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Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 08 January 2026

Content DGMS Marks 125 Years  Indusfood 2026 DGMS Marks 125 Years  Why in News ? Directorate General of Mines Safety (DGMS) celebrated its 125th Foundation Day at Dhanbad, Jharkhand. Relevance GS-III (Economy / Internal Security / Industry) Mining sector governance: Safety standards in coal, metalliferous & oil mines Occupational Safety & Health (OSH): Link with Mines Act, 1952 Sustainable industrial growth: Safe mining as prerequisite for economic growth DGMS: Basics You Must Know Established: 1902 (colonial-era origin; one of India’s oldest regulators) Ministry: Ministry of Labour & Employment Headquarters: Dhanbad, Jharkhand Mandate: Safety, health and welfare of mine workers Regulation of coal, metalliferous & oil mines Legal framework: Mines Act, 1952 Rules & Regulations framed under it Core Functions of DGMS Framing and enforcing mine safety standards Inspection of mines and accident investigation Approval of mining plans from safety perspective Training, certification & rescue preparedness Advising Centre and States on mine safety policy Institutional Reforms & Symbolism Launch of: New DGMS Logo Digital Compendium of Best Practices Purpose: Modern institutional identity Knowledge sharing & capacity building Indusfood 2026 Why in News ? Indusfood 2026, India’s flagship global Food & Beverage (F&B) sourcing exhibition, is being held in Greater Noida. Key announcements: India–UAE Food Corridor launch APEDA’s ‘Bharati Initiative’ for agri-food start-ups Reflects India’s expanding role in global food trade, food processing, and agri-exports. Relevance GS-III (Economy / Agriculture / Infrastructure) Agri-exports & food processing Export-led growth strategy: Value-added food products Role of institutions: TPCI APEDA What is Indusfood?  Event: Indusfood 2026 (9th edition) Nature: Global Food & Beverage sourcing exhibition Organiser: Trade Promotion Council of India Venue: India Expo Centre & Mart, Greater Noida Objective: Position India as a reliable global food supplier Facilitate B2B trade, sourcing, and export partnerships Institutional & Ministerial Linkage Inaugurated by Union Minister of Food Processing Industries Demonstrates: Government backing for food processing sector Integration of trade, agriculture, and industry policy Scale & Global Outreach Participation from 120+ countries Thousands of verified global buyers Presence of: International trade delegations Retail chains Global chefs & institutions Indicates India’s shift from regional exporter → global agri-food hub India–UAE Food Corridor   Launched by Abu Dhabi Food Hub Purpose: Strengthen bilateral food trade Improve supply chain efficiency Enhance food security (especially for UAE) Strategic significance: UAE as a re-export hub India as a reliable food surplus producer Part of India’s broader West Asia economic diplomacy APEDA’s ‘Bharati Initiative’ Implemented by Agricultural and Processed Food Products Export Development Authority Format: Shark Tank–style pitching Direct interaction with global buyers Focus: Agri-food start-ups Innovation, branding, value-addition Policy relevance: Aligns with Start-up India Boosts non-traditional agricultural exports Logistics & Export Infrastructure ‘Bharat Mart’ session by DP World Focus areas: Port-led logistics Cold chain integration Trade facilitation Addresses structural bottleneck: High logistics cost in agri-exports Culinary Diplomacy & Soft Power  World Culinary Heritage Conference India on a Platter Gala Dinner Role: Promotes Indian cuisine globally Links culture with commerce Example of soft power via food diplomacy Strategic Significance for India Strengthens: Export-led growth Agri-industrialisation Global value chain integration Reinforces India’s image as: Trusted food supplier Stable trade partner

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 08 January 2026

Content Natgrid’, the search engine of digital authoritarianism Fine-tune this signal to sharpen India’s AMR battle ‘Natgrid’, the search engine of digital authoritarianism Context & Background 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks (2008): Over 160 lives lost Exposed serious intelligence coordination failures Core problem identified: Intelligence inputs existed Failure lay in fragmentation, poor aggregation, and weak institutional response Example: David Headley’s travel, visas, hotel stays created data trails No system stitched these into a preventive warning Relevance GS-III (Internal Security & Technology) Counter-terrorism architecture post-26/11 Use of big data, AI, analytics in internal security Limits of techno-solutionism in intelligence failures Shift from targeted intelligence to mass surveillance Institutional capacity vs technological capacity Practice Question Q1.“Security without accountability erodes democracy.”Critically examine this statement in the context of the expansion of NATGRID in India.(250 Words) Birth of NATGRID: The Original Rationale Psychological and political aftermath of 26/11 led to: Expansion of intelligence architecture Emergence of National Intelligence Grid (NATGRID) as the technological solution Core idea: A middleware platform Enables selected agencies to query multiple databases in real time Objective: Prevent future terror attacks through data integration Design & Scope of NATGRID Access: Initially 11 central intelligence and investigative agencies Data sources (21 categories): Identity records Travel & immigration Financial transactions Telecom metadata Property & asset databases Function: Acts as a search-and-correlation layer, not a data owner Constitutional & Legal Concerns Key constitutional question: Can a mass surveillance system function without: Parliamentary law Independent oversight? Timeline: 2009: Public announcement 2010: Cabinet concerns on safeguards and privacy 2012: Cleared by executive order + CCS, not Parliament Funding: ₹1,002.97 crore (Horizon–I) Core issue: No statutory framework No oversight mechanism From ‘Vaporware’ to Reality Long delays created belief NATGRID was symbolic Situation changed in 2025: ~45,000 queries per month Usage expanded to: State police forces Officers down to Superintendent of Police rank Shift: From elite intelligence tool → routine policing infrastructure Integration with NPR: A Structural Turning Point NATGRID reportedly integrated with National Population Register (NPR) NPR contains: Data of ~1.19 billion residents Household, lineage and demographic linkages Why this is critical: Moves from event-based intelligence To population-wide surveillance Political sensitivity: NPR closely linked with NRC debates Result: Intelligence grid becomes a citizen-mapping platform Technological Escalation: From Search to Inference Deployment of advanced analytics tools (e.g. “entity resolution” engines) Capabilities: Merge fragmented records into a single identity Link faces, telecom KYC, driving licences, travel data Transformation: From “search bar” → predictive inference system Risk: Algorithms infer intent, not just retrieve facts Two Qualitative Dangers 1. Algorithmic Bias Algorithms reflect: Biases embedded in data Prejudices of policing practices Likely outcomes: Reinforcement of caste, religious, regional profiling Disparate impact: Affluent citizens → inconvenience Marginalised individuals → detention, harassment, violence 2. Tyranny of Scale Tens of thousands of queries monthly Safeguards claimed: Logging Sensitivity classification Problem: Without independent audit, safeguards become ritualistic No parliamentary or judicial supervision Core Fallacy: Data ≠ Intelligence Intelligence failures are rarely due to: Lack of data alone Real causes: Institutional decay Poor training Lack of accountability 26/11 example: Local police lacked even basic firearms training NATGRID does not fix: Human competence Organisational incentives Political interference Judicial & Democratic Deficit Supreme Court recognised right to privacy (Puttaswamy, 2017) Yet: Surveillance systems continue expanding No final adjudication on legality of NATGRID Pending issues: Absence of enabling law Absence of proportionality tests Absence of remedies for citizens Security Narrative vs Accountability Public discourse shaped by: Political rhetoric Cultural normalisation of surveillance Questioning intelligence agencies seen as: Anti-national Consequence: Silence on accountability Even after fresh terror attacks (e.g. Delhi, Nov 2025) Overall Assessment NATGRID has drifted from: Counter-terrorism tool To everyday surveillance infrastructure Without: Parliamentary oversight Judicial scrutiny Transparency It risks becoming: An architecture of suspicion A pillar of digital authoritarianism Way Forward  Genuine prevention requires: Professional, well-trained investigation Clear statutory backing for intelligence tools Parliamentary and judicial oversight Transparency about failures, not just data accumulation Core message: Security without accountability erodes democracy Technology cannot substitute institutional integrity Fine-tune this signal to sharpen India’s AMR battle Context & Trigger In the 129th edition of Mann Ki Baat (Dec 28, 2025), Prime Minister Narendra Modi explicitly flagged Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) as a national concern. He cited national data from Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) showing: Declining effectiveness of antibiotics against pneumonia and urinary tract infections. Central message: Indiscriminate and self-medicated antibiotic use is at the core of India’s AMR crisis. This is seen as a possible anagnorisis (moment of realisation) capable of catalysing mass behavioural change. Relevance GS III – Health Security & Sustainable Development Antimicrobial Resistance as a non-traditional security threat Surveillance gaps and data-driven policymaking One Health approach (human–animal–environment interface) Global health governance (WHO, GLASS) Long-term economic costs of health crises Practice Question Q1.Antimicrobial Resistance is increasingly being viewed as a silent pandemic.Discuss the reasons for its rapid spread in India and evaluate the adequacy of existing policy responses.(250 Words)   What is AMR? Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR): Occurs when bacteria, viruses, fungi or parasites evolve to resist medicines. Consequence: Common infections become harder or impossible to treat. Increased mortality, longer hospital stays, higher health costs. Global recognition: WHO classifies AMR as one of the top global public health threats. Why AMR is a Serious Problem in India India is: One of the largest consumers of antibiotics globally. Structural drivers: Over-the-counter antibiotic sales Self-medication culture Incomplete treatment courses Poor regulation of private healthcare Core contributor : Irrational use / misuse / overuse of antibiotics. Significance of PM’s Intervention AMR had remained: Confined to hospitals, laboratories, experts, and policy documents. PM’s speech: Mainstreams AMR as a public behavioural issue. Translates technical warnings into citizen-level responsibility. Why this matters: Previous policy tools (National Action Plan on AMR, drug bans) had limited mass impact. A direct appeal from the head of government can alter social norms. Behavioural Change as a Policy Tool Message delivered: Antibiotics are not casual medicines. Self-medication is dangerous. Strength: Targets the broadest base of the pyramid. Limitation: Awareness alone is necessary but not sufficient at India’s current AMR stage. The One Health Imperative AMR is a multi-sectoral problem: Human health Animal health Environment One Health approach: Recognises interlinkages between: Antibiotic use in humans Antibiotics as growth promoters in animals Environmental contamination Without this integrated approach: AMR behaves like a hydra-headed problem, regenerating across sectors. Surveillance: The Weakest Link Effective AMR control requires: Accurate, representative, nationwide data. Present limitation: Surveillance heavily skewed towards: Urban areas Tertiary care hospitals Risk: Overestimation or distortion of national AMR trends. Community-level AMR remains under-reported. India’s AMR Surveillance Architecture NARS-Net   National AMR Surveillance Network (NARS-Net): Established in 2013. Provides data to WHO’s Global Antimicrobial Resistance and Use Surveillance System (GLASS). Current status: ~60 sentinel medical college laboratories. Latest GLASS report (2023 data): Inputs from 41 sites across 31 States/UTs. Scope: Surveillance of 9 priority bacterial pathogens Some fungal pathogens. Critical Gaps Highlighted Non-urban India largely absent from datasets. Primary and secondary care centres excluded. Private hospitals not systematically integrated. Result: National AMR picture is incomplete and potentially misleading. Expert Viewpoint Dr. Abdul Ghafur (Chennai Declaration on AMR): Calls for true national representation. Advocates inclusion of: Primary healthcare Secondary hospitals Private sector facilities Rationale: Balanced, realistic estimation of resistance patterns. Evidence-based policy design. Global Framework Reference WHO Global Action Plan on AMR (2015) outlines five pillars: Improve awareness and understanding Strengthen surveillance and research Reduce infection incidence Optimise antimicrobial use Ensure sustainable investment in new drugs, diagnostics, vaccines PM’s speech: Strongly advances Pillar 1 (awareness). Missing acceleration: Pillar 2 (surveillance expansion) Pillar 4 (enforcement and regulation) What Still Needs Political Will ? Expanding surveillance sites nationwide Integrating private healthcare data Regulatory enforcement on antibiotic sales Investment in diagnostics and infection prevention Monitoring, accountability and inter-ministerial coordination Overall Assessment PM’s statement is a necessary inflection point, not a complete solution. Awareness can: Slow misuse Change social behaviour But without: Robust surveillance One Health governance Regulatory enforcement AMR will continue to rise silently. Way Forward India needs: Mass awareness + structural reform Surveillance that reflects community reality Integration of human, animal and environmental health Core takeaway: AMR is not just a medical issue; it is a governance and behavioural crisis.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 08 January 2026

Content India’s Progress on Its Climate Targets Trump–Greenland Remarks Jabarkhet Nature Reserve & Alternative Wildlife Tourism Why Silver Prices Surged ~160% in 2025 Turkman Gate Contaminated Water Crisis in Indore & Bhopal India’s Progress on Climate Targets  Why in News? Recent Aravalli judgment revived debate on environmental governance, mining, and climate commitments. Over 10 years since India’s climate pledges under the Paris Agreement, prompting evaluation of delivery vs outcomes. Updated data on emissions intensity, renewable capacity, and forest carbon sinks (ISFR 2023, CEA projections). Relevance to India’s 2070 Net Zero credibility. Relevance GS-3 | Environment & Climate Change Paris Agreement commitments, emissions intensity vs absolute emissions Renewable energy transition, coal dependence, storage bottlenecks India’s Climate Commitments (Paris, 2015) Reduce emissions intensity of GDP by 33–35% from 2005 levels by 2030. Achieve 40% non-fossil power capacity by 2030 (later raised to ~50%). Install 175 GW renewables by 2022. Create 2.5–3 billion tonnes CO₂e forest carbon sink by 2030. Principle: Common but Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR). Emissions Intensity: Success with Caveats Achievement: Emissions intensity reduced by ~36% by 2020 (2005 baseline). Target met a decade early. Drivers: Rapid non-fossil capacity expansion (solar, wind, hydro, nuclear). Structural shift towards services & digital economy. Efficiency schemes: PAT, UJALA → measurable energy savings. Limitation: Absolute emissions remain high (~2,959 MtCO₂e in 2020). India is the 3rd largest absolute emitter globally. Conceptual Issue: Partial decoupling: GDP growth > emissions growth. Intensity ↓, but emissions ↑ in cement, steel, transport. Renewable Energy: Capacity–Generation Mismatch Headline Success: Non-fossil capacity rose from ~29.5% (2015) to ~51.4% (June 2025). Solar: ~3 GW (2014) → ~111 GW (2025). Ground Reality: Renewables contribute only ~22% of electricity generation (2024–25). Coal (~240–253 GW) still provides >70% of electricity. Reasons: Low capacity factors of solar/wind. Intermittency and grid integration limits. Delays in land acquisition and transmission. Targets Missed: 175 GW by 2022 not achieved. 500 GW by 2030 feasible but execution-heavy. Storage Deficit: Core Bottleneck CEA projection (2029–30): 336 GWh storage needed. Actual operational storage (Sept 2025): ~500 MWh. Without storage: Renewables cannot replace coal baseload. Grid stability risks increase. Forest Carbon Sink: Numbers vs Ecology Official Claim: Total forest carbon stock: 30.43 billion tonnes CO₂e. Additional sink since 2005: ~2.29 billion tonnes. Target likely met numerically by 2030. Data Issues: “Forest cover” includes: Plantations, eucalyptus, tea, mango orchards. Any land >1 ha with >10% canopy. Natural forests vs plantations not differentiated. Governance Gaps: CAMPA funds (~₹95,000 crore) under-utilised (e.g., Delhi ~23% usage). Green India Mission (Revised, 2025) equates plantations with regeneration. Climate Stress: Warming and water stress reduce actual carbon assimilation despite “greening” signals. Structural Contradictions Highlighted Intensity gains coexist with rising absolute emissions. Renewable capacity growth masks coal-centric generation reality. Forest targets met administratively, not ecologically. Coal phase-down roadmap remains opaque. The Road Ahead Battery & pumped storage scale-up at mission mode. Transparent coal transition timetable aligned with 2070 net zero. Industrial decarbonisation (steel, cement, transport). Forest governance reform: quality, biodiversity, survivability metrics. Data transparency: sector-wise, region-wise emissions tracking. Stronger Centre–State coordination on grids and land. Trump–Greenland Remarks Why in News? Donald Trump reportedly re-discussed the idea of purchasing Greenland during internal deliberations. The White House clarified: No immediate diplomatic proposal. Military action ruled out, but strategic discussions ongoing. Triggered diplomatic responses from Denmark and European leaders. Renewed global focus on Arctic geopolitics amid U.S.–China–Russia competition. Relevance GS-2 | International Relations Arctic geopolitics, great power competition (U.S.–China–Russia) Sovereignty, self-determination, international law (UN Charter) GS-1 | Geography Arctic region, climate change impact on polar routes Greenland: Strategic Profile Autonomous territory under the Kingdom of Denmark. World’s largest island; population ~56,000. Located between North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans. Hosts a key U.S. military base (Pituffik/Thule Space Base). Why Greenland Matters Geopolitically ? Arctic Military Significance Controls access to Arctic air and naval routes. Critical for: Ballistic missile early-warning systems. Monitoring Russian Arctic activity. Integral to U.S. Arctic defence architecture and NATO security. Great Power Competition Russia: Expanding Arctic military bases. Northern Sea Route militarisation. China: Self-declared “near-Arctic state”. Investments in mining, infrastructure, and research stations. U.S. concern: preventing Chinese strategic foothold in Greenland. Resource Geopolitics Rich in critical minerals: Rare Earth Elements (REEs). Uranium, zinc, iron ore. Minerals essential for: Green technologies. Defence manufacturing. Seen as alternative to China-dominated rare earth supply chains. Climate Change & Shipping Arctic ice melt opening: Shorter transcontinental shipping routes. New fishing and resource extraction zones. Greenland becomes central to future Arctic economic geography. Diplomatic & Legal Constraints Greenland’s leadership and Denmark have rejected any sale. Greenland: Right to self-determination. Increasing push for eventual independence. Any transfer would violate: Modern international norms. Sovereignty principles under UN Charter. European & NATO Reactions Denmark: Firm assertion that Greenland is not for sale. European leaders (France, Germany, Italy, Spain): Expressed solidarity with Denmark. Warned against destabilising Arctic order. Issue touches intra-NATO trust and cohesion. Why This Matters for International Relations ? Illustrates: Return of territorial geopolitics in a rules-based order. Strategic salience of climate-affected regions. Highlights: Arctic as a new theatre of great power rivalry. Tension between strategic realism vs international law. Takeaway The Greenland discussion is not about purchase, but about: Strategic denial to rivals. Long-term Arctic dominance. Reflects how climate change, resources, and security are converging to reshape global geopolitics. Jabarkhet Nature Reserve (JNR) & Alternative Wildlife Tourism Why in News? Jabarkhet Nature Reserve (JNR) near Mussoorie completed 10 years (2015–2025). Highlighted as India’s first privately owned and operated nature reserve with conservation as the primary goal. Comes amid: Debate on mass tourism vs sustainable tourism in the Himalayas. Ecological concerns over road widening, mining, deforestation (Himalayas, Aravallis). Offers a distinct third model of wildlife tourism, beyond tiger safaris and restricted national parks. Relevance GS-3 | Environment Biodiversity conservation beyond protected areas Habitat restoration, landscape-level conservation What is Jabarkhet Nature Reserve? Location: Near Mussoorie, Uttarakhand. Area: ~100 acres of restored Himalayan woodland. Ownership: Private (Jain family estate), conservation-led management. Objective: Habitat restoration. Wildlife-first access. Low-impact, affordable nature tourism. Ecological Significance High biodiversity in a small landscape: 150 bird species (e.g. Rufous Sibia, Himalayan griffon vulture). Mammals: leopard, goral, barking deer, black bear, civet, porcupine, leopard cat. Flora: Oaks, deodars, rhododendrons, walnuts. 40 fern species. Ground orchids, sundews (insectivorous plants). Hundreds of fungi, grasses, >300 flowering plants. Acts as a refuge and stepping-stone habitat in a fragmented Himalayan landscape. Alternative Model of Wildlife Tourism Dominant Models in India Safari-based tourism: Tiger reserves, gypsy safaris. Crowding around “star species”. Guided community trails: Niche, expert-driven, species-specific. JNR’s “Third Model” Self-paced walking trails. Wildlife has first right of way. No vehicles, no fixed sightings, no spectacle. Emphasis on: Natural history. Slow engagement. Low ecological footprint. Affordable access → not elitist eco-tourism. Wider Environmental Context Himalayas: Road widening → frequent landslides. Tourism-led ecological stress. Aravallis: Legal definitions enabling mining and commercial use. Implication: Every intact natural habitat matters, even small private reserves. Policy & Governance Insights Demonstrates potential of private conservation areas: Complementing state-run protected areas. Raises questions on: Regulation of “eco-tourism” labels. Incentivising genuine private reserves. Supports landscape-level conservation beyond notified parks. Takeaway JNR shows that wildlife recovery is possible without fencing, spectacle, or mass tourism, if: Habitat integrity is prioritised. Human access is restrained, not eliminated. Local communities are stakeholders, not spectators. Why Silver Prices Surged ~160% in 2025 Scale and Significance of the Surge Silver prices rose ~160% in 2025, outperforming gold. Prices crossed ₹2.4 lakh/kg by end-2025. Indicates a structural, not speculative-only, commodity rally. Relevance GS-3 | Economy Commodity markets, inflation hedging, financialisation Gold–silver dynamics, impact of global monetary policy Dual Nature of Silver: Investment + Industrial Metal Unlike gold (primarily a store of value), silver has: High industrial utility. Strong linkage with future technologies. Key demand sectors: Solar photovoltaics. Electric vehicles. Batteries and electronics. AI hardware and data centres. Industrial Demand Boom Energy transition accelerated demand: Solar panels use silver paste. EVs require silver-intensive circuitry. AI-led digital expansion: Data centres, servers, chips increased silver consumption. Result: Silver demand grew faster than supply elasticity. Supply-Side Constraints Silver production largely by-product mining (from zinc, copper). Constraints: Long gestation period for new mines. Environmental regulations. Declining ore grades. USGS additions to “critical minerals” list increased scrutiny but not short-term supply. Global Supply Mismatches London silver shortage (Oct 2025): Physical availability tightened. Spot prices spiked sharply. Structural mismatch between: Physical silver demand. Paper silver instruments. Financialisation & Investment Demand Rising gold prices spilled over into silver. Drivers: Inflation hedging. Currency depreciation fears. Safe-haven diversification. ETFs and mutual funds: Sharp inflows earlier in 2025. Some moderation later, but momentum sustained. US–China & Geopolitical Factors Trade tensions disrupted metal supply chains. Tariffs and export controls: Raised costs. Encouraged stockpiling. Silver benefited as a strategic metal in clean-tech rivalry. Comparison with Gold Gold: Safer, slower, policy-driven. Silver: More volatile. More sensitive to industrial cycles. Hence: Silver outperformed gold during tech- and energy-driven growth. Turkman Gate  Why in News? Turkman Gate has re-entered public discourse due to: Renewed interest in Delhi’s Mughal-era urban heritage. Contemporary debates on historical memory of the Emergency (1975–77). Often cited as a symbolic site associated with Emergency-era excesses, especially in urban Delhi. Relevance GS-1 | Modern Indian History Emergency (1975–77), urban history of Delhi GS-1 | Art & Culture Mughal-era urban architecture, heritage of Shahjahanabad   Historical Background Built in the 17th century during the reign of Shah Jahan. Part of the fortified city of Shahjahanabad. One of the historic gateways controlling entry into Old Delhi. Named after Shah Turkan, associated with local Sufi traditions. Cultural-religious significance: Site linked to the tomb of Shah Turkan. Popular belief associates the area with Razia Sultana (burial traditions). Urban Context (Pre-Emergency) Area developed into: Dense residential settlement over centuries. Mixed-use neighbourhood with markets and small trades. Surroundings reflected organic urban growth, typical of medieval Indian cities. Turkman Gate During the Emergency (1975–77) Emergency imposed under Indira Gandhi. Turkman Gate emerged as a major flashpoint in Delhi. Area targeted under: Slum clearance. Urban “beautification” and road-widening drives. Strong local resistance turned the site into: One of the most remembered urban episodes of the Emergency. Symbolic Significance Represents: The intersection of heritage, population, and state power. How historic urban spaces became arenas for Emergency-era policies. Frequently referenced in: Academic works. Journalism. Oral histories of Delhi. Contaminated Water Crisis in Indore & Bhopal  Why in News? At least 17 deaths in Indore linked to contaminated drinking water. Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) audit highlights massive loss of treated water in Madhya Pradesh’s two largest cities. Madhya Pradesh High Court has: Declared access to clean drinking water a fundamental right. Sought a status report from the State government. Rising hospital admissions and public protests have intensified scrutiny. Relevance GS-2 | Governance & Social Justice Right to clean drinking water (Article 21) Municipal governance, accountability, judicial intervention GS-3 | Infrastructure & Public Health Urban water management, non-revenue water, service delivery failures Key Audit Findings (CAG) Massive “Non-Revenue Water” Losses Indore: Water loss: 65–70% (2013–18). Bhopal: Water loss: 30–49%. Losses include: Physical losses: pipeline leaks, joint failures, reservoir overflows. Non-physical losses: theft, illegal connections, faulty meters, wastage. Gap Between Water Drawn and Water Supplied Large discrepancy between: Raw water extracted. Water actually reaching households. CAG rejected municipal claims of lower losses as unsubstantiated. Per Capita Water Supply Below Norms Bhopal: Claimed: 135 LPCD (litres per capita per day). CAG-estimated: 122 LPCD. Indore: Target: 150 LPCD. Claimed: 105 LPCD. Actual (CAG): 58 LPCD. Indicates chronic under-delivery despite high water abstraction. Large Number of Unconnected Households As of 2018: Bhopal: ~1.43 lakh households without water connections. Indore: ~2.68 lakh households without water connections. Forces dependence on unsafe or informal water sources. Public Health Dimension Contaminated water linked to: Kidney failure. Rising hospital admissions. Health crisis exposes: Direct linkage between infrastructure neglect and mortality. Judicial Intervention Madhya Pradesh High Court observations: Clean drinking water = Article 21 (Right to Life). “No compromise” on water quality. Multiple PILs under hearing. Next hearing scheduled for 15 January 2026. Governance & Policy Significance Highlights failures in: Urban local body capacity. Infrastructure maintenance. Public service delivery. Shows importance of: Audit institutions (CAG). Judicial oversight in basic services. Raises questions on: Sustainable urban water management. Accountability of municipal corporations.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 07 January 2026

Content Study of stellar Twins reveal secrets of evolution and future of stars Mission 100% Electrification: Powering the Future of Indian Railways Study of stellar Twins reveal secrets of evolution and future of stars Why is it in news? A joint team from ARIES (Nainital) and PRL (Ahmedabad) studied four W Ursae Majoris–type (W UMa) contact binary stars using 1.3-m Devasthal Fast Optical Telescope (DFOT) and NASA’s TESS space telescope Results were published in the Astrophysical Journal (2026), revealing new evidence on binary star evolution, mass transfer, orbital changes, and magnetic activity. Relevance GS-3 | Science & Technology — Space Research & Astrophysics Advances understanding of stellar evolution, binary mergers, angular-momentum loss Strengthens India’s role in observational astronomy & indigenous research capacity (ARIES–PRL collaboration) Supports precision in exoplanet transit science (better stellar mass–radius calibration) Application to astrophysical modelling, space science innovation, and data-driven research Basics — What are W Ursae Majoris (W UMa) Stars? Type: Short-period contact binary systems Orbital period: Typically 0.2–1.0 days (very fast) Morphology: Dumbbell-shaped, both stars share a common outer envelope Composition: Generally low-mass, main-sequence stars Energy sharing: Thermal contact → nearly equal surface temperatures Scientific value: Natural laboratories to determine mass, radius, luminosity, temperature, angular momentum loss Key Findings Mass transfer & orbital evolution Evidence of mass exchange between stars Slight orbital period variations → angular-momentum redistribution Shared stellar envelope Stars share outer layers, confirming contact-binary energy coupling Magnetic activity & star spots Dark star spots cause asymmetric brightness (“lopsided light curves”) Strong magnetic fields + star-spot cycles Spectral emissions confirm flare-linked outer-layer activity Improved mass–radius calibration Results refine empirical relations for low-mass stars Critical for stellar structure & evolutionary models Scientific Significance Enhances understanding of: Binary star evolution & merger pathways Angular-momentum loss mechanisms Energy transport in contact binaries Supports: Exoplanet transit studies (accurate stellar radii = accurate planet sizes) Astrophysical population models Calibration of stellar evolutionary tracks Conclusion   The study of W UMa contact binaries provides high-precision evidence on mass transfer, orbital evolution, and magnetic activity, strengthening models of stellar evolution and merger pathways. It enhances India’s scientific capability in space research and improves mass–radius calibration crucial for exoplanet studies and astrophysical modelling. Mission 100% Electrification: Powering the Future of Indian Railways  Why is it in news? Indian Railways has reached ~99.2% Broad Gauge (BG) electrification as of Nov 2025 (≈ 69,427 RKM electrified out of 70,001 RKM), signalling near-completion of Mission 100% Electrification. Electrification pace rose from 1.42 km/day (2004–14) to >15 km/day (2019–25) — a 10× acceleration. Solar capacity on the network expanded from 3.68 MW (2014) to 898 MW (Nov 2025), of which 629 MW for traction and 269 MW for non-traction uses. India now ranks among the most extensively electrified rail networks globally, comparable to Switzerland (100%), and ahead of China (82%) and Japan (64%). Relevance GS-3 | Infrastructure, Energy & Economy Enhances logistics efficiency, freight competitiveness, operating cost savings Reduces diesel import dependence → strengthens energy security Demonstrates large-scale infrastructure modernisation + mechanised project execution Basics — What is Railway Electrification?  Meaning: Replacing diesel traction with electric traction powered through Overhead Equipment (OHE) and traction substations. Traction energy mix: Grid electricity + increasing share of solar and renewable power. Operational logic Higher energy efficiency (electric traction ≈ 70% more economical than diesel) Higher haulage capacity & acceleration Lower maintenance + lower dependency on imported fuel Environmental logic Reduced GHG emissions, air pollution, noise Enables future migration to green grids / RE integration Status Snapshot Network electrified: 69,427 RKM (≈ 99.2% of BG network) Electrified since 2014: 46,900 RKM Electrified share over time 2000: 24% 2017: 40% 2024: >96% 2025: ~99.2% States — Residual Sections (574 RKM pending; 0.8%) State % Electrified Balance (RKM) Rajasthan 99% 93 Tamil Nadu 97% 117 Karnataka 96% 151 Assam 92% 197 Goa 91% 16 25 States/UTs already 100% electrified. Global Positioning  Switzerland: 100% India: ~99%+ China: 82% Spain: 67% Japan: 64% France: 60% Russia: 52% UK: 39% Inference: India is among the world leaders in network-scale electrification. Solar Power Integration — Data Highlights Total solar installed: 898 MW 629 MW (≈70%) — Traction supply 269 MW — Non-traction (stations, workshops, service buildings, housing) Stations using solar power: 2,626 Outcome Reduced grid draw + electricity costs Greater energy security + decarbonisation of traction Engineering & Technology Interventions Cylindrical mechanised foundations (augering) Faster OHE mast installation, less manual excavation, superior consistency Automatic Wiring Train Simultaneous catenary + contact wire installation Accurate tensioning → higher safety, faster execution Mechanisation + standardisation Shorter project cycles, fewer failures, improved quality Why Electrification Matters ? Economic Lower fuel bill, reduced dependence on diesel imports Higher throughput → freight efficiency & logistics competitiveness Environmental Lower emissions; enables shift toward renewable-powered mobility Operational Higher speeds, reliability, and network capacity Regional development Electrified corridors catalyse industrial & rural connectivity Conclusion   Near-complete railway electrification, backed by rapid pace and large-scale solar integration, marks a major leap in infrastructure modernisation, energy efficiency, and logistics competitiveness. It significantly reduces diesel dependence and emissions, positioning Indian Railways as a global leader in sustainable, low-carbon transport transformation.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 07 January 2026

Content Dangerous paradigm The right to disconnect in an ‘always-on’ economy Dangerous paradigm  Context The United States, under President Donald Trump, conducted a military operation in Venezuela on 3 rd of January, resulting in the capture and transfer of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to the United States to face federal drug-related charges, provoking global diplomatic controversy and legal debate. The action has triggered widespread international condemnation, emergency United Nations discussions about violations of sovereignty and international law, and concerns over potential new geopolitical crises and erosion of global norms on use of force. Relevance   GS-2 International Relations Sovereignty, non-interference, and the UN Charter’s principles on use of force. Shifts in U.S. foreign policy and implications for global governance. GS-3 Security & Diplomacy Military intervention norms, extraterritorial jurisdiction, and global strategic balances. Influence of resource security (oil) and counter-narcotics policy in geopolitics. Practice Question “The unilateral U.S. operation in Venezuela marks a dangerous erosion of international legal norms.” Examine in the context of sovereignty, extraterritorial jurisdiction, and the UN Charter’s prohibition on the use of force..(250 Words) Operation Details and Aftermath Maduro capture: Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife were seized by U.S. forces in Caracas and flown to New York, where they pleaded not guilty to narcotics and weapons charges in federal court. Military engagement: The operation involved U.S. military action in Venezuelan territory, including reported strikes and casualties among Venezuelan and allied forces. Political transition attempt: Venezuelan Vice President Delcy Rodríguez was sworn in as interim president, opposed by Maduro loyalists and facing internal turmoil. Security escalation: Armed militias and paramilitary groups increased their presence within Venezuela to assert control amid national chaos. Global Reaction United Nations: The United Nations Security Council held an emergency session, with many members condemning the U.S. action as a violation of international law and Venezuelan sovereignty.  International law concerns: Experts and several countries cited concerns over violations of the UN Charter and the legal principles governing sovereign equality and non-use of force.  Mixed diplomatic response: While some U.S. allies expressed caution, major powers like Russia, China, Brazil, Cuba, and Colombia publicly denounced the intervention. U.S. Government Position The Trump administration described the operation as part of a law enforcement action to hold Maduro accountable for alleged narcotics trafficking, arguing that extradition and domestic legal claims justify the intervention even without explicit international authorization.  Despite internal U.S. debates, the White House asserted that the goal includes stabilising Venezuela, potentially overseeing a transition, and addressing oil infrastructure and national security interests. Why this matters? 1. Erosion of International Norms The operation signifies a sharp departure from conventional restraint in international relations, bypassing established frameworks for military intervention and extradition, thus risking the weakening of sovereignty norms and the UN Charter’s prohibition on unilateral force. It raises the spectre of a precedent where powerful states may justify extraterritorial military actions under broad or ambiguous pretexts, increasing global instability. 2. Geopolitical Ramifications The intervention intensifies U.S.–Latin America tensions, with implications for hemispheric relations and alliances, and may accelerate foreign policy realignments in the region. It has the potential to exacerbate proxy dynamics involving Russia and China, who are strategic partners of Venezuela, thereby impacting broader geopolitical competition. 3. Rule of Law and Precedent The legal basis for arresting and trying a sitting president abroad without host nation consent or UN mandate is contested, stimulating debate on the limits of international law and extraterritorial jurisdiction. Legal scholars argue such actions risk undermining legal protections for heads of state and could encourage reciprocal actions by other countries. 4. Regional Security and Conflict Risk Military actions of this scale in sovereign territory risk escalation into wider conflict, as seen in historical parallels (e.g., U.S. invasion of Panama in 1989) where unilateral interventions have had long-term regional impacts. Conclusion The U.S. military capture and transfer of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in January 2026 represents a dramatic shift in international conduct, sparking wide debate over legality, sovereignty, and the norms governing the use of force. The episode underscores rising geopolitical tensions and highlights the potential erosion of global rules designed to prevent unilateral intervention by powerful states.  The right to disconnect in an ‘always-on’ economy  Why is it in news? A Private Member’s Bill proposing a statutory “Right to Disconnect” has been introduced to amend the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code (2020), aiming to legally protect workers from employer-mandated digital availability beyond working hours. The proposal comes amid rising evidence of over-work, burnout, and mental-health stress in India’s workforce, and aligns India with countries such as France, Portugal, Italy, Ireland, and Australia, which have already legislated similar protections. Relevance GS-2: Governance & Labour Rights — regulatory frameworks, social justice, welfare of workers. GS-3: Economy & Human Capital — productivity, mental health, sustainable workforce, gig economy regulation. Practice Question “The Right to Disconnect is not merely a labour reform but a public-health and productivity imperative.” Critically examine in the Indian context, citing evidence.(250 Words) Issues Highlighted Long working hours 51% of India’s workforce works >49 hours/week — 2nd highest globally (ILO). Burnout prevalence 78% of Indian employees report job burnout → physical fatigue, emotional exhaustion, productivity decline. Health burden Over-work linked to hypertension, diabetes, anxiety, depression, and lifestyle disorders. Work-related stress accounts for ~10–12% of mental-health cases (National Mental Health Survey). Work culture risks 24×7 digital availability → fear of penalty for ignoring after-hours calls/emails → power imbalance favoring employers. Tragic over-work incidents (e.g., 2024 corporate exhaustion fatality) highlight systemic risks. Legal & Institutional Gaps  The OSHWC Code 2020 regulates hours mainly for traditional “workers” — Contractual, gig, freelance, platform economy employees remain weakly protected. No statutory safeguard against After-hours digital work demands Retaliatory action for non-response Absence of structured grievance redressal mechanisms. What the Proposed Law Seeks to Do ? Define & limit working hours for all employees, including gig/contractual workforce. Right to Disconnect — employees cannot be penalised for declining after-hours digital communication. Mandatory grievance redressal for violations. Integrates mental-health and well-being as part of occupational safety norms. Complements emerging State-level initiatives (e.g., Kerala) → seeks uniform national framework. Global Context  Countries with legislated “Right to Disconnect”: France (2017) → organisational protocols on after-hours email/calls Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Australia → codified rest-time protections Empirical takeaway: Protected downtime improves productivity, retention, and health outcomes rather than harming growth. Policy Rationale — Data-Driven Analysis Economic productivity Chronic fatigue → higher error rates, lower creativity, rising attrition costs. Quality-based work output outperforms time-duration-driven cultures. Public-health imperative Prevents lifestyle-disease escalation & mental-health burden on healthcare systems. Social stability & workforce sustainability Protects India’s youth demographic dividend from burnout risks. Future-of-work alignment Essential for digital economy, remote work, platform labour. Conclusion The Right to Disconnect legislation seeks to correct the structural imbalance created by 24×7 digital work culture, protecting worker health while improving sustainable productivity. By extending safeguards to all categories of employees — including gig and contractual workers — it reframes work-life balance as a public-health, economic, and social-stability priority for India.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 07 January 2026

Content Aditya-L1 AO Data Call — ISRO Opens Solar Mission Data to Indian Scientists Indigenous Biomaterials — A Pathway to Cut Fossil-Based Imports and Build a Bio-Economy Classical Language Heritage — Govt Releases 55 Volumes of Indian Literary Works Grasslands in Climate Policy — Recognising Rangelands as Carbon Sinks Beyond Forests FTA Impact — India’s Trade Deficit with Partner Countries Widens Despite Export Gains Aditya-L1 AO Data Call — ISRO Opens Solar Mission Data to Indian Scientists Why is it in news? On the 2nd anniversary of India’s Aditya-L1 solar mission, ISRO has issued an Announcement of Opportunity (AO) inviting Indian scientists and researchers to analyse the mission’s first AO-cycle data for solar science research. The Aditya-L1 spacecraft reached Lagrange Point-1 (L1) on 6 January 2024 (127 days after launch on 2 September 2023) and has since been carrying out continuous observations of the Sun; ISRO has now placed >23 TB of mission data in the public domain for global scientific utilisation. Relevance GS-3 | Science & Technology — Space Research, Heliophysics, Space-based Observations Facts & Data — Mission Status and Scientific Output Mission Objective: First Indian dedicated mission to study the Sun from L1 (≈1.5 million km from Earth) enabling continuous, eclipse-free observations. Orbit Position: Halo orbit around L1 → uninterrupted monitoring of solar corona, solar wind, CMEs, magnetic fields, and solar radiation. Data Generated: >23 terabytes (TB) of solar observation data already released Multiple peer-reviewed scientific papers published using mission data Instruments Studied (examples): VELC, SUIT, ASPEX, PAPA, SoLEXS, HEL1OS, MAG → spectrometry, coronagraphy, particle and magnetic-field measurements. What ISRO’s AO Call Involves ? Open to: Indian scientists/researchers in universities, institutes, and colleges working in solar & space sciences. Role Invited: Apply as Principal Investigators (PIs) with proposals for scientific justification, data-analysis methodology, and clear research outcomes. Goal: Maximise scientific return from mission data through wider community participation and collaborative research. Why this matters ? Strengthens India’s solar physics ecosystem by democratising access to high-value space-science data. Enhances space-weather forecasting capability (impact on satellites, power grids, communications, aviation). Positions India as a front-line contributor to heliophysics research alongside global missions (SOHO, Parker Solar Probe, Solar Orbiter). Encourages domestic research capacity, publications, and innovation in astrophysics and instrumentation science. Indigenous Biomaterials — A Pathway to Cut Fossil-Based Imports and Build a Bio-Economy Why is it in news? The article highlights India’s growing focus on indigenous biomaterials and biomanufacturing as a strategic pathway to reduce dependence on fossil-based imports, strengthen industrial competitiveness, and support environmental sustainability and farmer incomes. With global markets shifting toward low-carbon, circular and bio-based materials, India’s biomaterials sector is emerging as a $500-million (2024) opportunity in bioplastics, biopolymers and bio-derived materials, but requires scaling infrastructure, feedstocks, waste systems, and policy coordination to stay globally competitive. Relevance   GS-3 | Economy, Environment, Science & Technology — bio-economy, circular economy, import substitution, sustainable materials, industrial policy, farmer value-chains. Facts & Data — What are Biomaterials?  Definition: Materials derived wholly/partly from biological sources or engineered through biological processes, designed to replace, complement, or interact with conventional petroleum-based materials. Application sectors: Packaging, textiles, construction, healthcare, composites, consumer products. Three categories Drop-in biomaterials — chemically identical to petro-materials; compatible with existing manufacturing (e.g., bio-PET). Drop-out biomaterials — chemically different; need new processing or end-of-life systems (e.g., PLA – polylactic acid). Novel biomaterials — new properties (e.g., self-healing materials, bioactive implants, advanced biocomposites). Why Biomaterials Matter for India ? Strategic import substitution Cuts reliance on fossil-based imports in plastics, chemicals, materials. Economic & industrial growth Expands bio-manufacturing value chains → boosts domestic industry. Farmer livelihood diversification Creates new revenue streams from agricultural residues & feedstocks. Climate & sustainability alignment Supports single-use plastic bans, circular economy norms, climate action. Export competitiveness Aligns Indian products with global low-carbon regulations & consumer demand. Where India Stands — Sector Snapshot? Bioplastics market value (India, 2024): ~USD 500 million with strong growth outlook. Key domestic initiatives Balrampur Chini Mills — PLA plant (Uttar Pradesh) → among India’s largest planned biomaterials investments. Praj Industries — demonstration-scale bioplastics facility. Start-ups: Phool.co (temple-waste-to-biomaterials) and others building circular bio-economy models. Capability gap Dependence on foreign technologies for conversion of biomass feedstocks into market-ready biomaterials persists in some segments. Risks & Constraints ? Feedstock competition with food crops if scaling is unmanaged. Resource stress from intensive cultivation → water & soil degradation risks. Weak waste & composting systems may negate environmental benefits. Fragmented policy silos across agriculture–industry–environment. Global race risk — slower action may leave India dependent on imported biomaterials as others scale faster. Way Forward — Action Priorities Scale biomanufacturing capacity: fermentation, polymerisation, pilot plants, shared R&D facilities. Improve feedstock productivity: sugarcane, maize, agri-residues using advanced agritech & bio-process innovations. Invest in R&D & standards: promote drop-in + novel biomaterials for high-value applications. Regulatory clarity: definitions, labelling norms, recycling/composting pathways. Market-shaping tools: government procurement, time-bound incentives, de-risking early investments. Classical Language Heritage — Govt Releases 55 Volumes of Indian Literary Works Why is it in news? The Union Education Minister has released 55 volumes of literary works in classical Indian languages — including Kannada, Odia, Telugu, Malayalam, and Tamil — along with a sign-language series of the Tirukkural by Tamil poet Thiruvalluvar. The release is part of a national initiative to promote India’s linguistic heritage, led by the Centres of Excellence for Classical Languages under the Central Institute of Indian Languages (CIIL) and the Central Institute of Classical Tamil. Relevance GS-1 | Indian Heritage & Culture — Classical Languages, Literature, Civilisational Legacy GS-2 | Governance — NEP 2020, Cultural Policy, Inclusion & Accessibility Facts & Data — What was released? Total works released: 55 volumes 41 works developed by CIIL Centres of Excellence 13 books + sign-language Tirukkural series from the Central Institute of Classical Tamil Languages covered: Kannada, Odia, Telugu, Malayalam, Tamil Formats included: Literary texts, translations, and scholarly works Indian Sign-Language Tirukkural series to expand accessibility Key Literary Works & Highlights Tamil: Tirukkural (including sign-language edition), Silappathikaram, Nannool translations and classical commentaries Malayalam: Works such as Purananooru, Pathuppattu Odia: Classical literature including Charyapada and Madalapanji Kannada & Telugu: Classical and medieval texts, translations, linguistic documentation Focus on revival, preservation, and wider access to ancient and medieval Indian literature Purpose & Policy Linkages Aligns with National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 emphasis on Indian languages, knowledge systems, cultural heritage Inclusion of classical texts, translations, and linguistic diversity Promotes languages as a “unifying force” and bridge for dialogue and harmony Strengthens research, translation, and public accessibility to classical literature Why this matters ? Cultural preservation: Institutional support for classical and regional literary traditions Academic value: Expands research resources for linguistics, literature, and history Inclusive access: Sign-language editions promote linguistic accessibility Soft power & identity: Reinforces India’s civilisational heritage and linguistic diversity 11 Classical Languages Recognised by the Government of India Tamil Sanskrit Telugu Kannada Malayalam Odia Marathi Pali Prakrit Assamese Bengali Grasslands in Climate Policy — Recognising Rangelands as Carbon Sinks Beyond Forests Why is it in news? With the UN declaring 2026 as the International Year for Rangelands and Pastoralists, the article highlights the growing global demand to recognise grasslands and savannahs in climate policy, especially after repeated UNFCCC climate summits (including COP30 in Belém, Brazil) continued to prioritise forests over grasslands in climate action and financing. Scientists, indigenous communities, and policy groups warn that grasslands are among the world’s most threatened biomes, facing rapid loss from agriculture, invasive species, mining, fire suppression, and policy neglect — despite their major role in carbon storage, water systems, biodiversity, and livelihoods. Relevance GS-3 | Environment, Climate Change, Conservation, Land Use GS-2 | Multilateralism, Indigenous Rights, Governance of Natural Resources Facts & Data — Why Grasslands Matter Biome significance Grasslands and savannahs cover ~40% of the Earth’s land surface globally. They support pastoralist communities, biodiversity, and hydrological systems (e.g., Brazil’s cerrado houses 8 of 12 major river systems). Carbon & ecosystem services Grasslands store a large share of carbon underground in soils, making them stable long-term carbon sinks (often more resilient than forests to fires & droughts). Suppression of indigenous land management (e.g., controlled burns, regulated grazing) increases wildfire intensity and carbon release. Current Threats Australia — desert grasslands Facing climate-induced dry spells & flash floods and spread of buffel grass (Cenchrus ciliaris) → burns hotter, displaces native grasses. Indigenous Desert Alliance (IDA) uses cultural burning, invasive-species control, and ranger monitoring — but funding remains inadequate. Brazil — Cerrado savannah Losing habitat at nearly twice the rate of the Amazon due to agriculture, mining, and land-use change. 70% of Brazil’s agricultural toxic waste is dumped in the cerrado → ecological and health risks. Grasslands are ecologically linked to the Amazon — “No cerrado, no Amazon”. Policy & Multilateral Context UNFCCC climate focus remains forest-centric (e.g., Tropical Forest Forever Facility at COP30). Grasslands better recognised under CBD & UNCCD: UNCCD COP16 — Resolution L15: calls rangelands complex socio-ecological systems, urges tenure security & investment. WWF & IUCN report at COP30: “Protecting the Overlooked Carbon Sink” Recommends integrating grasslands across all three Rio Conventions and into country NDCs. India-Specific Insights Grasslands in India fall under 18 different Ministries → fragmented policy and conflicting classifications E.g., Environment Ministry treats grasslands as afforestation areas Rural Development Ministry categorises them as “wastelands” → open to conversion. India’s NDC currently targets 2.5–3 billion tonnes CO₂ sink via forests/tree cover by 2030 Including grasslands as carbon sinks would strengthen mitigation and correct forest-bias. What Needs to Change ? Recognise grasslands as independent ecosystems, not “empty land” or wasteland. Integrate grasslands into: Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) Land-degradation neutrality & biodiversity frameworks Ensure: Indigenous & community land rights + co-management Ecosystem-based approaches (fires, grazing, rangeland stewardship) Build cross-convention coordination — UNFCCC-CBD-UNCCD → break institutional silos. FTA Impact — India’s Trade Deficit with Partner Countries Widens Despite Export Gains Why is it in news? NITI Aayog’s ‘Trade Watch Quarterly’ report (Jan 2026) finds that India’s trade deficit with FTA partner countries has widened sharply, rising 59.2% between April–June 2025 compared to the previous year — even as electronics exports grew strongly. The report comes at a time when India is expanding FTA negotiations with the EU, U.S., Australia, EAEU, GCC, Canada, SACU, and exploring new PTAs with Brazil and Israel, raising questions about trade imbalances and sectoral competitiveness under FTAs. Relevance GS-3 | Economy — External Sector, FTAs, Trade Balance, Manufacturing Competitiveness Facts & Data — Trade Deficit with FTA Partners Trade deficit growth (Apr–Jun 2025): +59.2% YoY Drivers of widening deficit Petroleum imports up, due to higher crude prices and volumes Weak export growth in several sectors Stronger import demand from FTA partners Countries contributing to deficit trends ASEAN, South Korea, Japan, Thailand, UAE — rising import bills Some FTA partners saw export declines (e.g., Singapore −13.3%, Australia −8.7%, Saudi Arabia −8.5%) Sectoral Performance Electronics — strong export surge Became 2nd-largest export sector 47% YoY growth in Apr–Jun 2025 Export gains driven by: Mobile phones, electronic circuits, components Petroleum & commodities — deficit pressure Gold imports from UAE increased sharply Petroleum oils & bituminous minerals up Iraq and Russia remain key crude suppliers; import values rose Geography-wise Trends Rising imports from UAE (+28.7%) China (+16.8%) USA (+16.9%) Export growth markets South Korea (+15.6%) Japan (+2.8%) Thailand (+2.9%) Bhutan (+10.2%) Declining export markets Singapore, Australia, Saudi Arabia — contraction noted Policy Context India signed FTAs with UAE & Australia (2022), UK & EFTA under discussion, ASEAN review pending Report flags: Structural export weakness outside electronics High import dependence in fuels, gold, intermediates Need for sector-specific competitiveness & supply-chain depth Significance Highlights a pattern seen in past FTAs — imports rise faster than exports unless domestic industry upgrades capacity & value-addition. Suggests that electronics PLI-led gains are promising but broad-based export strength is still lacking. Signals the need to align FTA strategy with industrial policy, RoO enforcement, and trade-deficit risk management.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 06 January 2026

Content Indian Coast Guard Ship Samudra Pratap SAMPANN: Transforming Pension Administration for DoT Pensioners Indian Coast Guard Ship Samudra Pratap Why is it in News? Raksha Mantri commissioned ICGS Samudra Pratap at Goa. India’s first indigenously designed Pollution Control Vessel (PCV) built by Goa Shipyard Ltd (GSL). Largest ship in the Indian Coast Guard fleet; enhances environmental response & coastal security. Over 60% indigenous content; symbol of Aatmanirbhar Bharat in shipbuilding. First frontline ICG ship to have women officers posted onboard. Relevance GS-3 | Internal Security & Disaster Management Strengthening maritime security, coastal surveillance & EEZ protection Enhances capability for oil-spill response, marine pollution control & disaster mitigation Builds environmental security resilience in alignment with NOS-DCP, MARPOL, UNCLOS Supports multi-mission maritime operations (SAR, law enforcement, firefighting) What is a Pollution Control Vessel (PCV)? A specialised maritime platform to: Detect, contain & recover oil spills / hazardous pollutants Support fire-fighting, salvage & maritime safety Protect marine ecosystems & blue economy assets Critical for India’s obligations under: MARPOL Convention UNCLOS environmental responsibilities National Oil Spill Disaster Contingency Plan (NOS-DCP) Mission Capabilities Pollution Control Suite Side-sweeping arms Floating booms & high-capacity skimmers Portable barges Onboard pollution control laboratory Fire-fighting: Fi-Fi Class 1 external system Automation & Navigation Dynamic Positioning System Integrated Bridge & Platform Mgmt Systems Automated Power Mgmt System Aviation Capability Helicopter hangar & aviation support facilities Armament 30-mm CRN-91 gun Two 12.7-mm SRCGs with modern FCS Roles Beyond Pollution Response Coastal patrol & surveillance SAR & maritime law enforcement EEZ monitoring & environmental safety ops Strategic Significance Environmental Security = Maritime Security Protects coral reefs, mangroves, fisheries, biodiversity Supports coastal livelihoods & blue economy Places India among select nations with advanced marine pollution response capability Strengthens India’s position as a Responsible Maritime Power in the Indo-Pacific Enhances operational readiness in rough sea conditions Aligns with Grand Maritime Vision, SAGAR & Indo-Pacific stability framework Indigenisation & Defence Industrial Ecosystem Built by Goa Shipyard Limited (GSL) Reflects shift to: Platform-agnostic, intelligence-driven, integration-centric Coast Guard Growth of domestic shipbuilding, servicing & repair ecosystem Supports: Make in India Aatmanirbhar Bharat Maritime manufacturing value chains Gender Inclusion Milestone First frontline ICG ship to appoint women officers Expands roles in: Aviation, operations, logistics, law, air-traffic control Marks shift toward a gender-neutral operational force Broader Context: Global Maritime Uncertainty Enhances capability against: Marine disasters Oil spill contingencies Hybrid maritime threats Supports regional capacity-building & cooperative frameworks Conclusion ICGS Samudra Pratap marks a major leap in indigenous maritime environmental protection & coastal security capacity, positioning India as a responsible, capability-driven maritime power in the Indo-Pacific. SAMPANN: Transforming Pension Administration for DoT Pensioners  Why is it in News?  SAMPANN platform expanded for DoT pensioners with deeper digital integration. Key update → Pension documents now accessible via DigiLocker: e-PPO / Pension Certificate Gratuity Payment Order Commutation Order Form-16 (tax document) Relevance GS-2 | Governance, Service Delivery & e-Government Example of digital public service reform in pension administration Improves transparency, accountability & grievance redressal Paperless workflows → reduced delays, fewer intermediaries, faster outcomes Strengthens citizen-centric governance for elderly & retired employees Basics — What is SAMPANN? Full form: System for Accounting and Management of Pension Sector: Department of Telecommunications (DoT) Type: Integrated online pension management system Core objective: End-to-end digital pension lifecycle management from sanction → disbursal → grievance redressal. What SAMPANN Does ? Single unified platform for: Pension processing & sanction Direct pension disbursal to bank accounts Digital profile & transaction history Online grievance redressal Transparency + real-time tracking Paperless workflow + reduced delays New Enhancement (2026 Update): DigiLocker Integration Makes key pension records securely available online: e-PPO / Pension Certificate Gratuity Payment Order Pension Commutation Order Form-16 Benefits Anytime-anywhere access Tamper-proof authenticity Long-term digital preservation Eliminates dependency on physical copies Governance & Reform Significance Strengthens: Digital Governance Paperless Administration Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) architecture Improves: Service delivery to telecom retirees Efficiency, transparency & accountability Reduces: Processing delays Manual handling errors Intermediary dependency Policy Linkages Aligns with: Digital India e-Governance & Good Governance reforms National Digital Public Infrastructure Pension sector modernization initiatives Impact on Stakeholders Pensioners Faster approvals & disbursal Secure digital records Simplified grievance process Administration Better monitoring & audit trails Reduced paperwork & transaction costs Conclusion SAMPANN is a digitally integrated, end-to-end pension management platform for DoT pensioners, now strengthened through DigiLocker-based access to official pension records, enhancing convenience, transparency, and paperless governance.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 06 January 2026

Content Hierarchy of roles Off the guard rails Hierarchy of roles Why is it in News?  The Supreme Court applied a “hierarchy of participation” test while deciding bail in the Delhi Riots–UAPA conspiracy case (2020). The Court relied on Section 43D(5), UAPA — which bars bail if accusations appear prima facie true — and held that prolonged incarceration alone is not a ground for bail under UAPA. Relevance   GS-2 | Polity & Governance Bail jurisprudence, Rule of Law, Constitutional morality Article 21 — liberty, due process, proportionality Judicial responsibility vs Executive power Rights in extraordinary legislation (UAPA, preventive detention) GS-3 | Internal Security Terror laws vs democratic freedoms Balancing state security & civil liberties Practice Question   “The ‘hierarchy of participation’ approach in UAPA bail decisions risks turning pre-trial detention into punishment.”Examine in the context of Supreme Court jurisprudence on liberty and due process.(15 marks) The Basics — UAPA & Bail Framework Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 — anti-terror law to prevent activities threatening sovereignty & integrity. Key provisions relevant here Section 15 — defines terrorist act (expanded interpretation used by Court) Section 43D(5) — reverse-bail clause Bail must be refused if the court finds prima facie truth of allegations. Section 2(o) — unlawful activity Standard bail principle reversed: presumption shifts against the accused, unlike CrPC. Data point NCRB data across recent years shows: High arrests under UAPA, low conviction rates, long pre-trial custody Courts and scholars frequently highlight process-as-punishment concerns. Case Background Case relates to alleged conspiracy behind the 2020 North-East Delhi riots. Prosecution theory: protests and messaging-group coordination → organised conspiracy. Defence claim: protest planning ≠ terrorism; prolonged custody without trial violates liberty. Trial status: Charges not framed yet; ~700 witnesses listed → major delays. What the Supreme Court Did — “Hierarchy of Participation” The Court grouped accused by their role-level in the alleged conspiracy: Core / Higher-order participation → denied bail Peripheral / lower-order participation → granted bail with conditions The Court said: at the bail stage, it only checks prima facie linkages, not proof. Critique flagged by commentators The hierarchy is inferred before trial evidence is tested → fairness concerns. Court’s Interpretation of “Terrorist Act” (Section 15)  Court accepted that terrorist acts may include acts beyond overt violence, e.g. threatening disruption of essential services / social order. This interpretation widens the preventive net under UAPA. Risk flagged May chill legitimate protest, expanding the State’s capacity to justify prolonged pre-trial incarceration in political-adjacent cases. Prolonged Incarceration vs Bail — Court’s Position Defence plea: 5 years in custody without trial = violation of liberty. Court response: Under 43D(5), liberty arguments can’t override prima facie bar, unless the case falls outside the statutory prohibition. Result: No bail for two accused despite long custody. Civil-liberty concern Young accused spending years in jail → irreversible life-costs if acquitted later. State Power vs Constitutional Dissent — Broader Debate Editorial perspective highlights: UAPA sometimes invoked to quell dissent rather than address terrorism. Distinction stressed between: Extraordinary terror cases (e.g., 26/11) Protest-linked conspiracy allegations Raises questions on: Due process Proportionality of criminal response Right to protest & free speech Implications for Criminal Justice System For Trial Courts Bail to five accused signals need to: Rationalise witness lists Avoid procedural delays Begin trials expeditiously For Future UAPA Cases “Hierarchy of participation” may become a new bail-screening doctrine. Expanded reading of Section 15 strengthens preventive detention logic. For Democratic Protest Space Raises fear of over-criminalisation of mobilisation networks. Takeaways UAPA = preventive + punitive law with reverse-bail burden. Supreme Court precedent tightens bail thresholds via role-based classification. Prolonged incarceration remains legally tolerated under UAPA, but socially contested. Balance between security and liberty remains the central normative tension. Off the guard rails Why is it in News?  The AI chatbot Grok on platform X (formerly Twitter) was found generating non-consensual sexually explicit and suggestive images of women on user request. Requests surged after New Year’s Eve, and the model continued responding without safeguards. Governments including India and France called for accountability and demanded strong guard rails. Instead of corrective assurances, Elon Musk responded dismissively, trivialising the seriousness of image-based sexual abuse. Editorial concern: Tech platforms enabling such misuse are normalising criminal behaviour and worsening online gender hostility. Relevance GS-2 | Governance & Regulation Platform accountability, intermediary responsibility Cyber laws, non-consensual intimate imagery (NCII) enforcement GS-3 | Science & Tech / Cybersecurity AI deepfakes, safety-by-design, harm mitigation Technology ethics & online safety Practice Question   AI-generated non-consensual intimate imagery represents a failure of both technology governance and criminal enforcement. Discuss the regulatory and ethical challenges involved, and suggest policy measures.(15 marks) The Basics — What Makes This Serious? Non-consensual intimate imagery (NCII) — also called image-based sexual abuse — is a criminal offence in many jurisdictions. Generating AI sexual images of real individuals without consent falls within: cyber-harassment defamation / obscenity digital sexual violence AI systems scale this abuse — faster creation, wider circulation, and hard-to-trace replication. Technology & Safety Issue — What Went Wrong? Grok positions itself as a chatbot with minimal safety restrictions compared to OpenAI / Google systems. The platform adopted a “laissez-faire” safety posture, allowing: explicit prompts harassment-linked generation public visibility of abusive outputs Result: The absence of guard rails encouraged malicious actors to exploit the tool. Gendered Impact — Editorial Emphasis Such AI-enabled image abuse: deepens online misogyny creates fear and humiliation for women worsens hostility toward gender minorities online The Internet already has high rates of: doxxing rape threats targeted harassment against outspoken women AI now multiplies these harms. Law & Accountability — India’s Position The Union Government demanded X stop such image generation and acknowledged its criminal nature. Editorial calls for two parallel responses: Platform liability — enforce guard rails, moderation, safety testing. Criminal prosecution of users who create / circulate NCII. Idea: Misuse must not feel risk-free. Structural Problem Highlighted by the Editorial Platforms have often shown impunity in gender-based harms. Survivors face: slow grievance redress weak enforcement under-reporting and low conviction rates Companies assume geopolitical insulation (US-based tech jurisdiction shields them). This weakens global accountability. Broader Governance Concerns Public-facing AI tools demand: safety-by-design red-team testing harm auditing Without this, AI risks becoming: a weapon for harassment an amplifier of digital gender violence Key Facts & Risk Indicators Research across jurisdictions shows: Sharp rise in AI-generated deepfake abuse, with women forming the overwhelming majority of victims. NCII harms include psychological trauma, reputational damage, job impacts, and extortion risk. Policy communities warn of an “arms-race dynamic” — unsafe AI features drive attention and traffic. Editorial’s Core Argument — In One Line AI tools that enable criminal abuse cannot be excused as innovation; users who exploit them must face prosecution, and platforms must impose guard rails. Implications for Regulation & Policy For Governments strengthen NCII enforcement enable swift takedown frameworks mandate platform risk-mitigation obligations For Platforms / AI Companies deploy safety filters & consent protections curb explicit generation involving real persons invest in responsible AI governance For Society / Users recognise AI-enabled sexual imagery as digital violence, not humour or prank. Takeaways AI governance now intersects with: gender justice platform accountability cyber-crime enforcement Absence of guard rails → technology becomes a vector of harm. Effective response must blend: criminal liability for abusers structural accountability for platforms.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 06 January 2026

Content What does the SHANTI Bill change? What remote-sensing reveals about plants, forests, and minerals from space Police in States step up social media monitoring Mexico’s Popocatépetl volcano — first 3D interior imaging Places in News(Colombia, Mexico, Cuba, Greenland) What does the SHANTI Bill change?  Why is it in News?  Parliament has passed the Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy in India (SHANTI) Bill. It opens India’s nuclear power sector to private and foreign participation — ending the exclusive State-run regime since 1956. Opposition demanded Select Committee review, citing concerns about: diluted liability safety and transparency risks weakening RTI and labour safeguards The government argues the law is essential for energy security, baseload power, clean energy, and nuclear expansion. Relevance GS-2 | Polity & Governance Public sector reforms, regulatory institutions, accountability Parliamentary oversight, transparency, RTI, labour safeguards State vs market role in strategic sectors GS-3 | Economy / Infrastructure / Energy Nuclear energy policy, investment models, PPP in strategic sectors Energy security, baseload power, Net-Zero strategy Technology partnerships & FDI policy constraints The Basics — Nuclear Governance Before SHANTI Sector governed by: Atomic Energy Act, 1962 Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage (CLND) Act, 2010 Nuclear operations were monopolised by NPCIL. Private/foreign role restricted due to: strict supplier liability high legal risk exposure Result → capital shortage, slow capacity addition, stalled global partnerships. What the SHANTI Bill Does ? — Core Provisions Opens nuclear projects to private Indian companies (licences to own, build, operate plants) Allows foreign supplier participation (indirectly, via JV / supply chains) Government to retain 51% control over strategic & sensitive functions: nuclear fuel cycle / reprocessing heavy water & enrichment radioactive waste & spent fuel radiation safety & emergency systems regulatory oversight Ends NPCIL’s monopoly Enables PPP-style model Private role in: equipment & fuel fabrication reactor construction & operation R&D and advanced technologies Supports deployment of: Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) Advanced Pressurised Water Reactors Indigenous reactor designs Policy link: ₹20,000 crore allocation announced for SMRs & advanced reactors under the Nuclear Energy Mission. Regulatory Architecture — Role of AERB  Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) given statutory status → now answerable to Parliament, not only the executive Mandate: nuclear & radiation safety licensing & inspection emergency preparedness quality & industrial safety compliance (Factories Act linkage) Criticism flagged: Concentration of regulatory power in one body → demand for independent nuclear safety commission. What Has Changed on Liability?  Earlier regime (CLND Act, 2010) Operators could recover liability from suppliers for: defective parts, design faults, wilful acts Supplier liability discouraged foreign entry. Under SHANTI — Predictable, Capped Liability Plant Type Capacity Operator Liability Cap Large plants ~3600 MW ₹3,000 crore Medium plants 1500–3600 MW ₹1,500 crore SMRs ~150 MW ₹100 crore Penalty for violations — ₹1 crore (cap)   Beyond the cap → Union Government pays, supported by a Nuclear Liability Fund. Supplier liability removed completely. Government reasoning: Predictable liability → lowers risk → attracts investment & technology inflow. Opposition argument: Shifts burden to State & society → weakens polluter-pays principle. Comparative data point Fukushima damages ≈ 700× higher than SHANTI’s proposed liability cap → highlights catastrophic-risk underestimation concern. Safeguards Retained No automatic FDI permission — route remains case-specific & regulated AERB authorisation required for: possession, production, disposal of nuclear/radiation materials establishing & operating facilities Government retains: fuel reprocessing, enrichment, heavy-water production high-level waste management Nuclear Liability Fund created for accident compensation. Transparency, Labour & Safety — Contested Clauses Concerns Raised Section 39 — overrides RTI Act review & appeal mechanisms → restricts public access to safety & operational information. Section 42 — exempts nuclear workers from general labour safety laws → unions term it “draconian”. No statutory requirements for: public hearings EIA disclosure community consent periodic safety reporting / parliamentary review Government’s Position — Rationale & Benefits Strengthen energy security & baseload capacity Reduce dependence on: coal & fossil imports single-country nuclear partnerships Support: Net-Zero 2070 clean energy & grid stability Reactivate stalled deals with U.S., France, Japan Encourage technology diversity + investment inflow Why Nuclear Energy Matters for India ? Renewables intermittency + storage costs India still relies heavily on coal for power Nuclear provides: 24×7 baseload very low lifecycle emissions long-term cost stability Current nuclear profile 25 reactors across 7 plants 21 PHWRs + 4 LWRs Installed nuclear capacity ~7 GW (≈ 3% of total electricity mix) Long-term strategy built around thorium cycle & fast breeder reactors Opposition’s Key Criticisms Accountability diluted, private profit + public risk Liability caps too low, supplier walks free RTI override weakens public oversight Labour protections diluted Vendor-driven push despite indigenous thorium tech capability Lack of safety-democracy mechanisms (consultation, EIA transparency) Global comparator: France keeps nuclear under full state control Labels the Bill as: pro-corporate / pro-oligarch risking public safety & environment Strategic & Governance Implications Marks a paradigm shift: State-monopoly → regulated PPP model May accelerate: capacity addition financing & technology partnerships Raises structural questions: Are liability caps socially optimal? Is independent nuclear safety regulation adequate? Can transparency be ensured without weakening security? Takeaways  SHANTI Bill = Liberalisation of nuclear sector + capped operator liability + removal of supplier liability + PPP-driven expansion under State oversight. Balances investment predictability vs public safety & accountability risks. Core tension = Energy security + clean baseload ↔ liability, transparency, labour & safety concerns. What remote-sensing reveals about plants, forests, and minerals from space Why is it in News?  Remote-sensing technologies — satellites, drones, hyperspectral sensors, SAR radars, and gravity-mapping missions — are increasingly being used for: resource mapping (minerals, groundwater, hydrocarbons) forest health & biomass estimation flood mapping & water monitoring climate change research & environmental protection Growing relevance due to: India’s push toward climate resilience, water security, precision agriculture, and mineral exploration expansion of ISRO-led EO missions, NISAR, Bhuwan, NRSC programmes Remote-sensing has moved from mapping what we can see → to detecting what lies underground and underwater using physics-based signatures. Relevance GS-1 | Geography (Physical & Resource Geography) Earth observation, landforms, vegetation & hydrology mapping GS-3 | Environment, Disaster Management & S&T Climate monitoring, biodiversity assessment, forest biomass Mineral & groundwater exploration Flood mapping, drought monitoring, precision agriculture Space technology applications (ISRO missions, NISAR, RISAT) The Basics — What is Remote-Sensing? Remote-sensing = observing the Earth without physical contact using: satellites aircraft / drones ground-based sensors Works by analysing electromagnetic radiation (EMR) reflected or emitted by Earth-surface features. Spectral Signatures  Every object reflects/absorbs EMR differently. These reflection patterns = spectral signatures (like fingerprints). Sensors interpret signatures to identify: healthy crops vs stressed crops minerals vs soil water vs land vegetation types / species Vegetation Monitoring — NDVI & Biomass  Healthy plants: absorb red light (for photosynthesis) reflect near-infrared (NIR) (to avoid heat stress) Normalised Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) High NDVI → healthy vegetation Low NDVI → drought / disease stress Evidence: Journal of Plant Ecology (2008) — spectral data enables mapping of plant communities & forest species at landscape scale. Applications crop health monitoring drought early warning forest biomass & carbon-storage estimation (climate mitigation) Water Mapping — NDWI & SAR Optical Water Mapping Water reflects visible green Strongly absorbs NIR & SWIR Normalised Difference Water Index (NDWI) → High values over water bodies Modified NDWI (MNDWI) → Better in urban areas (distinguishes water vs shadows) Limitation Optical sensors fail during: cloud cover night storms / cyclones Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) Active microwave sensor Sees through clouds & darkness Calm water = smooth mirror → black on radar image → Enables flood mapping during cyclones Key Missions NASA–ISRO NISAR Sentinel-1 (ESA) RISAT series (ISRO) Subsurface Mapping — Minerals, Oil & Gas Hyperspectral Sensing Splits light into hundreds of narrow bands Produces per-pixel spectral fingerprints Applications mineral prospecting (Cu, Au, Li) alteration-zone mapping soil & rock composition studies Evidence: Ore Geology Reviews (2023) — hyperspectral sensors map hydrothermal alteration zones linked to ore deposits. Oil & Gas Exploration  Micro-seepage detection Hydrocarbons leaking through micro-cracks: alter soil chemistry stress vegetation → yellowing leaves Satellites detect these subtle spectral anomalies Structural Mapping Anticlines / Dome-fold traps Surface folds suggest similar subsurface geometry Tools Landsat, ASTER (NASA) → structural imaging Bathymetry via ocean-surface gravity anomalies Magnetometry → detects depth of magnetic basement rocks Satellites don’t say “oil is here”, but “this structure can hold oil”. Groundwater Mapping — GRACE Mission Large aquifers exert stronger gravitational pull NASA GRACE (2002–2017) used twin satellites to: measure distance variation caused by gravity changes infer groundwater volume shifts Landmark finding (Nature, 2009) North India groundwater depletion detected from space → linked to irrigation withdrawals Benefits of Remote-Sensing Faster, cheaper, low-impact exploration Avoids random drilling / geological disturbance Enables: precision agriculture climate monitoring disaster management resource conservation Environmental Value helps ensure resources are not over-exploited supports sustainable groundwater & forest management Limitations   Requires ground-truth validation Interpretation depends on: atmospheric conditions sensor resolution calibration accuracy Cannot detect resources directly — only indicators Police in States step up social media monitoring  Why is it in News?  Over the last five years, States have significantly scaled up social-media monitoring infrastructure within police departments. Number of dedicated social-media monitoring cells 2020: 262 cells 2024: 365 cells (across 28 States + 8 UTs) Growth reflects policing priorities around: misinformation, hate speech, rumour-control cyber-enabled crime & communal mobilisation protest surveillance & law-and-order monitoring Data Source: Data on Police Organisations (DoPO), Bureau of Police Research & Development (BPR&D). Relevance GS-2 | Governance, Policing & Rights Surveillance, privacy, proportionality doctrine Cyber-policing & law-and-order institutional reforms Articles 19 & 21 — speech, dignity, due-process concerns GS-3 | Internal Security & Cybersecurity Tech-centric policing, misinformation & hate-speech monitoring Cyber-crime ecosystem, digital intelligence, drones & analytics The Basics — What Are Social-Media Monitoring Cells? Specialised police units that: track Facebook, X, WhatsApp, Instagram, Telegram, Snapchat etc. flag hate speech, fake news, mobilisation calls, financial scams identify law-and-order triggers & cyber-crime signals Evolved from cyber-crime police stations → now distinct units since 2021 in DoPO reporting. State-wise Expansion — Key Facts & Numbers States with highest number of monitoring cells (2024): Bihar — 52 Maharashtra — 50 Punjab — 48 West Bengal — 38 Assam — 37 Significant growth cases Manipur: 3 (2020) → 16 (2024) (growth despite ~140-day Internet suspension during 2023 ethnic violence) Assam: 1 (2022) → 37 (2024) West Bengal: 2 (2022) → 38 (2024) Punjab: 24 (2022) → 48 (2024) (doubled) Parallel Trend — Rise in Cybercrime Policing Cyber-crime police stations 2020: 376 2024: 624 Indicates shift from traditional policing → techno-forensics & platform-driven crime monitoring. Related Policing Infrastructure — Data Highlights  Drones with State/UT police: 1,147 (up from 1,010 in 2023) Vacancies:5,92,839 posts vacant Against sanctioned strength 27,55,274 Social composition of actual strength SC: 3,30,621 ST: 2,31,928 OBC: 6,37,774 Insight: Expansion of digital surveillance capacity is occurring alongside large manpower shortages. Why Are Police Expanding Social-Media Monitoring? Evolving crime trends cyber-fraud, extortion, phishing networks hate-speech mobilisation & rumour-spread radicalisation & organised protest coordination Real-time early-warning systems riot-prevention misinformation control during elections / crises Evidence collection digital footprints for prosecution Governance & Civil-Liberty Concerns Risk of over-surveillance chilling effect on dissent & free speech Weak legal oversight unclear statutory standards on monitoring protocols Privacy risks bulk-monitoring vs targeted intelligence Capacity vs accountability gap rapid expansion without transparency norms Balancing challenge: Security imperatives ↔ constitutional freedoms (Articles 19 & 21). Strategic Implications Positive improves situational intelligence supports cyber-crime detection aids disaster / protest / riot monitoring Concerns potential misuse for political surveillance uneven capability across States human-resource deficit despite tech growth Takeaways  India’s police forces are rapidly institutionalising social-media monitoring, rising from 262→365 cells (2020–2024) alongside cyber-crime station expansion (376→624). Trend signals tech-centric policing, but raises issues of privacy, proportionality, and oversight amid large police vacancies. Mexico’s Popocatépetl volcano — first 3D interior imaging Why is it in News? Scientists in Mexico have produced the first high-resolution 3D interior map of Popocatépetl volcano — one of the most active and dangerous volcanoes in the world. The project helps identify where magma accumulates, improving eruption prediction, hazard modelling, and evacuation planning. Significance is high because: ~25 million people reside within 100 km of the volcano Critical infrastructure nearby includes houses, schools, hospitals, and five airports Earlier interior images (≈15 years ago) were low-resolution and contradictory. Relevance GS-1 | Geography / Geomorphology Volcano types, stratovolcano behaviour Magma chambers, tectonic-volcanic linkages GS-3 | Disaster Management Hazard mapping, early-warning systems Risk-informed evacuation & urban-hazard planning The Basics — Understanding Popocatépetl Location: Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt Elevation: 5,452 m Age: current structure emerged >20,000 years ago Continuous activity since 1994 — ash, gas, smoke emissions almost daily Last major dome-collapse eruption: 2023 Known for: frequent ash plumes lava domes that build and collapse pyroclastic activity risk Popocatépetl is considered a high-risk stratovolcano due to population exposure + persistent activity. What Did the Scientists Achieve? Created the first 3-dimensional cross-sectional image of the volcano’s interior Imaging depth: ≈18 km below the crater The model reveals: multiple magma pools at different depths separated by rock layers / solidified material greater concentration towards the southeast of the crater Demonstrates that magma storage is not a single chamber → instead a complex multi-reservoir system Implication: Eruptions may not behave uniformly — risk patterns vary spatially. How Was the 3D Image Created?  Seismic Imaging + AI Processing Inside an active volcano, magma, gases, rocks & aquifers move constantly Motion generates seismic vibrations Researchers installed seismographs that: record ground motion ≈100 times per second Massive datasets processed using AI-based inference models infer material type, temperature, depth, and density contrasts Field Challenges Work carried out on the volcano slopes for 5 years Risks included: eruptions & explosions harsh weather damaged instruments (rats, shocks, battery failures) Some data sets were lost / corrupted, increasing mission difficulty Why This Matters — Disaster Risk & Public Safety The new model helps: identify magma pathways & accumulation zones assess likelihood of dome formation / collapse improve eruption forecasting windows inform evacuation strategy & exclusion-zone planning Repeating the study periodically will allow: change-detection over time tracking magma movement before eruptions The volcano becomes a “natural laboratory” for predictive volcanology. Facts & Data — Key Points to Remember Elevation: 5,452 m 3D imaging depth: 18 km Population at risk (within 100 km): ≈ 25 million Active since: 1994 Recent eruption event: 2023 Hazards: ash plumes, dome collapse, pyroclastic activity Purpose of imaging: magma mapping & eruption-risk assessment Takeaways  Popocatépetl’s first 3D subsurface map (to 18 km) reveals multiple magma reservoirs, improving eruption prediction & disaster preparedness for ~25 million people living nearby — a major advancement in volcano monitoring using AI-enabled seismic imaging. Places in News Relevance GS-1 | Geography (Location-based) Neighbouring countries, coastlines, strategic geography Caribbean, North America, Arctic region mapping GS-2 | International Relations / Global Politics U.S.–Latin America relations Drugs, migration, security geopolitics Arctic competition & strategic resources  Colombia — Why in News? Trump threatened action over failure to curb drug trafficking; Colombia remains a major global cocaine producer. Bilateral strain under President Gustavo Petro. Neighbouring Countries Panama (NW) Venezuela (E) Brazil (SE) Peru (S) Ecuador (SW) Geographic Notes Lies in North-western South America Only South American country with coastlines on both Pacific Ocean & Caribbean Sea Andes Mountains run across the country Major river basins: Amazon & Orinoco Data Angle Accounts for ~⅔ of global cocaine output  Mexico — Why in News? Trump warned of action over fentanyl-trafficking networks impacting the U.S.; debates around Neighbouring Countries United States (N) Guatemala (SE) Belize (SE) Geographic Notes Located in North America Coastlines on Pacific Ocean & Gulf of Mexico / Caribbean Sea Dominated by Mexican Plateau, Sierra Madre ranges, and Yucatán Peninsula Part of the Ring of Fire → earthquake & volcano-prone Policy Context Fentanyl crisis driving security-centric U.S.–Mexico relations  Cuba — Why in News? Accused by Trump of supporting terrorism & drug-trafficking networks; renewed geopolitical friction amid economic crisis & migration flows. Neighbouring Countries (Maritime Proximity) United States (Florida) — North Mexico — West Bahamas — NE Haiti (Hispaniola) — East Jamaica — South Geographic Notes Largest island in the Caribbean Located between Gulf of Mexico & Atlantic Ocean Part of the Greater Antilles archipelago Strategic Layer Symbolically key in U.S. hemispheric policy & Cold War legacy politics  Greenland (Denmark) — Why in News? Trump reiterated interest in annexing Greenland, citing strategic defence priorities. Neighbouring / Nearby Regions Canada — West (across Baffin Bay) Iceland — SE (across Denmark Strait) Arctic Ocean — North North Atlantic Ocean — South & East Geographic Notes World’s largest island; autonomous territory under Kingdom of Denmark Mostly covered by the Greenland Ice Sheet Hosts Pituffik (Thule) Space / Air Base Critical to Arctic sea-lanes, missile-defence, and rare-earth resources Strategic Context Rising U.S.–China–Russia competition in the Arctic

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 05 January 2026

Content Rah-Veer: Save a Life Without Fear Design Linked Incentive Scheme Rah-Veer: Save a Life Without Fear Why in News ? The Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (MoRTH) is highlighting the Rah-Veer (Good Samaritan) protections and reward scheme, reinforcing public awareness that bystanders helping road-accident victims are legally protected . Linked to India’s broader road-safety strategy under the Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act, 2019 and the Good Samaritan Rules, 2020. Relevance GS-II (Health): Golden Hour emergency-care governance; cuts preventable deaths and disability. GS-III (Public Safety / Disaster Management): Community-led first response; Safe-Systems / Vision Zero approach. Basics — Concept & Rationale Golden Hour: First hour after a serious injury when timely medical care can prevent death or disability. Problem Addressed: Bystanders often hesitate to help due to fear of police, court procedures, hospital liabilities, or payment demands. Policy Logic: Encourage lifesaving intervention by removing legal, procedural, and financial risks for helpers. Legal Architecture Statutory Basis: Section 134A, Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act, 2019. Operational Rules: Good Samaritan (Protection from Civil and Criminal Liability) Rules, 2020. Judicial Foundation: Supreme Court directions in SaveLIFE Foundation v. Union of India (2016) — made Good Samaritan guidelines binding nationwide. Good Samaritan — Rights & Protections No civil or criminal liability when acting in good faith. Right to anonymity — no mandatory disclosure of name/address. No detention or harassment by police or hospital authorities. If volunteering as witness — statement can be recorded only once, at a convenient time/place (including video-conference). Hospital acknowledgement must be issued on request. No obligation to stay back after admission of the victim. No payment liability — hospitals cannot demand treatment costs from the helper. No compulsion to file FIR or give evidence unless the person voluntarily agrees. Obligations on Authorities / Institutions Hospitals (public & private) must: Provide immediate emergency care without pre-payment. Issue simple acknowledgement to the Good Samaritan. Not detain the helper for procedural formalities. Police must: Avoid unnecessary questioning or repeated summons. Treat Good Samaritans with dignity and privacy safeguards. State Governments / MoRTH: Conduct awareness programmes and institutional compliance audits. Rah-Veer Reward & Recognition Scheme  ₹25,000 reward + Certificate of Appreciation for helping a crash victim reach medical care within the Golden Hour. Eligibility up to five recognitions per person per year (repeat acts of assistance). Objective: build a culture of empathy, courage, and community responsibility on roads. Data & Context India records one of the highest global road-crash fatalities. Economic loss from road accidents estimated at ~3% of GDP (as noted in studies cited by MoRTH / IIT-Delhi). A significant share of preventable deaths occurs due to delays in first response during the Golden Hour — bystander hesitation is a major factor. Impact Pathways — Why the Policy Matters ? Reduces Golden-Hour mortality by encouraging early evacuation. Builds trust between citizens, hospitals, and law-enforcement. Shifts policy focus from punitive perception to public-spirited participation. Supports Vision Zero / Safe-Systems approach in road safety. Implementation Gaps & Challenges Low public awareness → fear still persists in many regions. Variable compliance by private hospitals & local police. Lack of standardised claim processing for rewards in some states. Need for training of frontline officials and routine audits. Way Forward Nationwide awareness campaigns in schools, highways, transport hubs. Emergency responder training for citizens (basic first-aid modules). Digital reward & acknowledgement portal for transparency. Integration with 112 emergency response and ambulance networks. Periodic compliance monitoring & penalties for violations by institutions. Prelims Pointers  Section under MV Act: 134A. Rules notified: 2020. Liability status: Protected from civil & criminal liability when acting in good faith. Supreme Court basis: SaveLIFE Foundation case (2016). Reward under Rah-Veer scheme: ₹25,000 + certificate. Design Linked Incentive Scheme Why in News ? The Government of India highlighted progress under MeitY’s Design Linked Incentive (DLI) Scheme — a pillar of the Semicon India Programme — aimed at building a self-reliant fabless semiconductor design ecosystem. The update reports rapid scaling of DLI-supported chip-design projects, talent creation, patents, tape-outs, and private-investment leverage. Relevance GS-III (S&T & Indigenisation): Strategic chip-design capability, IP ownership, RISC-V/SoC innovation; design-to-deployment ecosystem. GS-III (Economy & MSMEs): Startup/MSME up-gradation, investment leverage, and high-value manufacturing linkages (design ≈ major share of value addition). Basics — Semiconductor Value Chain & Policy Logic Chip design = main value creator Contributes up to 50% of value addition Accounts for 20–50% of BOM cost Drives 30–35% of global semiconductor sales via the fabless segment Fabless model = high-value, low-capex Value lies in design + IP, not fabrication alone. Strategic rationale for India Reduce import dependence on core technologies Retain IP ownership Attract downstream manufacturing & assembly Strengthen technology sovereignty & resilience Scheme Architecture — Core Facts Implementing Ministry: MeitY Nodal Agency: C-DAC under the India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) Umbrella Programme: Semicon India Programme (₹76,000 crore outlay) Coverage: ICs, chipsets, SoCs, systems, IP cores, semiconductor-linked designs Lifecycle support: Design → prototyping → validation → deployment Eligibility Startups & MSMEs → incentives + design-infrastructure support Other domestic companies → deployment-linked financial incentives Definitions aligned to: MSME notification (1 June 2020) DPIIT Startup notification (19 Feb 2019) FDI Policy, 2017 (domestic ownership norms) Financial Incentives  Product Design Linked Incentive (PDLI) Up to 50% reimbursement of eligible expenditure Cap: ₹15 crore per application Deployment Linked Incentive (DLI) 6% → 4% of net sales turnover for 5 years Cap: ₹30 crore per application Minimum cumulative net sales (Y1–Y5): ₹1 crore → startups/MSMEs ₹5 crore → other domestic firms Design must be successfully deployed in products Design-Infrastructure Support National EDA Tool Grid — remote access to advanced design tools IP Core Repository — reusable IPs for SoC design MPW prototyping support — shared-lot chip fabrication Post-silicon validation — testing & silicon bring-up support Measured Outcomes & Data Highlights 24 DLI-supported chip-design projects in strategic sectors 16 tape-outs, 6 fabricated ASIC chips 10 patents filed 140+ reusable IP cores developed 1,000+ specialised engineers engaged / trained >3× private investment leveraged EDA Grid Usage: 54,03,005 hours by 95 startups ChipIN Centre reach: ~1 lakh engineers & students 400+ organisations 305 academic institutions (C2S Programme) 95 startups Key Institutional Pillars Semicon India Programme (SIM) — investment & design ecosystem support Chips to Startup (C2S) — target 85,000 semiconductor-ready manpower Microprocessor Development Programme — indigenous VEGA, SHAKTI, AJIT families C-DAC, IIT-Madras, IIT-Bombay — open-source architecture leadership Strategic Impact Pathways Anchors India in high-value chip-design/IP segment Reduces exposure to geopolitical & supply-chain shocks Enables assured access to technologies for defence, telecom, AI, mobility Drives technology autonomy + export-ready fabless capability Representative Success Stories Vervesemi — motor-control ICs for appliances, drones, EVs; 110+ IPs, 10 patents InCore — indigenous RISC-V processor IPs; silicon-proven across 180–16 nm Netrasemi — India’s first indigenous AI SoC @ 12 nm for surveillance & robotics Aheesa Digital — VEGA-based GPON broadband SoC (Vihaan) AAGYAVISION — advanced radar-on-chip for safety & 6G-sensor networks Challenges & Implementation Gaps Talent pipeline needs deep-specialization scaling Transition from prototype → volume manufacturing still evolving Need for stronger market linkages & downstream fabrication access IP commercialisation & export readiness require policy continuity Way Forward — Policy Priorities Expand EDA + MPW capacity & subsidised access Incentivise RISC-V, edge-AI, telecom & automotive SoCs Strengthen design-to-manufacturing coordination with ISM fabs Deepen VC + industry co-funding & global partnerships Create national semiconductor IP marketplace and standards stack Prelims Pointers Scheme type: Fabless chip-design incentive Ministry / Nodal: MeitY / C-DAC Outlay umbrella: Semicon India ₹76,000 crore PDLI cap: ₹15 crore | DLI cap: ₹30 crore Incentive band: 6% → 4% of net sales (5 years) Focus: ICs, SoCs, chipsets, IP cores, semiconductor-linked designs