). Economic & Industrial Dimension Quantum computing expected to revolutionise sectors like drug discovery, finance, logistics, and AI, with global market projected to reach $90 billion by 2040 (BCG estimates). Enhances India’s position in high-tech manufacturing and semiconductor ecosystem. Scientific & Innovation Ecosystem Establishment of quantum labs (23 approved, 100 under review) builds skilled workforce and research capacity. Integration with Anusandhan National Research Foundation (NRF) strengthens funding and interdisciplinary research. Global Competitiveness India currently lags behind: USA → National Quantum Initiative (2018) China → $10 billion quantum programme NQM helps India avoid technological dependence and strategic vulnerability. Challenges Technological Lag India lacks advanced infrastructure compared to US (Google, IBM quantum systems) and China (quantum satellite Micius). Skilled Manpower Deficit Limited pool of quantum physicists, engineers, and interdisciplinary experts, necessitating large-scale capacity building. High Cost & Complexity Quantum technologies require cryogenic systems, precision engineering, and high R&D investment, increasing cost barriers. Institutional Coordination Issues Multiple agencies (DST, ISRO, DRDO, academia) require strong coordination to avoid duplication and inefficiency. Private Sector Participation Limited involvement of Indian startups and industry compared to global players like IBM, Google, Alibaba, slowing innovation ecosystem. Way Forward Strengthen Human Capital Expand quantum labs, fellowships, and interdisciplinary courses, integrating physics, computer science, and engineering. Public-Private Partnerships Encourage collaboration with startups and industry (e.g., Indian deep-tech firms) for faster innovation and commercialization. Global Collaboration Partner with EU, US, and Japan quantum programmes, leveraging technology transfer and research collaboration. Focus on Niche Areas Prioritise areas like quantum communication and sensing, where India has comparative advantage over full-scale quantum computing. Policy & Regulatory Framework Develop national quantum strategy with cybersecurity, export controls, and ethical guidelines, ensuring responsible deployment. Prelims Pointers NQM (2023–31) → ₹6003.65 crore Qubit → basic unit of quantum information QKD → Quantum Key Distribution 23 quantum labs approved (2026) DST → nodal agency  Conclusion NQM represents a forward-looking investment in frontier technology, aiming to bridge India’s gap with global leaders in quantum science. Its success depends on skilled manpower, institutional coordination, and industry participation, ensuring India transitions from technology adopter to technology leader. Sahitya Akademi announces literary awards for 2025 Why in News ? Sahitya Akademi Awards 2025 announced for 24 recognised languages, after a delay due to Union Ministry of Culture’s directive on restructuring process (Dec 2025). Awards include 8 poetry, 4 novels, 6 short stories, 2 essays, 1 literary criticism, 1 autobiography, 2 memoirs, reflecting diversity of literary forms. Relevance GS 1 (Art & Culture): Literary diversity, linguistic plurality, preservation of regional languages GS 2 (Governance): Autonomy of cultural institutions, state oversight vs independence, cultural policy Practice Question Q. The functioning of cultural institutions like the Sahitya Akademi raises questions about autonomy and accountability. Critically examine. (15 Marks) About Sahitya Akademi  Institutional Framework Established in 1954, Sahitya Akademi is India’s National Academy of Letters, promoting literature across 24 recognised languages (including English, Sanskrit, and tribal languages like Santali). Functions as an autonomous body under Ministry of Culture, alongside Sangeet Natak Akademi and Lalit Kala Akademi. Award Structure Annual awards recognise outstanding literary works, selected by expert jury panels, ensuring peer-reviewed credibility. Award includes ₹1 lakh, copper plaque, and shawl, symbolising national recognition. Key Highlights of Sahitya Akademi Awards 2025 Diversity of Literary Genres Awards distributed across genres: Poetry (8 awards) Novels (4) Short stories (6) Memoirs (2), essays (2), criticism (1), autobiography (1) Reflects broad literary ecosystem, moving beyond traditional fiction to include critical and autobiographical writing. Linguistic Diversity Winners span 24 Indian languages, including Hindi (Mamta Kalia), English (Navtej Sarna), Tamil (Sa Tamilselvan), Telugu (Nandini Sidha Reddy). Inclusion of Santali, Manipuri, Rajasthani, Sindhi reflects commitment to linguistic inclusivity and preservation of regional literature. Representation of Contemporary Themes Works include memoirs, literary criticism, and modern narratives, indicating shift toward personal histories, social critique, and evolving literary discourse. Governance & Institutional Issues Delay due to Government Intervention Awards announcement delayed after Ministry of Culture directive (Dec 2025) mandating prior approval for restructuring of awards process. Indicates increasing administrative oversight over autonomous cultural bodies. Autonomy vs Accountability Debate Sahitya Akademi is designed as autonomous institution, but MoU (July 2025) requires consultation with Ministry for major decisions. Raises concerns about erosion of institutional independence, affecting credibility of cultural recognition systems. Broader Governance Context Similar oversight applied to NSD, Sangeet Natak Akademi, Lalit Kala Akademi, indicating systemic trend in cultural governance. Significance of Sahitya Akademi Awards Cultural Integration Promotes unity in diversity, recognising literature across languages and regions, strengthening national cultural identity. Preservation of Linguistic Heritage Supports endangered and regional languages like Santali and Manipuri, aligning with Eighth Schedule expansion debates. Encouragement of Literary Excellence Provides national platform for authors, encouraging creative writing, critical thought, and intellectual discourse. Soft Power & Cultural Diplomacy Indian literature contributes to global cultural presence, with authors like Rabindranath Tagore (Nobel laureate) setting precedent for literary diplomacy. Challenges Politicisation of Cultural Institutions Government intervention raises concerns about bias, censorship, or influence, potentially undermining credibility of awards. Delayed Announcements 2025 awards announced after 3-month delay, affecting institutional reputation and predictability of processes. Limited Public Engagement Despite diversity, awards often remain confined to literary circles, with limited outreach to wider audience. Language Hierarchies Perception that dominant languages (Hindi, English) receive more visibility compared to tribal and regional languages. Way Forward Strengthen Institutional Autonomy Ensure clear boundaries between Ministry oversight and Akademi independence, preserving credibility of award process. Transparent Selection Process Publish jury criteria, evaluation process, and timelines, enhancing trust and accountability. Promote Regional Literature Increase translation initiatives (e.g., Sahitya Akademi Translation Programme) to expand readership across languages. Digital Outreach Use digital platforms, e-books, and literary festivals to make award-winning works accessible to wider audience. Cultural Policy Reform Develop comprehensive framework balancing autonomy, accountability, and cultural promotion, aligning with constitutional values. Prelims Pointers Sahitya Akademi → established 1954 Recognises 24 languages Award includes ₹1 lakh + plaque + shawl Works selected by jury panels Autonomous body under Ministry of Culture Conclusion Sahitya Akademi Awards 2025 reaffirm India’s literary diversity and creative vitality, while also exposing governance challenges in cultural institutions. Ensuring institutional autonomy, transparency, and inclusivity will be key to sustaining the Akademi’s role as the custodian of India’s literary heritage. The fate of the Washington Consensus, once talisman  Why in News ? Article argues that Washington Consensus (WC) — based on liberalisation, privatisation, deregulation (LPG) — is no longer relevant in a multipolar, digital, and geopolitically fragmented world (2025–26 context). Global shift toward protectionism, industrial policy, and state intervention seen in US tariffs (Trump-era revival), EU subsidies, China’s state-led model. Relevance GS 2 (International Relations): Global economic governance, IMF–World Bank role, multipolarity GS 3 (Economy): Liberalisation, industrial policy, inequality, globalisation vs protectionism Practice Question Q. The decline of the Washington Consensus reflects changing realities of the global economic order. Analyse with reference to emerging development models. (15 Marks) What was the Washington Consensus?  Core Principles (John Williamson, 1989) Ten policy prescriptions including fiscal discipline, tax reforms, trade liberalisation, FDI openness, privatisation, deregulation, and property rights protection. Promoted by IMF, World Bank, and US Treasury, especially during Latin American debt crisis (1980s). Ideological Foundations Rooted in Reaganomics (USA) and Thatcherism (UK), emphasising free markets and minimal state intervention. Operationalised through Structural Adjustment Programmes (SAPs) imposed on developing countries. Legacy & Outcomes  Mixed Economic Outcomes Some success stories: Chile (1980s reforms) East Asian economies (partial adoption with state control) Failures: Latin America debt crises (1980s–90s) Post-Soviet transitions → inequality, economic collapse (World Bank studies) Financial Instability Asian Financial Crisis (1997) exposed risks of capital account liberalisation without regulatory capacity. Global Financial Crisis (2008) highlighted dangers of excess deregulation in financial markets. Rising Inequality IMF later acknowledged (2016 report) that neoliberal policies increased inequality, contradicting earlier “trickle-down growth” assumption. Policy Space Constraints WTO rules like TRIPS and TRIMs limited developing countries’ ability to pursue industrial policy and subsidies. Contradiction: Countries like South Korea, Taiwan, Japan industrialised using state intervention, not WC prescriptions. Why Washington Consensus is Obsolete Today ? Multipolar World Order Rise of China, India, Global South challenges US-led economic order, reducing dominance of WC institutions. Geopolitics & Economic Nationalism Revival of tariffs and subsidies (US CHIPS Act 2022, EU Green Deal subsidies) shows shift toward strategic protectionism. Supply chains reoriented for national security (China+1 strategy, friend-shoring). Digital Economy Transformation WC did not anticipate AI, digital trade, data governance, now central to economic policy (India’s Digital Public Infrastructure model). Climate & Sustainability Imperatives Need for green subsidies, carbon policies, climate finance, contradicting WC’s minimal state intervention approach. Social Equity & Welfare Growing focus on inequality, social safety nets, redistribution, especially after COVID-19 (global fiscal stimulus > $10 trillion, IMF). Emerging Alternatives   Post-Washington Consensus Emphasises: State intervention + market efficiency Social safety nets Inclusive growth Example: India’s welfare + growth model (DBT, PLI schemes, infrastructure push). Beijing Consensus Model Based on: State-led industrial policy Gradual liberalisation Authoritarian governance with economic focus Example: China’s rise to world’s second-largest economy (GDP ~$18 trillion, 2025 IMF). Pragmatic Eclecticism (Current Reality) Countries adopt hybrid models: Markets + state intervention Trade openness + strategic protectionism Growth + redistribution India’s Perspective India’s Departure from Pure WC 1991 reforms adopted LPG model, but India retained: Public sector role (PSUs, welfare schemes) Industrial policy (PLI schemes, Make in India) Current Policy Mix Combines: Fiscal prudence (FRBM framework) State intervention (₹10 lakh crore infra push, Union Budget) Digital governance (UPI, Aadhaar) Strategic Autonomy India balances: Global integration (FTAs) Domestic protection (tariffs, Atmanirbhar Bharat) Challenges of New Paradigm Risk of Protectionism Excessive tariffs may reduce efficiency and global trade integration, as seen in WTO stagnation (Doha Round failure). Policy Uncertainty Absence of clear consensus leads to fragmented global economic order, increasing unpredictability for developing countries. Inequality & Governance Issues Even new models risk elite capture and uneven redistribution, requiring strong institutions. Way Forward Context-Specific Policy Framework Move away from one-size-fits-all models toward country-specific development strategies, aligned with institutional capacity. Balanced State-Market Approach Combine: Market efficiency Strategic state intervention Strong regulatory institutions Focus on Human Capital Invest in education, healthcare, and skilling, as seen in East Asian success models. Climate & Digital Integration Develop policies for green growth, AI governance, and digital trade, addressing 21st-century challenges. Reform Global Institutions Strengthen IMF, World Bank, WTO reforms, ensuring greater voice for Global South (India, Africa). Prelims Pointers Washington Consensus → 1989, John Williamson SAPs → IMF/World Bank reforms TRIPS/TRIMs → WTO agreements Asian Financial Crisis → 1997 Global Financial Crisis → 2008 Conclusion The Washington Consensus is not entirely irrelevant, but its universalist, rigid application has lost credibility in today’s complex global landscape. The emerging paradigm is one of pragmatic pluralism, where nations design policies suited to their economic, political, and technological realities, marking the end of a single dominant economic doctrine. On scientific collaborations in BRICS Why in News ? BRICS emerging as a key platform for Science, Technology & Innovation (STI) cooperation amid techno-nationalism, sanctions, and export controls (2020s). Expansion to BRICS+ (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Egypt, Iran, Ethiopia, Indonesia) enhances Global South collaboration but raises coordination challenges. Relevance GS 2 (International Relations): BRICS+, global governance, South-South cooperation, New Development Bank GS 3 (Science & Technology / Economy): Innovation ecosystems, AI governance, R&D collaboration, digital public goods Practice Question Q. BRICS cooperation in science and technology represents an emerging alternative innovation ecosystem for the Global South. Discuss its potential and limitations. (15 Marks) Institutional & Policy Framework Evolution of STI Cooperation STI formally recognised in 2011, strengthened via 2015 MoU, making it a core pillar of BRICS cooperation. BRICS Action Plan for Innovation (2017–2020) institutionalised collaboration via STIEP Working Group focusing on entrepreneurship, tech transfer, and incubation. Key Institutional Mechanisms Annual STI Ministerial Meetings approve joint research agendas and funding priorities. National agencies (India: CSIR, DBT) coordinate calls, reflecting decentralised yet coordinated model. Emerging Platforms BRICS Technology Transfer Centre (TTC) → facilitates cross-border commercialisation of technologies. iBRICS, BRICS Institute of Future Networks → focus on ICT, AI, and digital ecosystems. Key Areas of Cooperation Frontier Technologies Focus areas include AI, High-Performance Computing (HPC), advanced materials, ICT, and space cooperation (2021 agreement). Development-Oriented Research Shift toward energy, water, health, environment, especially post-COVID, prioritising public health, vaccines, and digital health systems. AI Governance BRICS 2025 AI Declaration elevates AI as central pillar, advocating inclusive, development-oriented governance, countering Western tech dominance. Significance of BRICS STI Alternative to Western Tech Hegemony Provides Global South platform against US-led tech restrictions and export controls (e.g., semiconductor bans on China). Resource & Demographic Advantage BRICS accounts for: ~40% global population Significant share of global GDP (~30% PPP) Enables scale in innovation, data economy, and resource-based technologies. Development Finance Linkages Through New Development Bank (NDB), supports innovation-led infrastructure and sustainable development projects. Challenges Low R&D Investment Except China, BRICS countries have low GERD (<1% of GDP for India) compared to South Korea (~4.8%), indicating innovation gap. Institutional Weakness Lack of permanent secretariat or central funding mechanism, with rotating presidency limiting long-term continuity. Uneven Participation New BRICS+ members show limited engagement (only Egypt & Iran joined recent calls), reflecting integration challenges. Limited Mega-Science Projects Areas like ocean research, polar science, particle physics lag due to high capital and coordination requirements. Heterogeneity of Members Wide differences in economic development and scientific capacity hinder consensus-building (as noted by Irina Dezhina). Way Forward Establish Permanent STI Secretariat Modelled on EU Horizon Programme, to manage funding, evaluation, and long-term projects. Scale Mega-Science Projects Launch flagship projects in climate tech, space, biotech, enhancing global scientific relevance. Increase R&D Investment Target GERD ≥2% of GDP, especially for India and emerging BRICS members. Strengthen South-South Collaboration Promote paired collaborations (India–Brazil, China–South Africa) for focused outcomes. Focus on AI & Digital Public Goods Leverage India’s Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar) as model for Global South tech cooperation. Prelims Pointers BRICS+ expansion (2023–25) NDB → Shanghai HQ STIEP → innovation working group GERD (India ~0.7% GDP) AI Declaration 2025 (BRICS) Conclusion BRICS STI cooperation has moved from symbolic collaboration to strategic innovation partnership, but requires institutional deepening and funding scale-up to become globally transformative. BRICS – Basics Formation & Members BRIC coined in 2001 (Jim O’Neill, Goldman Sachs); formal grouping in 2009 (Yekaterinburg Summit), with South Africa added in 2010 → BRICS. Current Members (Expanded BRICS+) Core: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa New entrants (2023–25): Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia Objectives Promote multipolar world order, reducing Western dominance (US-led institutions). Enhance cooperation in economy, trade, development finance, and global governance reforms. Key Features Represents: ~40–45% global population ~30% global GDP (PPP basis) Major players in energy, minerals, agriculture, and manufacturing. Why Transgender Protection (Amendment) Bill 2026 has attracted criticism Source : The Indian Express Why in News ? Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) (Amendment) Bill, 2026 criticised for removing self-identification of gender and introducing mandatory medical certification. Seen as a rollback of Supreme Court’s NALSA (2014) judgment, triggering protests by LGBTQ+ groups across India. Relevance GS 1 (Society): Gender identity, social inclusion, marginalised communities GS 2 (Polity & Governance): NALSA judgment (2014), Articles 14 & 21, rights-based vs regulatory approach Practice Question Q. The Transgender Persons (Amendment) Bill, 2026 raises concerns about the balance between state regulation and individual autonomy. Critically examine. (15 Marks) Constitutional & Legal Dimensions Violation of NALSA Judgment (2014) In National Legal Services Authority v. Union of India (2014), SC recognised right to self-identify gender as part of Article 21 (dignity and autonomy). Amendment removes self-perceived gender identity, contradicting SC’s recognition of “third gender” and self-identification rights. Article 14 (Equality) Concerns Mandatory medical certification creates unequal treatment, as cisgender individuals do not require such validation for identity recognition. Excludes groups like trans men and non-binary persons, violating reasonable classification principle. Article 21 (Right to Dignity & Privacy) Medical verification intrudes into bodily autonomy and privacy, recognised in Puttaswamy judgment (2017). Pathologises identity, undermining dignity of transgender persons. Conflict with International Norms Violates Yogyakarta Principles (2006) which affirm self-determined gender identity as a human right. Contradicts India’s obligations under ICCPR and UN Human Rights frameworks. Governance & Administrative Dimensions Shift to Medicalised Bureaucracy Requires certification by medical boards, increasing dependence on state-controlled institutions. Risks delays, corruption, and exclusion due to limited healthcare access in India (rural–urban divide). Implementation Challenges India lacks adequate gender-sensitive healthcare infrastructure, making certification process impractical for many. Could exclude economically weaker transgender persons (~90% informal workforce, community estimates). Graded Punishments Provision Bill introduces graded penalties for crimes (abduction, forced labour, exploitation), strengthening protection framework. However, activists argue criminal provisions cannot compensate for denial of identity rights. Social & Ethical Dimensions Erasure of Identity Narrow definition excludes: Trans men Non-binary persons assigned female at birth Leads to identity invisibilisation, affecting access to welfare schemes and legal recognition. Pathologisation of Gender Medical certification treats transgender identity as a “condition” requiring validation, reinforcing stigma. Activists term it “transpathia”, reversing progress toward de-medicalisation of gender identity. Impact on Marginalised Communities Transgender community already faces: High unemployment (~90% informal sector) Limited education access (literacy ~56%, Census 2011) Additional barriers worsen social exclusion and vulnerability. Economic Dimension Access to Welfare & Employment Identity recognition is prerequisite for: Reservation policies (as per NALSA) Government schemes (SMILE scheme, scholarships) Medical certification may delay or deny access, affecting economic empowerment. Key Criticisms Rollback of Hard-Won Rights Removes self-identification, core achievement of NALSA judgment, seen as constitutional regression. Exclusionary Definition Narrow definition ignores diverse gender identities, especially modern non-binary expressions. Accessibility Issues Medical certification is costly, inaccessible, and bureaucratic, disproportionately affecting poor and rural trans persons. Overemphasis on Control Shifts focus from empowerment → regulation, undermining trust between state and community. Way Forward Restore Self-Identification Principle Align law with NALSA (2014) by reinstating self-perceived gender identity without medical requirement. Inclusive Definition Expand definition to include trans men, non-binary persons, and diverse gender identities, ensuring inclusivity. Strengthen Welfare Framework Improve schemes like SMILE (Support for Marginalised Individuals for Livelihood and Enterprise) for socio-economic upliftment. Sensitisation & Institutional Reform Train medical boards, police, and administrators to reduce discrimination and improve service delivery. Gender-Neutral Policy Approach Move toward rights-based, dignity-centric framework, integrating transgender rights into broader social justice policies. Prelims Pointers NALSA v. Union of India (2014) → right to self-identification Transgender Persons Act 2019 → definition includes intersex, genderqueer, sociocultural identities Puttaswamy (2017) → right to privacy Yogyakarta Principles (2006) → gender identity rights Conclusion The Amendment Bill, 2026 risks reversing progressive jurisprudence by undermining self-identification and imposing medical barriers. Ensuring inclusive, rights-based, and dignity-centric legal frameworks is essential for advancing substantive equality for transgender persons in India.  

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 17 March 2026

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

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 17 March 2026

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

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 17 March 2026

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

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 16 March 2026

Content AAHAR 2026: The International Food & Hospitality Fair MSME Ministry Completes 364 MSE-CDP Projects; SFURTI Boosts Traditional Industry Clusters AAHAR 2026: The International Food & Hospitality Fair Why in News? The 40th edition of AAHAR – International Food & Hospitality Fair was held 10–14 March 2026 at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi, jointly organised by Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI) and India Trade Promotion Organisation (ITPO). AAHAR 2026 showcased global brands, regional enterprises, start-ups, hospitality institutions and distributors, reinforcing its position as South Asia’s leading B2B platform for food processing, hospitality, packaging and supply chain industries. The event highlighted entrepreneurial success stories, export opportunities and sustainable packaging innovations, aligning with India’s policy push under Make in India, Atmanirbhar Bharat and food processing sector expansion strategies. Relevance GS II – Governance: Demonstrates the role of ITPO and government trade promotion platforms in facilitating global business linkages and MSME participation. GS III – Economy: Highlights food processing sector growth, agri value addition and export promotion in India’s agro-industrial economy. Practice Question “Government-supported trade promotion platforms such as international exhibitions and trade fairs play an important role in strengthening India’s global economic engagement.” Discuss the role of institutions like ITPO in promoting MSMEs and enhancing India’s trade diplomacy. (10/15 marks) AAHAR – International Food & Hospitality Fair Overview and Evolution AAHAR is an annual international B2B exhibition focusing on food processing, hospitality equipment, beverages, ingredients and packaging, organised by ITPO and MoFPI to promote trade, innovation and export opportunities. First launched in 1986, the exhibition has grown into one of South Asia’s largest food and hospitality trade fairs, attracting thousands of exhibitors and buyers from India and abroad annually. Institutional and Governance Framework India Trade Promotion Organisation (ITPO), established 1977, operates under Ministry of Commerce & Industry and manages major exhibition venues including Bharat Mandapam, facilitating trade fairs and international business networking platforms. Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI) collaborates with AAHAR to promote food processing investment, technology adoption and export promotion, supporting national initiatives such as Pradhan Mantri Kisan Sampada Yojana (PMKSY). State governments participate through State Pavilions, offering free exhibition spaces or subsidies to MSMEs, enabling regional food brands and agri-enterprises to access global markets and buyers. Economic Significance for Food Processing Sector India’s food processing industry contributes about 13% to manufacturing GDP and 6% to overall GDP, making exhibitions like AAHAR vital platforms for technology transfer, trade networking and export promotion. The sector recorded USD 41.3 billion FDI inflows between 2000–2024, indicating rising global interest in India’s processed foods, beverages, dairy and packaged goods markets. With India becoming the world’s largest producer of milk, pulses and spices, events like AAHAR connect farmers, processors, hospitality sector and global buyers, strengthening farm-to-market value chains. Role in Export Promotion and Global Trade AAHAR facilitates international buyer–seller meets, enabling Indian food brands to access markets in Europe, Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Oceania and Southeast Asia, expanding India’s processed food export footprint. Example: RG Foods (Kerala) exports products to 31 countries including Australia, New Zealand, Qatar and European markets, illustrating how participation enhances global supply chain integration. India’s agri and processed food exports reached about USD 53 billion in 2023–24, supported by institutional mechanisms such as APEDA export promotion and international trade exhibitions. MSME and Entrepreneurial Ecosystem AAHAR serves as an incubation ecosystem where entrepreneurs initially attend as buyers or visitors and later participate as exhibitors, enabling knowledge transfer, industry exposure and venture creation. Example: TGR Foods (Ahmedabad) transitioned from a 10-year visitor to exhibitor, demonstrating how exhibitions facilitate market understanding, supplier networks and entrepreneurship in food processing value chains. Such platforms particularly benefit MSMEs and start-ups, which contribute over 45% of India’s manufacturing output and 40% of exports, according to Ministry of MSME statistics. Innovation and Sustainability in Food Industry The exhibition promotes sustainable packaging, food innovation and technology adoption, reflecting global industry trends toward eco-friendly materials and circular economy models. Example: Packmold’s beverage cups with aqua coating replace traditional plastic coatings, aligning with India’s Single-Use Plastic Ban (2022) and Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) framework. Such innovations support India’s commitments under SDG-12 (Responsible Consumption and Production) and Plastic Waste Management Rules 2016 (amended 2022). Skill Development and Human Capital Hospitality and culinary students attending AAHAR gain exposure to industry practices, equipment, supply chains and product development, bridging the academia–industry gap in hospitality education. India’s tourism and hospitality sector employs over 40 million people, making professional exposure events essential for skilling under initiatives like Skill India and National Skill Development Mission. Live demonstrations by global chefs and food technologists promote culinary innovation, food presentation techniques and gastronomy entrepreneurship. Regional Enterprise Promotion State pavilions enable regional food traditions and products to gain visibility, promoting Geographical Indications (GI), traditional foods and local value-added products in national and international markets. Example: Kerala companies showcased Palakkadan Vadi Matta rice, coconut oil, traditional snacks and ready-to-use pastes, reflecting India’s diverse agro-processing ecosystem and cultural food heritage. Regional promotion supports One District One Product (ODOP) initiatives, strengthening rural industrialisation and agri-based entrepreneurship. Distribution and Market Expansion Successful companies leverage AAHAR to build national distribution networks and export linkages, expanding beyond regional markets through retail partnerships and logistics networks. Example: RG Foods operates through 450 distributors and supplies products to about 1.5 lakh retail outlets across Kerala, demonstrating scalable distribution ecosystems in the FMCG sector. Such networks support domestic market integration and export readiness, aligning with India’s objective of becoming a global food processing hub. Challenges / Criticisms Institutional and Structural Issues Despite exhibitions like AAHAR, India’s food processing share of agricultural output remains around 10–12%, significantly lower than developed economies where processing exceeds 60–70%. Fragmented supply chains, inadequate cold storage infrastructure and logistics gaps increase post-harvest losses, estimated by ICAR at nearly ₹92,651 crore annually across perishables. MSME and Export Barriers Many small enterprises face high certification costs (HACCP, ISO, global food safety standards) and limited access to international distribution channels, restricting export expansion despite exposure through trade fairs. Regulatory and Compliance Issues Complex regulations under FSSAI, packaging norms, labeling requirements and export documentation increase compliance burden for start-ups and small food businesses, slowing their scaling potential. Way Forward Strengthen global food trade promotion platforms by integrating AAHAR with APEDA buyer-seller meets, export promotion councils and international food expos to boost India’s processed food exports. Expand cold chain infrastructure, mega food parks and agro-processing clusters under PMKSY, improving farm-to-processing supply chains and reducing post-harvest losses. Promote sustainable food systems and green packaging innovation, incentivising MSMEs to adopt biodegradable materials, circular packaging models and EPR compliance. Integrate digital platforms and e-commerce linkages with trade fairs to help MSMEs access global markets, digital B2B marketplaces and export logistics support. Prelims Pointers AAHAR – International B2B Food & Hospitality Exhibition. Organised by India Trade Promotion Organisation (ITPO) with Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI). Venue: Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi (redeveloped Pragati Maidan). First edition: 1986. Focus areas: food processing, hospitality equipment, packaging, ingredients, beverages and supply chains. Part of India’s broader trade promotion ecosystem alongside events like India International Trade Fair (IITF). MSME Ministry Completes 364 MSE-CDP Projects; SFURTI Boosts Traditional Industry Clusters Why in News? Ministry of MSME reported major progress in cluster development schemes: 364 MSE-CDP projects completed out of 606 approved, while SFURTI approved 513 clusters benefiting about 3.03 lakh artisans across India. The announcement highlighted the role of cluster-based industrial development in improving productivity, digital adoption, infrastructure and market linkages for MSMEs, aligning with Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India strategies. Relevance   GS II – Governance: Illustrates cluster-based development through cooperative federalism, where States propose and implement MSME clusters. GS III – Economy: Strengthens MSME competitiveness, manufacturing productivity and export potential, crucial for India’s GDP and employment. Practice Question Cluster-based development programmes require effective coordination between the Centre, States and local institutions.” Analyse how schemes such as MSE-CDP reflect cooperative federalism in promoting regional industrial ecosystems. (10/15 marks) MSME Sector in India MSMEs constitute nearly 30% of India’s GDP, 45% of manufacturing output and about 48% of exports, employing over 11 crore people, making them the backbone of inclusive industrial growth. India has approximately 6.33 crore MSMEs (NSS 73rd Round), with over 99% classified as micro enterprises, highlighting the importance of cluster-based infrastructure and shared services for competitiveness. MSME definition revised under Atmanirbhar Bharat (2020) combining investment and turnover criteria, enabling enterprises to grow without losing policy support benefits. Cluster-Based Development: Concept Industrial clusters refer to geographic concentrations of interconnected firms, suppliers, service providers and institutions, enhancing innovation, efficiency, economies of scale and collective competitiveness. Cluster development reduces production costs through shared infrastructure, technology centres and training facilities, enabling small enterprises to compete with large-scale manufacturing ecosystems. India adopted cluster development following recommendations from UNIDO and MSME policy frameworks, recognising clusters as engines of regional industrialisation and rural employment generation. Micro and Small Enterprises-Cluster Development Programme (MSE-CDP) MSE-CDP is a Central Sector Scheme of Ministry of MSME aimed at improving productivity, competitiveness and technology adoption among micro and small enterprises through cluster-based infrastructure. Since inception, 606 projects have been approved nationwide, out of which 364 projects are completed and 242 are currently ongoing, strengthening industrial ecosystems across multiple sectors. The scheme supports Common Facility Centres (CFCs) and Infrastructure Development (ID) projects, enabling enterprises to access shared machinery, R&D facilities, testing labs and design centres. Key Components of MSE-CDP Common Facility Centres (CFCs) provide shared access to advanced manufacturing technologies such as Industry 4.0 tools, additive manufacturing, digital infrastructure and automated production systems. The scheme promotes design and incubation centres, training and skill upgradation facilities, R&D centres and renewable energy installations including solar, wind and bio-energy systems for green manufacturing. Greenfield cluster development under the scheme supports holistic industrial ecosystems by integrating technology, infrastructure, innovation, logistics and energy management systems. Demand-Driven Implementation Model MSE-CDP is a demand-driven scheme, where State Governments and Union Territories submit cluster proposals based on local industrial needs, ensuring bottom-up planning and regional industrial diversification. This decentralised approach strengthens cooperative federalism, enabling States to design cluster proposals tailored to regional comparative advantages such as textiles, food processing, handicrafts or engineering. Scheme of Fund for Regeneration of Traditional Industries (SFURTI) SFURTI, launched in 2005 and revamped in 2015, aims to organise traditional artisans into clusters, improving productivity, skill development, branding and market access. Since 2015-16, 513 clusters have been approved with Government assistance of ₹1,332.95 crore, benefiting around 3.03 lakh artisans engaged in handicrafts, handloom, coir, agro-processing and honey sectors. As of 2026, 378 clusters are operational and 135 clusters are under implementation, strengthening rural livelihoods and preservation of traditional crafts. Socio-Economic Significance of SFURTI The scheme supports labour-intensive traditional industries, enabling artisans to transition from informal household production to organised cluster-based enterprises. SFURTI clusters enhance value addition through common processing facilities, branding, packaging and marketing support, improving income levels of rural artisans and preventing distress migration. The initiative contributes to women empowerment and rural employment, particularly in sectors such as handloom, coir, bamboo crafts and honey production. Digital Transformation of MSMEs The Government is promoting digital adoption among MSMEs, including digital payments, IoT-enabled production systems, e-commerce platforms and AI-driven supply chain management. Digital empowerment initiatives include Udyam Registration, DigiLocker integration, IndiaAI datasets platform, Tool Rooms training programmes and MSME Innovative Scheme for technology incubation. Connectivity infrastructure such as BharatNet and PM-WANI public Wi-Fi networks enable MSMEs in rural areas to access digital markets and online business platforms. Trade Enablement and Marketing (TEAM) Scheme The TEAM Scheme facilitates onboarding of micro and small enterprises onto the Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC), enabling small businesses to participate in India’s digital commerce ecosystem. Financial assistance is provided to Seller Network Participants (SNPs) for services such as product cataloguing, logistics support, packaging design and digital account management. The scheme prioritises inclusive entrepreneurship, ensuring 50% of beneficiaries are women-owned MSMEs, promoting gender equity in digital commerce. Technological and Green Transformation MSME schemes increasingly integrate green technologies and energy-efficient manufacturing, supported through initiatives such as MSE Green Investment for Financing Transformation Scheme. Adoption of renewable energy, waste reduction technologies and energy management systems reduces operational costs while aligning MSMEs with India’s climate commitments under the Paris Agreement. Such initiatives support SDG-9 (Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure) and SDG-8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth). Challenges and Criticisms Infrastructure and Capacity Constraints Many MSME clusters suffer from limited infrastructure, outdated machinery and weak logistics networks, restricting productivity despite government support programmes. Technology Adoption Gap MSMEs often face financial constraints and skill shortages, limiting their ability to adopt Industry 4.0 technologies, AI-based production systems and digital supply chains. Market Access Barriers Small enterprises struggle with branding, global certification standards and export logistics, reducing their competitiveness in international markets despite cluster-level support. Institutional Coordination Issues Cluster schemes require coordination between central ministries, state governments, industry associations and financial institutions, leading to delays in implementation and infrastructure development. Way Forward Strengthen cluster-level innovation ecosystems by linking MSME clusters with research institutions, start-up incubators and technology parks for continuous technological upgrading. Expand credit access through digital lending platforms, credit guarantee schemes and fintech integration, reducing financing barriers for MSME technology adoption. Promote export-oriented MSME clusters through integration with Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes, Free Trade Agreements and export promotion councils. Enhance digital capacity building programmes and Industry 4.0 training centres within clusters to improve productivity and global competitiveness. Prelims Pointers MSE-CDP: Central Sector Scheme under Ministry of MSME for cluster-based infrastructure development. Supports Common Facility Centres (CFCs) and Infrastructure Development Projects. 606 projects approved; 364 completed and 242 ongoing (2026). SFURTI: Scheme to promote traditional artisan clusters. 513 clusters approved since 2015-16, benefiting ~3.03 lakh artisans with ₹1,332.95 crore support. TEAM Scheme: Helps MSMEs onboard onto Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC).