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Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 06 December 2025

Content PRADHAN MANTRI FORMALISATION OF MICRO FOOD PROCESSING ENTERPRISES (PMFME) SCHEME THE HEALTH SECURITY SE NATIONAL SECURITY CESS BILL, 2025 PRADHAN MANTRI FORMALISATION OF MICRO FOOD PROCESSING ENTERPRISES (PMFME) SCHEME WHAT IS PMFME? Centrally Sponsored Scheme under MoFPI. Launch year: 2020 (part of Atmanirbhar Bharat). Objective: Formalisation + Competitiveness + Modernisation of India’s unorganised micro food processing sector (~25 lakh units, 74% unregistered). Implementation model: One District One Product (ODOP) approach. Target beneficiaries: Individual micro-enterprises, FPOs, SHGs, Cooperatives. Relevance GS-III | Economy – MSMEs & Food Processing: Formalises unorganised micro units, strengthens value addition, ODOP clusters, supply chains, and rural non-farm growth. GS-III | Inclusive Growth: Empowers women-led SHGs, expands credit access, reduces rural vulnerability, supports micro-entrepreneurship. GS-II | Governance & Implementation: Demonstrates convergence (PMKSY, PLISFPI, NRLM), highlights gaps in capacity building, digital literacy, market linkages.   WHY IS THIS IN NEWS?   MoFPI reported the latest progress up to 31 October 2025 on PMFME scheme performance. Multiple PIB releases (food processing, renewable technologies, MSME support, PLISFPI linkages) highlight policy push for micro-enterprise formalisation + green technologies + rural employment. Parliamentary replies confirm high uptake, massive SHG participation, and integration with PMKSY + PLISFPI.   KEY PERFORMANCE HIGHLIGHTS A. Loans & Subsidies 1,62,744 loans sanctioned under credit-linked subsidy. Total loan amount sanctioned: ₹13,234.90 crore. B. SHG Empowerment 3,65,935 SHG members approved for seed capital. C. Infrastructure Creation 101 Common Infrastructure Facilities (CIFs) sanctioned. 76 Incubation centres approved. D. Market Access 27 Branding & Marketing proposals approved. E. Central Share Released to States/UTs Steady fund release over last 5 years (exact annual figures not disclosed in PIB). SCHEME COMPONENTS Support to Individual / Group Micro Enterprises 35% credit-linked capital subsidy, max ₹10 lakh. Covers new units + upgradation. Support to SHGs ₹40,000 per SHG member as seed capital for tools and working capital. Max ₹4 lakh per SHG federation. Common Infrastructure Support 35% subsidy, cap ₹3 crore. For FPOs/SHGs/Cooperatives/Govt agencies. Facilities open for public use on hiring basis → reduces cost barriers. Branding & Marketing Support Up to 50% grant to FPOs/SHGs/Cooperatives/SPVs. Essential for ODOP value chain integration. Capacity Building Entrepreneurship Development Program (EDP+) Product-specific skilling Training of trainers, DRPs, incubation support. PROGRESS & PERFORMANCE NATIONWIDE Formalisation Momentum SHG seed capital uptake (3.66 lakh members) shows deep penetration in rural areas. High loan sanction numbers reflect strong credit linkage via banks/NBFCs. ODOP Integration improving clusters Establishment of CIFs + incubation centres strengthens local value chains. Reduces entry barriers for first-time entrepreneurs. Employment & Income Growth Micro food processing units generate off-farm rural employment → stabilises incomes, reduces distress migration. Women-led Enterprise Growth SHG-driven participation is a major success → aligns with Lakhpati Didi, NRLM, Aatmanirbhar Bharat goals. Convergence with PMKSY & PLISFPI PMFME upgrading micro-units, while PLISFPI scales large/medium units → integrated value chain development. CAPACITY BUILDING & ECOSYSTEM SUPPORT MoFPI Interventions National & State campaigns: newspapers, radio, expos, fairs, buyer-seller meets. Awareness drives targeting women collectives & SHGs. NIFTEM-K & NIFTEM-T Support Handholding, mentoring. Pilot plants, incubation services, NABL labs. Access to R&D, market linkages, packaging technology. Green Technology Push (related PIB note) Incentives for solar, biomass, wind energy → up to ₹35 lakh per project (PMKSY). Mandatory CTO (Water & Air) for grant release. Promotion of Non-ODS, low-GWP refrigerants for cold chain. Sustainable Packaging Innovation Biopolymers: PLA, starch, nanofibers. Low-waste packaging systems → crucial for export competitiveness. FINANCIAL SUPPORT STRUCTURE Component Support Target Group Capital Subsidy 35% (max ₹10 lakh) Individual/Group MFPEs SHG Seed Capital ₹40,000 per member (max 4 lakh per federation) SHGs Common Infrastructure 35% (max ₹3 crore) FPOs/SHGs/Coops/Govt agencies Branding & Marketing Up to 50% FPOs/SHGs/Coops/SPVs Capacity Building EDP+, Skilling, ToT, DRPs Entrepreneurs, SHGs, FPOs STRENGTHS OF PMFME Modernises the unorganised food processing sector (~74% unregistered units). Reduces credit constraints through capital subsidies. Empowers women SHGs → major socio-economic impact. ODOP creates specialisation, branding and export potential. Facilitates common facilities, reducing costs for small entrepreneurs. Strong convergence with NRLM, PMKSY, PLISFPI. CHALLENGES & GAPS Slow pace of on-ground utilisation of CIFs relative to sanction numbers. Need for stronger market linkages beyond local markets. Limited digital literacy among micro-entrepreneurs → affects compliance & formalisation. Fragmented value chains in certain ODOP regions. Credit access still depends heavily on bank willingness. THE HEALTH SECURITY SE NATIONAL SECURITY CESS BILL, 2025 WHAT IS THIS BILL? A new capacity-based excise cess introduced via a dedicated legislation. Purpose: Create a predictable, rule-based revenue stream for National Security, and Public Health expenditure. The cess is levied on machinery or processes used for manufacturing specified goods. Initially applies to pan masala, but Government may extend it to other notified goods. Relevance GS-III | Economy – Taxation & Fiscal Policy: Introduces rule-based, capacity-based excise system to ensure predictable revenue for national priorities. GS-II & GS-III | Public Health: Uses corrective taxation on harmful products; channels revenue to strengthen health security systems. GS-II | Governance: Establishes structured compliance, audit, enforcement, and multi-tier appeals—enhances transparency and accountability. WHY IS THIS IN NEWS? Government introduced a new statutory framework for a special excise cess to strengthen funding for two critical national priorities—health security and national security. Bill formalises a capacity-based taxation system for high-risk/ high-revenue products. Seeks to improve compliance, monitoring, enforcement and stable revenue mobilisation. OBJECTIVES OF THE BILL A. Fiscal Stability Create predictable and reliable revenues for national security & public health. B. Administrative Clarity Provide a structured, transparent, rule-based framework for levy, assessment, monitoring, enforcement, and appeal. C. Corrective Taxation Ensure certain products (starting with pan masala) contribute fairly to socio-economic needs. D. Plug Revenue Leakages Prevent evasion common in high-margin goods produced on semi-automatic/hybrid machines. WHAT GOODS ARE COVERED? Pan Masala (initial coverage). Government empowered to add any other goods to Schedule I. WHO IS LIABLE TO PAY THE CESS? Any person who owns / operates / controls machines or processes used for manufacturing the notified goods. Liability independent of income tax/GST status. NATURE OF LEVY Capacity-based monthly excise cess. Levied in addition to existing taxes/duties. Applied on: Machines installed, or Manual processes undertaken. BASIS OF CALCULATION A. Machine-Based Production Computed using: Maximum rated speed (pouches/tins/containers per minute). Weight per pack. Example rate: ₹101 lakh per month for machines up to 500 packs/min (up to 2.5 g pack weight). B. Manual Process ₹11 lakh per month flat cess. ABATEMENT RULE If operations remain shut for 15+ continuous days, prorated abatement applies. Ensures fairness and prevents liability during genuine downtime. FLOW OF FUNDS Cess proceeds credited to Consolidated Fund of India (CFI). To be used specifically for: National Security, Public Health Systems. REGISTRATION, RETURNS & COMPLIANCE ROADMAP Step 1: Registration Mandatory for any person possessing machines/processes for notified goods. Step 2: Self-Declaration of Machinery Maximum speed, weight per pouch, number of machines, type of process. Step 3: Verification Officers may verify/calibrate parameters. Opportunity of being heard before final determination. Step 4: Cess Computation Based on declared/verified capacity. Step 5: Monthly Payment Pay cess by 7th of each month (pre-payment model). Step 6: Monthly Return Filing Mandatory return with details of machines, operations, cess paid. Step 7: Audit & Scrutiny Audit of returns, records, declarations. ENFORCEMENT ARCHITECTURE A. Monitoring Tools Scrutiny of returns Inspection Search Seizure Real-time monitoring of machinery/process B. Offences Non-declaration of machines Undeclared operations Falsification of records Evasion or short payment Obstruction of officers Fraudulent refund claims C. Penalties Monetary fines Confiscation of goods/machinery Graded imprisonment depending on severity Arrest for serious contraventions D. Inter-Agency Coordination Collaboration with police, customs, railways, revenue departments. APPEALS MECHANISM Multi-tier appeal structure: Appellate Authority Appellate Tribunal High Court Supreme Court Ensures due process, fairness, and judicial review. GOVERNMENT POWERS UNDER THE BILL Increase cess up to 2× in public interest. Exempt specific persons/units under prescribed conditions. Notify additional goods for inclusion under the cess system. Set rules and procedures for all aspects of levy & administration. POLICY SIGNIFICANCE A. Strengthening Health Security & National Security Financing Dedicated revenue channel ensures non-disruptive funding for critical sectors. B. Capacity-Based Taxation = Anti-Evasion Tool Pan masala, gutkha, tobacco products often evade tax via under-reporting. Machine-capacity levy bypasses quantity reporting manipulation. C. Rule-Based, Transparent Framework Reduces discretionary power and increases administrative predictability. D. Aligns with Public Health Priorities Sin-goods/product categories that impose public health costs help fund health systems. E. Fiscal Federalism Neutrality Cess → goes to CFI, not divisible pool → strengthens Union fiscal space. CHALLENGES & RISKS Industry may shift to undeclared/illegal production to avoid cess. Monitoring capacity at ground level (especially for semi-automatic units) is crucial. Risk of litigation due to capacity assessment disputes. Potential for regressive impact if extended to essential goods (unlikely but permitted by law).

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 06 December 2025

Content Digital Constitutionalism Chile’s lesson for India’s coal conundrum Digital Constitutionalism WHAT WAS THE ORDER? Govt announced (2025) that all mobile manufacturers must pre-install Sanchar Saathi on phones sold from 2026 onwards. App’s functions include CEIR, stolen-phone tracking, SIM misuse detection, user safety, and police assistance. The rule required mandatory installation at manufacturing level, not optional download by users. Relevance GS-II | Polity: Fundamental Rights, privacy, state surveillance, constitutional governance. GS-II | Governance: Algorithmic decision-making, administrative fairness, accountability, opaque technologies. GS-III | Cyber Security: Rising digital crimes, digital policing, metadata risks. GS-III | Economy & Technology: Regulatory tensions between state control and global tech industry. Practice Questions The Sanchar Saathi rollback highlights the tension between citizen privacy and state surveillance. Discuss how this episode strengthens the case for Digital Constitutionalism in India. (10 marks)   WHY IS THIS IN NEWS? (The 48-hour rollback) In 48 hours, the government revoked the mandatory installation order after: Opposition from foreign smartphone companies, especially Apple, which refused compliance. Concerns raised by civil society, privacy researchers, and industry bodies. Fears of ambiguous data collection, lack of user consent, unlimited storage, and surveillance risks. Reuters broke the story → triggered global scrutiny. Government clarified that the intention was consumer safety, citing rising cybercrimes (15.9 lakh → 20.4 lakh between 2023–2024), but concerns of digital overreach took precedence. WHAT THIS CONTROVERSY SIGNALS ? Escalating tension between state surveillance authority and digital privacy rights. Increasing dependence of government on platforms, metadata, AI tools → blurred lines between governance and surveillance. Exposes weaknesses in India’s evolving data protection, algorithmic accountability, and digital rights frameworks. DEEPER ISSUE: THE EMERGENCE OF DIGITAL CONSTITUTIONALISM Meaning Application of constitutional values—liberty, privacy, dignity, equality, non-arbitrariness, natural justice—to the digital domain. Why needed Governance increasingly relies on invisible systems: biometrics predictive algorithms behavioural modelling facial recognition metadata analysis Without constitutional safeguards, these technologies expand state and private power beyond citizen control. KEY ARGUMENTS FROM THE ARTICLE A. Threats from Algorithmic Governance Automated decisions regulate: KYC welfare delivery job eligibility credit scoring moderation of speech These systems operate as “black boxes” → no explanation, no appeal, high risk of unfair exclusion. B. Rise of Invisible Surveillance Surveillance today is not Orwellian in a visible sense; it is ambient and silent: location tracing metadata facial recognition device identifiers Creates self-censorship and a chilling effect on dissent. C. Inadequacy of existing legal protections Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (2017) recognised privacy as fundamental right. DPDP Act 2023 offers protections but has: broad government exemptions weak oversight limited remedies prioritisation of state interests over liberty D. Global examples of caution Facial recognition restrictions across U.S. cities due to discrimination & misidentification. DigiYatra storing biometric data with private entities → ownership ambiguities. E. Structural democratic dangers Concentration of digital power with: governments law enforcement tech platforms Citizens reduced to data subjects, not constitutional right-holders. WHAT DIGITAL CONSTITUTIONALISM SHOULD INCLUDE ? Independent Digital Rights Commission. Strict necessity and proportionality for surveillance. Mandatory judicial warrants for sensitive data access. Public transparency reports. Regular bias/audit tests for high-risk AI. Right to explanation in algorithmic decisions. Right to appeal automated decisions. Strong purpose limitation and harsh penalties for misuse. Digital literacy as a constitutional right-enabler. BROADER IMPLICATIONS FOR INDIA A. India’s digital state is expanding rapidly Aadhaar DigiLocker FASTag DigiYatra AI-powered policing Predictive governance → All operate with limited constitutional guardrails. B. Economic considerations constrain regulatory choices Apple, global tech companies have leverage → government cannot risk “manufacturing exit”. C. India lacks a comprehensive surveillance law Surveillance currently governed by colonial-era or patchwork IT rules. No statute requiring judicial authorization for digital surveillance. CONCLUSION The Sanchar Saathi rollback underscores an emerging constitutional challenge: state-led digital expansion without adequate rights-based safeguards. As governance becomes increasingly algorithmic, surveillance-driven, and data-centric, India must embed constitutional protections—privacy, transparency, due process, proportionality—into its digital architecture. Digital constitutionalism is not merely a theoretical construct but a democratic necessity to ensure that technology serves citizens and not the other way around. Chile’s lesson for India’s coal conundrum WHAT IS THE ISSUE? India has achieved dramatic renewable energy gains, doubling clean energy capacity during 2021–25. Yet, India remains heavily dependent on coal, especially for electricity generation (≈75% in 2024). Coal provides jobs + cheap power in several States, but also results in air pollution, health loss, climate risk, and global warming. Relevance GS-III | Environment & Climate Change Coal phaseout, decarbonisation pathways, CCPI rankings, global comparisons (Chile). Air pollution, climate vulnerability, energy transition strategies. GS-III | Economy – Infrastructure & Energy Power sector reforms, energy security, renewable integration, market design, carbon pricing. GS-I & GS-II | Social Justice & Governance Just Transition for coal-dependent regions. Worker protection, reskilling, community rehabilitation. GS-II | International Relations Climate leadership, global expectations from India, COP negotiations. Practice Question India’s fall in the CCPI ranking despite renewable gains exposes contradictions in its energy transition pathway. Examine the factors behind this decline. (10 marks) WHY IS THIS IN NEWS? (COP30, Brazil, Nov 2025) India fell 13 places to 23rd in the Climate Change Performance Index (CCPI) 2025. Reason: Lack of progress in coal phaseout, despite strong renewable expansion. Highlights the coal conundrum: socio-economic dependence vs. ecological and public health costs. Chile’s successful coal transition is highlighted as a comparative model relevant to India. INDIA’S ENERGY STATUS (2024–25) Coal Dependence Coal accounts for over half of India’s total energy use. 75% of electricity was coal-generated in 2024. Domestic coal production is increasing, not declining. Renewables Renewables (wind, solar, hydro, nuclear) = ~50% of installed capacity, but only 20% of actual generation. Growth strong but inadequate to replace coal in dispatch. CHILE’S EXPERIENCE: WHAT DID IT DO DIFFERENTLY? Key Actions (2014–24) Carbon tax: USD 5 per tonne of CO₂ in 2014. Strict emission norms: raised coal plant compliance costs by 30%. Competitive solar/wind auctions lowered renewable tariffs. Large-scale energy storage rollout for grid stability. Commitment to phase out all coal by 2040. Outcomes Coal generation dropped from 43.6% → 17.5% (2016–24). Renewables > 60% of energy mix. Worker transition aided by: diversified economy strong renewable industry supportive political environment WHY INDIA’S TRANSITION IS MORE COMPLEX ? Coal’s share far higher than Chile → more plants to retire. Millions depend on coal economy in Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, West Bengal → risk of social disruption. Fewer alternative industries in coal districts. Grid integration challenges → renewables intermittent; storage insufficient. Political economy resistance due to tariffs, subsidies, and state-owned coal interests. WHY COAL PHASEOUT IS A “NO REGRETS” POLICY ? A. Economic Loss Climate change could cause 3–10% GDP loss by 2100 due to heat stress & productivity decline. B. Health Impact A 1 GW increase in coal capacity → 14% rise in infant mortality in nearby districts. Also contributes to PM2.5, respiratory diseases, and chronic illness. C. Climate Leadership Without a coal exit plan, India’s renewable achievements lack credibility in global negotiations. Three Key Thrust Areas 1. Physical Transition Remove oldest & most polluting units on priority. Cancel new coal approvals. Replace coal output with firm renewable power + storage. Scale up electrification of transport, industry, households. 2. Market & Regulatory Reform Introduce carbon pricing. Remove coal subsidies & cross-subsidies. Implement clean dispatch rules (renewables-first). Reform procurement contracts to incentivise RE+storage. 3. Social Protection & Just Transition Reskilling, alternative livelihoods, and robust worker support. Set up a dedicated transition fund – e.g., Green Energy Transition India Fund. Use District Mineral Foundation (DMF) for industry diversification in coal regions. FINANCE FOR COAL PHASEOUT Needs blended finance: Public funds → social welfare, worker protection. Private capital → renewable infrastructure, battery storage, green hydrogen. International climate finance flows crucial. DMF + CSR + sovereign green bonds can support district-level transition. CONCLUSION India’s fall in the CCPI rankings highlights a structural contradiction: rapid renewable expansion without a parallel coal exit strategy. The Chile experience demonstrates that coal-dependent economies can transition if supported by decisive policy, market reform, carbon pricing, and worker protection. For India, the challenge is larger but the imperative is unavoidable — climate losses, health impacts, and economic risks make coal phaseout a no-regrets pathway. A credible transition roadmap, with timelines, financing mechanisms, regulatory reforms, and Just Transition policies, is essential to align India’s growth trajectory with its net-zero ambitions and global climate responsibility.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 06 December 2025

Content Govt. to Streamline Its Public Communications Framework Judges Are Conscious, Won’t Let AI Overpower Judicial Process: Supreme Court Health Security → National Security Cess Bill, 2025 Passed Right to Disconnect Bill Introduced in Lok Sabha India–Russia Reiterate $100-Billion Trade Target by 2030 DRDO Successfully Conducts Indigenous Dynamic Ejection Test Govt. to streamline its public communications framework  Why is this in News? Centre has initiated a system-wide overhaul of India’s public communication architecture. Reforms span human resources restructuring, technology upgrades, and real-time media response mechanisms. A major proposal in advanced stages: Cadre restructuring of the Indian Information Service (IIS) to increase intake and reorganise roles. Rising number of ministries, digital platforms, and citizen-facing schemes require a unified, data-driven communication system. Last restructuring of IIS occurred in 2016; expansion of government communication needs has outpaced current cadre strength. Relevance GS-II: Governance, Polity Government communication reforms. Accountability, transparency, citizen–state interface. Rights: privacy, information, media freedom. Ethical public communication. GS-III: Internal Security Combatting misinformation/disinformation. Crisis communication readiness. What is the Indian Information Service (IIS)? A Central Group ‘A’ service under Ministry of Information & Broadcasting. Functions: Government communication & public information dissemination. Media management across print, TV, digital. Press Information Bureau (PIB), Bureau of Outreach and Communication (BOC), DD News, AIR News roles. Crisis communication, fact-checking, public campaigns. Recruitment: UPSC CSE. What is Cadre Restructuring? Change in sanctioned strength, hierarchy, and distribution of posts. Objectives: Modernise workforce. Improve promotion avenues. Add new roles, abolish outdated ones. Align cadre with contemporary needs (digital, analytics, multilingual outreach). What Exactly Is Being Revamped? 1. Human Resource Overhaul Increase intake of IIS officers to cover growing ministries and communication responsibilities. Reorganising functions: Creation of posts in digital media, strategic communication, data analytics, behavioural insights. Phasing out traditional press-centric roles. Improving career progression to attract and retain talent. 2. Technological Infrastructure Upgradation Real-time media monitoring systems. Rapid misinformation tracking and counter-response architecture. AI and analytics for campaign design, sentiment mapping, impact evaluation. 3. Unified Public Communication System Integration of all departmental communication wings under a single coordinated framework. Standardisation of messaging, tone, factual accuracy, and crisis protocols. Why the Revamp Now? Information ecosystem transformation: 800+ million internet users; explosive growth of social media. Decline of print-first communication model. Government expansion: New ministries, schemes, and regulatory bodies → each requires specialised communication specialists. Misinformation and national security concerns. Global trend: UK Government Communication Service (GCS), US Public Affairs Model rely heavily on data-led messaging. Key Objectives Real-time public communication. Data-driven policy messaging. Crisis communication readiness. Unified narrative building across ministries. Higher professionalisation of government communication. Expected Implications Faster misinformation response, aiding national security and public order. Improved scheme awareness and behavioural change outcomes. Professional, evidence-based policy communication. Enhanced transparency if executed with accountability. Better citizen engagement through multilingual, digital-first outreach. Challenges / Criticisms Risk of state propaganda if transparency safeguards are weak. Centralisation may reduce autonomy of departmental communication teams. Increased intake requires high-quality training in digital analytics, communication ethics, behavioural science. Need to balance proactive messaging with citizens’ Right to Information (RTI) and privacy. Constitutional & Governance Lens Article 19(1)(a): Citizens’ right to information. Supreme Court: “Right to know is essential for democracy.” Public communication reforms must balance freedom of press, privacy, and state accountability. Aligns with SMART Governance, Good Governance Indicators, and Participatory Democracy. Comparison with Global Models UK GCS: Highly centralised, analytics-heavy communication; rapid response unit. US Federal Public Affairs Officers: Decentralised but coordinated; emphasis on transparency laws. India’s model is moving closer to UK’s centralised GCS. Judges are conscious, won’t let AI overpower judicial process: SC  Why is this in News? Supreme Court observed that judges are “very conscious, even overconscious” about risks of generative AI (GenAI) in judicial work. SC emphasised that AI will not be allowed to overpower judicial administration. Comments were made while hearing a petition seeking guidelines or a policy regulating GenAI use in courts, tribunals, and quasi-judicial bodies. Petitioner highlighted dangers such as: AI hallucinations (inventing fictitious case law) Bias propagation Opaque data systems Fake rulings generated by AI tools Court allowed the plea to be withdrawn but permitted the petitioner to take the matter to the administrative side of the SC. Issue arises amidst global debate over AI use in justice delivery systems. Relevance GS-II: Judiciary Judicial independence & oversight Regulation of AI in judicial administration Natural justice and due process GS-II: Polity Article 14 (equality), Article 21 (fair procedure), Article 19(1)(a) (legal clarity) Administrative vs. judicial domain governance GS-III: Science & Technology Ethical AI, algorithmic bias AI hallucinations and explainability concerns What is Generative AI in the judicial context? AI tools capable of producing text, summaries, legal research, and even draft judgments. Uses: Case summarisation Research referencing Transcription (already used via SUVAAS, Vidhik Anuvaad) Predictive analytics (risk of misuse) What is AI Hallucination? AI generating non-existent judgments, false precedents, or invented statutes—a major legal risk. 3. Judicial Administration Includes research, drafting, decision-making, case management, court records, and adjudication. Core Concerns Raised (As per petition) 1. Fake Judgments & Fictitious Case Law GenAI can create fabricated citations, leading to wrong legal conclusions. 2. Bias Amplification AI trained on biased data may perpetuate caste, gender, religious or socio-economic biases. 3. Lack of Transparency Proprietary AI systems lack explainability → violates principles of natural justice and reasoned decision-making. 4. Data Ownership & Accountability Judicial data must be: free of bias stored transparently accountable to stakeholders. 5. Risk to Fundamental Rights Arbitrary use of opaque AI tools may compromise: Article 14 (equality) Article 21 (due process, privacy) Article 19(1)(a) (access to information, legal clarity) What the Supreme Court said ? Judges are “overconscious” of risks. AI cannot replace judicial reasoning or adjudication. Judges and judicial officers must verify all AI outputs, especially research. Training camps are being conducted to familiarise judicial officers with risks and proper use of AI tools. Instances of subordinate courts citing non-existent SC judgments were flagged as cautionary lessons. Judicial Philosophy behind the Position 1. Human oversight is non-negotiable Judicial discretion, empathy, context, and reasoning cannot be automated. 2. Rule of law requires interpretative judgment, not algorithmic output AI cannot exercise conscience, proportionality analysis, or balancing of rights. 3. Protecting constitutional morality Courts must prevent technological systems from undermining constitutional values. Present State of AI in Judiciary Already deployed: SUVAS: Judicial translation system SUPACE (SC): AI-assisted research (suspended over ethical concerns earlier) National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG): Data analytics for pendency Not deployed: AI-driven decision-making systems (explicitly rejected by SC) Governance and Policy 1. Need for Uniform National Guidelines No statutory framework exists for AI use in: subordinate courts tribunals quasi-judicial authorities. 2. Administrative vs Judicial Domain SC suggested this issue is better handled on the administrative side than through litigation. 3. Regulatory Vacuum India lacks: Standards on AI explainability Accountability frameworks Data protection enforcement (DPDP Act partially applicable). 4. Comparative Global Context EU AI Act: classifies justice-related AI as “high-risk”. US Federal Courts: require disclosure if AI-assisted. Canada: strict transparency mandates. India has no comparable regulatory architecture yet. Risks of Unregulated AI 1. Miscarriage of Justice Fake case law may lead to wrongful convictions, incorrect civil rulings. 2. Data Bias Sentencing or bail recommendations generated from biased data harm marginalised groups. 3. Accountability Failure If a judgment uses AI reasoning, who is responsible for error? 4. Erosion of Public Trust Justice system credibility depends on human deliberation, not probabilistic output. 5. Confidentiality Breach AI tools may process sensitive case data without adequate safeguards. Why the debate matters? Article 21 – Fair Procedure Automated, opaque decision-making violates due process. Article 14 – Right to Equality Algorithmic discrimination breaches equal protection guarantees. Natural Justice Right to reasoned decision → algorithms cannot provide judicial justification. Benefits of regulated AI Faster case summarisation. Reducing pendency in procedural stages. Improved access to legal information. Assistance for judges, not replacement. Real Policy Question How to use AI as a tool without compromising judicial independence, fairness, and constitutional rights? What should be the guidelines? 1. Mandatory human oversight AI cannot draft judgments; must only assist research. 2. Verification requirement Every AI output must be independently checked. 3. Transparency norms Mandatory disclosure when AI tools are used in submissions or drafting. 4. Data governance Only vetted, bias-audited datasets allowed. 5. Ethical and legal accountability A responsibility matrix for errors arising from AI-assisted work. 6. Clear prohibition zones No AI use in: bail decisions sentencing adjudication of rights constitutional interpretation 7. Regular training for judges Handling AI tools safely, understanding limitations. Implications for the Indian Justice System Positive (with safeguards) Efficiency gains in drafting/non-adjudicatory tasks. Reduction in backlog. Better multilingual access. Negative (if unsupervised) Threat to judicial independence. Risk of fabricated precedents. Erosion of citizens’ trust in the justice delivery system. Health Security → National Security Cess Bill, 2025 Why is this in News? Lok Sabha passed the Health Security se National Security Cess Bill, 2025 by voice vote. The Bill levies a new cess on manufacturing units of paan masala and gutkha, with revenue earmarked for: Strengthening national security, and Improving public health. Finance Minister clarified that defence modernisation is capital-intensive, and India must find additional internal resources. Debate triggered due to: Rising defence costs (precision weapons, autonomous systems, space assets, cyber warfare). Public health hazards from paan masala/gutkha. Ethical questions on funding defence via “sin goods.” Relevance GS-III: Economy Taxation structure (cess), fiscal federalism Resource mobilisation for defence expenditure Pigouvian taxes and sin goods GS-III: Security Defence modernisation & capital-intensive warfare National security financing models GS-II: Governance Public health policy (tobacco regulation) Parliament’s role in budgetary decisions BASICS 1. What is a Cess? A cess is a tax levied for a specific purpose, over and above existing taxes. Not part of divisible pool → not shared with states (goes to Consolidated Fund but is earmarked). Used earlier for: Swachh Bharat Cess, Krishi Kalyan Cess, Health & Education Cess. 2. What is “Health Security se National Security” Cess? Conceptually links public health risk mitigation with resource mobilisation for defence. Levy on “harmful, addictive products” → paan masala & gutkha manufacturing. KEY FEATURES   1. Target of the Cess Manufacturing units of paan masala & gutkha. 2. Intended Use of Funds National security preparedness, including: Modern weapons Surveillance systems Cyber defence Space assets Upgradation & modernisation of armed forces Public health improvement, addressing hazards of tobacco-based products. 3. Fiscal Rationale Defence is capital-heavy → “precision weapons are not cheap.” Defence allocation needs predictable, insulated revenue sources to avoid budget shocks. WHY GOVERNMENT SAYS THIS IS NECESSARY ? 1. Modern Warfare = High Cost Precision missiles, drones, autonomous systems, AI-driven warfare, space-based ISR are extremely capital-intensive. India’s military modernisation is lagging relative to technological shifts. 2. National Security is Public Good Cannot be compromised by cyclical budget pressures. FM cited Operation Shakti, Kargil experience and the 1990s budget crisis, when only “70–80% of authorised weapons/equipment” could be procured. 3. Defence Sovereignty Long-term self-reliance (Aatmanirbharta in Defence) requires sustained funding. 4. Public Health Justification Paan masala & gutkha are linked to oral cancers, addiction, and large public health costs. Higher taxation reduces consumption and funds treatment/prevention. PUBLIC HEALTH DIMENSION India has one of the highest global burdens of oral cancer, heavily linked to smokeless tobacco & gutkha. A targeted cess aligns with WHO-recommended strategy: tax harmful goods + invest revenue in healthcare. Addresses dual problems: Reduce harmful consumption Generate revenue for public goods (health + security) NATIONAL SECURITY DIMENSION 1. Precision Warfare Era Conflicts today require: Hypersonics Long-range precision strikes Electronic warfare Cyber resilience Space-based surveillance These drastically increase defence costs. 2. Need for Predictable Funding Capital acquisitions must be multi-year; cess creates a dedicated non-shareable revenue pool. ECONOMIC & GOVERNANCE ANALYSIS Advantages Pigouvian taxation: Taxing socially harmful goods to fund national goods. Reduces public health burden. Earmarks revenue for sectors often under fiscal strain (health + defence). Politically more acceptable than broad-based tax increases. Concerns Regressivity: Cess may disproportionately affect lower-income consumers. Narrow tax base: Revenue potential is limited; cannot substitute mainstream defence budgeting. Centre–State tension: Cess is not shareable → States may lose potential revenue streams. Moral argument: Linking defence funding to addictive substances may attract ethical criticisms. Industry impact: Paan masala/gutkha units (many in MSME sector) may face higher compliance costs. POLITICAL CONTEXT Some MPs urged withdrawal of national awards from celebrities endorsing gutkha. Widening debate on: Tobacco advertising ethics Public health priorities “Sin tax” governance Bill passed despite objections, signalling strong government push for defence-capex financing. STRATEGIC SIGNIFICANCE FOR INDIA 1. Defence Modernisation Push Aligns with India’s shift from manpower-heavy forces to technology-centric forces. 2. Health–Security Linkage Recognises that national security is not only defence, but includes public health resilience (post-COVID learning). 3. Fiscal Innovation Part of a global trend: countries using targeted levies for security preparedness. POTENTIAL IMPACT ON HEALTH Higher prices → reduced consumption → lower disease burden. More resources for cancer screening, awareness, PHC strengthening. ON DEFENCE Dedicated revenue stream for: procurement research ammunition stocks modernisation pipeline ON INDUSTRY Market contraction for paan masala & gutkha; may encourage diversification. CRITICISMS & CHALLENGES Cess proliferation creates non-shareable pools, weakening federal fiscal balance. Should defence be funded via a stable tax base rather than “sin goods revenue”? Risk of creating dependency on consumption of harmful products to fund essential sectors. Implementing cess effectively requires tight monitoring to prevent tax evasion and illicit manufacturing. Right to Disconnect Bill WHY IS THIS IN NEWS? NCP (SP) MP Supriya Sule introduced a Private Member’s Bill in Lok Sabha proposing an employees’ Right to Disconnect — i.e., the legal right to ignore work-related calls, emails, and messages outside official working hours. Bill seeks to address the modern crisis of overwork, blurred boundaries between home and workplace, and mental-health deterioration in an always-connected digital economy. India currently has no statutory right to disconnect, despite rising cases of burnout, information overload, and 24×7 digital surveillance tools used by employers. The Bill aligns with global moves (France, Portugal, Ireland) recognising disconnecting as a fundamental labour right necessary for work-life balance. Relevance GS-II: Social Justice Labour rights, workplace dignity Mental health and well-being as part of Article 21 GS-II: Governance Regulation of digital-era work culture Rights of gig workers and remote workers GS-III: Economy & Technology Digital tools, algorithmic management Productivity vs. overwork dynamics BASICS 1. What is the Right to Disconnect? A labour right allowing employees to refuse work communications after official hours without penalty. Protects personal time, rest, leisure, health, and family life. Based on the principle: “Work must end when working hours end.” 2. Why is this needed today? Remote work, hybrid models, smartphones, and collaboration tools (WhatsApp, Teams, Slack) make employees perpetually reachable. Overwork → Sleep deprivation Burnout Anxiety & depression Reduced productivity Health disorders (cardiac risk, obesity, cognitive overload) Especially severe in IT, finance, e-commerce, gig work, and start-up ecosystems. 3. Why a legal right? Voluntary corporate guidelines lack enforceability; without law, employees cannot refuse after-hours work pressures. KEY FEATURES OF SULE’S RIGHT TO DISCONNECT BILL, 2025 1. Right to ignore after-hour work communications Employees cannot be penalised for not responding to: Calls Emails Messages Official digital monitoring tools Outside notified working hours. 2. Employer obligations Cannot force employee availability beyond hours unless mutually agreed. Failure → penalties up to 1% of the company’s total remuneration bill. 3. Employees’ Welfare Authority (new regulatory body) To frame rules for: Work-hour boundaries Digital communication limits Monitoring compliance To mediate disputes between employer and employee on work-after-hours issues. 4. Mandatory counselling services Large workplaces must offer mental-health support for overworked employees. 5. Data collection & audit Authority to set baseline metrics for continuous assessment of work-related stress and time-use patterns. 6. Negotiation committees When Parliament is in session, employers must discuss and finalise disconnection norms with workers’ unions or representatives. THE PROBLEM: WHY SUCH A BILL IS EMERGING NOW 1. Digital capitalism has erased boundaries Employees remain “on-call” 24×7. Increased notifications → cognitive overload (“info-obesity”). 2. Gig and remote work expansion India has ~8–10 million gig workers; they face unregulated, unpredictable hours. 3. Mental health crisis Burnout is classified as an occupational phenomenon (WHO). Work-from-home during COVID accelerated the trend. 4. Feminisation of stress Women face “double burden”: paid work + domestic labour. 5. India’s labour codes silent on digital after-hours work Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSH) Code doesn’t address digital-era work overload. GLOBAL CONTEXT   France (2017) First country to legally recognise the right to disconnect. Companies with >50 employees must negotiate digital boundaries. Portugal (2021) Employers banned from contacting workers after hours except in emergencies. Ireland, Italy, Spain, Belgium National guidelines + statutory protections for workers’ digital disengagement. Learning for India: Legal frameworks help institutionalise mental-health protections and enforce predictable working hours. GOVERNANCE & POLICY ANALYSIS 1. Labour Rights Perspective Reinforces constitutional values under Article 21 (right to live with dignity, mental well-being). Supports ILO principles on decent work. 2. Public Health Governance Sleep deprivation & burnout are public health concerns → increase NCD risks and reduce national productivity. 3. Economic Impact Balanced work regimes → higher productivity, innovation, employee retention. Helps companies reduce burnout-driven attrition, especially in IT-BPM sector. 4. Technology Governance Addresses ethical use of digital monitoring tools and employee surveillance. Encourages transparency in algorithmically scheduled work. CRITICISMS & CHALLENGES 1. Compliance cost for employers SME/MSME sector may struggle to formalise strict digital boundaries. 2. Sectoral differences Emergency services, healthcare, logistics, and 24×7 operations may require flexible norms. 3. Enforcement gap Private Member’s Bills rarely become law (only ~14 passed since Independence). Implementation may be difficult without strong trade unions. 4. Global competitiveness concerns Some argue it may reduce responsiveness in highly competitive export sectors. 5. Cultural barrier India’s corporate culture often normalises long hours → legal right alone may not fix mindset. IMPLICATIONS IF THE BILL IS ADOPTED Positive Improved mental and physical health outcomes. Clearer work-life boundaries. Reduced information overload & burnout. Better employee satisfaction and retention. Progressive labour policy signalling globally. Negative Possibility of informal pressure continuing outside legal frameworks. New compliance burden may deter startups. India–Russia Trade Target of $100 Billion by 2030 WHY IS THIS IN NEWS? India and Russia, during high-level meetings involving PM Modi and President Putin (BRICS & Annual Summit frame), reaffirmed their commitment to achieve USD 100 billion bilateral trade by 2030. Russia emphasised it is a reliable supplier of fuel and will continue uninterrupted shipments to India. Comes amid US-imposed tariffs and increasing Western scrutiny of India–Russia economic ties, especially following the Ukraine conflict. India also pushed for rapid conclusion of the FTA with the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) to reduce tariff and non-tariff barriers. Trade gap has sharply widened due to surging Russian oil imports and falling Indian exports. Relevance GS-II: International Relations India–Russia strategic partnership Energy security, defence cooperation Multilateral linkages (EAEU, BRICS) Navigating sanctions environment GS-III: Economy Bilateral trade imbalance Currency settlement (rupee–rouble) Oil imports and global supply chains GS-III: Security Defence logistics and spare parts dependency Strategic autonomy BASICS 1. What is the India–Russia trade relationship? Traditionally driven by defence, energy, nuclear cooperation, fertilizers, and diamonds. Post-2022, Russia became India’s largest crude oil supplier, radically altering the trade composition. 2. What is the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU)? A regional economic bloc led by Russia including Belarus, Kazakhstan, Armenia, and Kyrgyzstan. Negotiating an FTA with India since 2017. 3. Why are US tariffs mentioned? The US introduced tariffs and sanctions related to geopolitical tensions, indirectly affecting global supply chains and trade flows with Russia. India’s continued high-volume trade with Russia is closely watched by Western partners. DATA: THE WIDENING TRADE GAP (Commerce Ministry) Imports from Russia (largely crude oil): 2021–22: $6.9 bn 2022–23: $46.2 bn 2023–24: $61.15 bn 2024–25 (Apr–Aug): $63.81 bn (annualised trend) Exports to Russia: Remain under $4 billion, flat for years. Result: Massive trade imbalance, driven by discounted Russian crude flows. CURRENT DRIVERS OF INDIA–RUSSIA TRADE 1. Crude Oil as the Dominant Component India imported heavily discounted Russian oil after 2022. Russia now accounts for 35–40% of Indian crude imports at times. 2. Use of National Currencies About 96% of trade settlements in rupees and roubles, reducing dollar dependency. Helps bypass sanctions-related transaction bottlenecks. 3. Russia’s role as a stable fuel supplier Putin reassured India of continuous & uninterrupted shipments. 4. Defence & High-tech cooperation Components, spares, joint ventures, and nuclear energy (Kudankulam) remain core areas. WHY BOTH SIDES WANT THE $100-BILLION TARGET ? India’s perspective Secure long-term energy supplies. Diversify away from Gulf dependence. Gain favourable pricing in oil & gas. Expand exports: pharma, agricultural products, machinery, engineering goods. Promote India’s presence in Russia’s Far East through connectivity initiatives (INSTC, Chennai–Vladivostok route). Russia’s perspective Pivot to Asian markets after Western sanctions. Stable buyer for oil, coal, fertilizers. Attract Indian investments in infrastructure, mining, and energy in the Far East. Strengthen geopolitical partnership amid global realignment. STRUCTURAL CHALLENGES 1. Huge Trade Imbalance India imports far more from Russia → unsustainable gap. Indian exporters face logistical, payment & certification hurdles. 2. Payment & Currency Issues Rupee accumulation in Russian banks is large; Russia wants to use rupees to buy Indian goods, but supply is limited. Exchange rate volatility & currency convertibility constraints. 3. Logistics Bottlenecks INSTC (International North-South Transport Corridor) still not fully optimised. Limited maritime connectivity. 4. Sanctions Environment Western sanctions complicate shipping insurance, banking channels, and trade finance. Indian entities must navigate compliance risks. 5. Limited Indian Market Penetration Lack of market awareness, limited brand presence in Russia, certification & regulatory hurdles. FTA WITH THE EURASIAN ECONOMIC UNION (EAEU) India wants a swift conclusion because: Benefits Reduced tariffs → boost Indian exports. Address non-tariff barriers (phytosanitary, certification). Improve predictability in bilateral trade. Help in rupee-rouble settlement mechanisms. Strategic foothold in the Eurasian region. Hurdles Complex negotiation environment due to sanctions. Sensitive sectors (metals, fertilizers) require careful balancing. Logistics & standards harmonisation needed. GEOPOLITICAL SIGNIFICANCE FOR INDIA 1. Balancing Act Between West and Russia India seeks strategic autonomy: Buys Russian oil Cooperates with Russia in defence Deepens Quad partnership with US Maintaining diversified partnerships mitigates geopolitical risks. 2. Energy Security Russian crude provides price stability, reducing India’s import bill. 3. Defence Readiness Russia remains major supplier of critical defence spares & technologies. 4. Strategic Presence in Eurasia Connectivity corridors with Russia strengthen India’s Eurasian footprint vis-à-vis China. ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS FOR INDIA Positive Lower energy costs due to discounted Russian oil. Opportunity to expand export base in pharmaceuticals, agriculture, textiles, auto components. Investment openings in the Far East → minerals, hydrocarbons, infrastructure. Risks Overdependence on Russian energy. Exposure to secondary sanctions. Trade imbalance if exports don’t rise substantially. POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS 1. Build strong export support mechanisms Market intelligence cells for Russia Certification/standards harmonisation Export credit, logistics subsidies 2. Accelerate INSTC operationalisation Reduce transit time and cost via Iran & Caspian Sea. 3. Diversify beyond crude Promote IT services, engineering goods, medical devices. 4. Currency mechanism innovation Expand rupee-rouble convertibility windows Explore digital currency settlement channels DRDO Successfully Conducts Indigenous Dynamic Ejection Test WHY IS THIS IN NEWS? DRDO announced the successful dynamic ejection test of a new indigenous fighter aircraft crew escape module (ejection system). The test took place at the Rail Track Rocket Sled (RTRS) facility at Terminal Ballistics Research Laboratory (TBRL), Chandigarh. This marks a technological milestone in India’s defence aviation ecosystem, enhancing safety for pilots during emergencies such as high-speed crashes, mid-air failures, or loss of control. The development strengthens India’s move toward self-reliance in advanced aerospace safety technologies, previously dominated by foreign suppliers. Relevance GS-III: Security / Defence Defence R&D, aerospace indigenisation Pilot safety and combat readiness Support for indigenous fighter programmes (Tejas, AMCA, etc.) GS-III: Science & Technology High-speed aerodynamics Rocket sled testing, flight safety systems Indigenous engineering capabilities GS-II: Governance Aatmanirbhar Bharat in defence manufacturing Reducing reliance on foreign suppliers BASICS 1. What is an Ejection System? A system designed to save a pilot’s life when the aircraft experiences catastrophic failure. Includes: Ejection seat Explosive charges/rockets to propel the pilot out Parachute deployment system Survival kit 2. Dynamic Ejection Test A high-speed test that simulates real-life aircraft escape conditions, including: Aerodynamic loads High-speed airflow Changing acceleration forces Seat–pilot interaction Conducted on a “rocket sled track” to mimic aircraft speed. 3. Why dynamic tests matter? Static tests cannot reproduce real conditions like: High wind blast Instability G-forces Canopy fragmentation Pressure variations Dynamic tests help validate crew survivability under extreme operational conditions. THE TEST: KEY DETAILS Conducted by DRDO’s Aeronautical Development Establishment (ADE) and TBRL. Rocket sled propelled the ejection seat & dummy at simulated aircraft speeds. System was tested for ensuring: Pilot safe separation Stable trajectory Correct sequencing of explosive & rocket elements Proper parachute deployment envelope Involved: Canopy fragmentation or breaking Safe clearance from aircraft body Avoiding seat tumbling Ensuring steady descent TECHNOLOGICAL CHALLENGES 1. Simulating High-Speed Ejection Faster aircraft (modern fighters reach >1.6 Mach) → greater aerodynamic forces. 2. Complex escape sequence Canopy must shatter/jet away → seat rockets fire → seat stabilizes → parachute deploys. Each step must occur within milliseconds. 3. Dummy behaviour Human-like crash dummies mimic: Body movements Neck/torso response Pressure effects Ensures realistic data on spinal loads and shock absorption. 4. All-weather complexity Ejections may occur: At low altitude High altitude Low speed Very high speed System must handle flight-envelope extremes. 5. Safety margins Preventing neck injuries, fractures, and uncontrolled spinning. WHY THIS MATTERS: STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE ? 1. Critical for Indigenous Fighter Programmes The ejection system is essential for: LCA Tejas variants AMCA (Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft) LCA Mk-2 Twin-engine deck-based fighter (TEDBF) Future trainer and combat aircraft 2. Reduces Dependence on Foreign Suppliers India historically relied on: Martin-Baker (UK) Russian K-36 systems Indigenous system → cost reduction + strategic autonomy. 3. Enhances Pilot Safety Pilot survivability affects: National morale Training costs Military readiness Losing pilots to avoidable ejection failures is unacceptable in modern Air Forces. 4. Boosts Aatmanirbhar Bharat in Defence High-tech R&D ecosystem strengthened. Spinoff benefits for space, missile, and aerospace sectors. 5. Supports High-Speed Future Platforms AMCA, unmanned–manned teaming, and future air combat platforms will need advanced escape systems. ADDITIONAL CONTEXT FROM THE ARTICLE 1. First-of-its-kind achievement Rare capability globally; dynamic ejection tests require sophisticated rail-track rocket facilities. 2. Avoiding 1990s setbacks Earlier generations of Indian aviation depended on foreign imports for survival equipment. This test helps India avoid bottlenecks in supply chains due to geopolitical pressures. 3. Data gathered Test generated critical data: Oscillation dynamics Parachute stability Dummy kinematic response Used to adjust seat design. 4. Actual dummy test Test used a human-like dummy fitted with sensors that tracked: Pressure Acceleration Impact loads Flight dynamics IMPLICATIONS FOR INDIA’S DEFENCE CAPABILITY 1. Improves Aircraft Certification Safe escape systems are mandatory for aircraft clearance. 2. Enhances Export Potential Indigenous fighters with indigenous safety systems become more attractive for foreign buyers. 3. Strengthens R&D Infrastructure RTRS facility’s success encourages more flight-safety and airframe-testing experiments. 4. Boosts confidence of IAF & Navy pilots Reliable ejection systems improve operational confidence during risky missions.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 05 December 2025

Content PARLIAMENT QUESTION: DISCRIMINATION IN UPSC INTERVIEWS PARLIAMENT QUESTION: STATUS OF RTI  PARLIAMENT QUESTION: DISCRIMINATION IN UPSC INTERVIEWS Why is this in News? A Parliament Question (04 Dec 2025) asked whether discrimination or bias occurs in UPSC Personality Tests. Ministry of Personnel informed Parliament that UPSC interviews are structurally designed to prevent any form of bias. UPSC conveyed specific institutional safeguards to ensure anonymity, neutrality, and fairness in the Personality Test. Relevance:   GS2 – Governance & Accountability • Fairness in recruitment systems; safeguards ensuring neutrality in public institutions. • Strengthens trust in independent constitutional bodies (UPSC under Art. 315). • Addresses allegations of bias linked to region, language, socio-economic background. GS2 – Civil Services Reforms • Interview randomisation, anonymity, moderation → institutional mechanisms for objective evaluation. • Debates on subjectivity, standardisation, recorded interviews. What is the UPSC Personality Test? Final stage of the Civil Services Examination: 275 marks (no minimum qualifying marks). Objective: test overall suitability for public service—judgement, ethics, leadership, mental alertness, balance of mind, communication clarity. Conducted by multiple boards, each chaired by a UPSC Member and comprising eminent experts. Allegations Often Raised by Aspirants  Possible variation in marks across Boards. Perception of bias based on: Optional subjects Socio-economic background Region, language, or category Concerns about transparency and subjectivity in evaluation. UPSC’s Official Response (As Stated in Parliament) UPSC denied any discrimination, citing the following systemic safeguards: a. Randomized Allotment of Candidates Candidates are assigned to Boards randomly each day, preventing pre-selection or targeting. b. Category & Written Marks Not Disclosed Boards do not know: Category (SC/ST/OBC/EWS/GEN) Written exam marks Eliminates both positive and negative bias. c. Board Identity Not Disclosed to Candidates Candidates do not know in advance which Board they will face, preventing external influence or pressure. d. Transparency in Results After final selection, UPSC publishes: Written marks Interview marks Total marks Ensures public scrutiny, discouraging manipulation. Why These Safeguards Matter ? Randomization breaks any predictable pattern that could favour particular groups. Non-disclosure of category and marks ensures the interview panel evaluates only: Personality, Demeanor, Reasoning, Ethics, Decision-making. Board anonymity reduces potential lobbying or intimidation. Disclosure of marks provides an audit trail, promoting trust in outcomes. Structural Strengths of UPSC Interview System Standardized evaluation guidelines across Boards. Diverse Board composition ensures balanced perspectives. Checks on marking outliers (internal moderation). India’s CSE interview model is globally considered high-integrity compared to: US administrative hiring (heavily subjective) UK Civil Service Fast Stream (multiple filters but less anonymity) Challenges & Criticism  Perception of variability in marks across boards persists; data shows 25–40 mark spread is common. Some argue for: Recorded interviews Uniform questioning guidelines External observers However, UPSC holds that flexibility is essential for assessing personality, not rote responses. Implications for Governance & Public Trust Reinforces credibility of the world’s largest merit-based civil service exam. Counteracts narratives of discrimination. Supports government’s stance on transparency and neutrality in recruitment. Critical for maintaining aspirant confidence and ensuring social legitimacy of the selection process. PARLIAMENT QUESTION: STATUS OF RTI  Why is this in News? A Parliament Question (04 Dec 2025) sought data on RTI applications filed, rejected, and answered between 2019–20 and 2023–24. The Ministry of Personnel placed five-year comparative figures, highlighting trends in RTI usage and transparency. The data provides an official snapshot of the health of India’s transparency regime. Relevance: GS2 – Transparency, Accountability & Governance • RTI trends as indicators of institutional openness and citizen trust. • Rise in filings shows demand for accountability; gaps highlight weak proactive disclosure. • Low rejection rate reflects proper use of Section 8 exemptions. GS2 – Statutory Bodies • CIC/SIC workload, pendency, and need for capacity strengthening. What is the RTI Act, 2005? Empowers citizens to seek information from public authorities. Mandates: 30-day response timeline Mandatory disclosure of many categories of information Promotes accountability, transparency, anti-corruption, and participatory governance. RTI performance is a key indicator of institutional openness. Official Data (As Tabled in Parliament) (i) RTI Applications Filed Year Applications Filed 2023–24 17,50,863 2022–23 16,38,784 2021–22 14,21,226 2020–21 13,33,802 2019–20 13,74,315 Trend: Steady rise since 2020–21; approx 31% growth over five years. (ii) RTI Applications Rejected Year Rejected 2023–24 67,615 2022–23 52,662 2021–22 53,733 2020–21 51,390 2019–20 58,634 Trend: Rejection numbers remain around 3–4% of total applications; slight increase in 2023–24. (iii) RTI Applications Answered Year Answered 2023–24 14,30,031 2022–23 13,15,222 2021–22 11,31,757 2020–21 Not Available 2019–20 10,86,657 Trend: Response numbers improving; over 13–14 lakh answers annually in recent years. Overview a. Increasing Public Reliance on RTI Sharp rise from 13.7 lakh (2019–20) to 17.5 lakh (2023–24). Indicates growing: Awareness Demand for accountability Digital access (as many RTIs now filed online) b. Low Rejection Rate Rejections remain roughly 3–4%, suggesting: Reasonable access Lower misuse of Section 8 exemptions Improved applicant awareness But rise in 2023–24 (67k) requires monitoring. c. Gap Between Filed and Answered In 2023–24: Filed: 17.5 lakh Answered: 14.3 lakh Gap partly due to: Transfers across departments Pendency Applications not requiring full answers (withdrawn, invalid, etc.) d. Administrative Load 17.5 lakh RTIs annually reflect significant strain on PIOs, diverting resources from core functions. Increasing RTI numbers often signal weak proactive disclosure, as mandated under Section 4. Governance Significance RTI statistics serve as a transparency barometer. Higher filings = higher trust in RTI mechanisms but also point to: Information hoarding by departments Lack of suo motu disclosure High answer rates reinforce credibility of the Act. Issues & Challenges Highlighted Rising workload on PIOs. Incomplete data reporting (e.g., 2020–21). Variability in rejection practices across ministries. Backlog at Information Commissions. Digital divide affecting RTI access in rural regions. Implications for Policy Strengthening proactive disclosure to reduce filings. Standardised rejection guidelines. Capacity building for PIOs. Improving CIC/SIC staffing to reduce appeals backlog. Full digitisation of RTI records for accuracy.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 05 December 2025

Content World Soil Day (Dec 5) New Delhi’s relative isolation, India’s tryst with terror World Soil Day (Dec 5) Why is this in News? World Soil Day observed annually on 5 December, established by FAO. Theme 2025: “Healthy Soils for Healthy Cities” — shifts focus to soils within urban landscapes, not just farms. Rising global urbanisation (56% population in cities) has intensified issues: heat islands, flooding, pollution, food insecurity, biodiversity loss. Article highlights urban soil degradation and calls for soil-centric urban planning. Relevance GS1 (Geography): Soil formation, soil degradation, urbanisation impacts, human geography. GS2 (Governance): Urban governance, sustainable city planning, policy frameworks for climate-resilient cities, SDG-11. GS3 (Environment): Land degradation, ecosystem services, climate change adaptation, urban floods, biodiversity conservation, waste-to-compost management. Practice Question “Urban soils are the most ignored yet most critical component of urban resilience.” Discuss how healthy soils contribute to sustainable cities and evaluate the policy interventions needed in India to protect and restore urban soil ecosystems.(250 Words) Basics: What is Soil & Why It Matters? Soil = living ecosystem containing microorganisms, organic matter, minerals, water and air. Provides food security, water filtration, carbon sequestration, habitat, infrastructure support. Non-renewable at human time scale: 1 cm topsoil can take hundreds of years to form. Urban Soils: Why They Matter Urban soils exist under parks, street trees, medians, vacant lands, community gardens. A teaspoon of healthy soil contains more microorganisms than human population, driving decomposition, fertility, nutrient cycling. Functions of Healthy Urban Soils Climate Regulation Reduce urban heat island effect. Increase carbon sequestration. Cooler microclimates through vegetation-rooted soils. Flood Prevention & Water Management Act as sponges, absorbing rainfall and reducing runoff. Facilitate groundwater recharge. Impermeable surfaces → flash floods; healthy soils → moderated hydrology. Urban Food Systems Support urban agriculture (rooftop farms, backyard agriculture, community gardens). Shortens food chains and improves resilience. Biodiversity Support Provide habitat for earthworms, microbes, beneficial insects, pollinators. Promote soil fertility and ecological balance. Human Well-being “Vitamin N” (nature contact) reduces stress, anxiety, depression. Soil-based spaces strengthen physical activity and community bonding. Status of Urban Soils: Alarming Trends FAO: One-third of global soils degraded; degradation more acute in cities. Key urban pressures: Contamination from industrial residues, heavy metals. Compaction from construction. Loss of organic matter. Soil sealing (concrete/asphalt) → zero infiltration, zero soil life. Impacts: Poor vegetation growth. Higher flood risk. Decline in air quality buffering. Reduced food safety in urban farming. Blueprint for Action (FAO 2025 Theme Agenda) 1. Urban Soil Restoration Soil testing, compost addition, biochar, organic amendments. Rehabilitate degraded urban patches. Restrict new soil sealing; adopt permeable pavements. 2. Promote Green Infrastructure Parks, rain gardens, bioswales, roadside tree belts. Soil-based solutions replace concrete to mitigate floods & heat. 3. Champion Urban Agriculture Community gardens, backyard plots, rooftop farms. Enhances food resilience, reduces stress, builds social capital. 4. Responsible Soil Management Reduce chemical fertilizers & pesticides. Native species planting. Mulching and topsoil protection. 5. Boost Soil Literacy & Composting School campaigns, hands-on soil tests. Household composting → closes nutrient loop → reduces city waste. Larger Significance: Why Soil = Foundation of Healthy Cities Resilient cities are not built on steel and concrete alone. They depend on functioning ecological infrastructure, with soil as the core. Soil conservation = climate resilience + public health + biodiversity + food security. Community-driven stewardship critical for long-term sustainability. New Delhi’s relative isolation, India’s tryst with terror Why Is This in News? India is facing an unusually complex national security environment: rising hostility on both flanks (Pakistan–Bangladesh), turbulence across South Asia, and strategic marginalisation in global crises (West Asia, Europe, Indo-Pacific). A new domestic terror module led by young medical professionals was uncovered across J&K, Faridabad, and Delhi — signalling a qualitative shift in urban terrorism. Pakistan’s 27th Constitutional Amendment institutionalises military supremacy through a new Chief of Defence Forces with full nuclear control — heightening the risk of miscalculation. Bangladesh’s interim government is showing anti-India posture while reviving defence links with Pakistan (first Pak Navy ship visit in 50 years). Former NSA M.K. Narayanan warns this is a moment of reckoning requiring heightened vigilance. Relevance GS2 (IR): Neighbourhood challenges, India–Pakistan, India–Bangladesh dynamics, South Asian geopolitics, strategic isolation, India’s role in global governance. GS3 (Internal Security): Urban terrorism, radicalisation pathways, intelligence coordination, terror financing networks, cyber-encrypted communication, multi-front security threats. Practice Question India today faces simultaneous external hostility and rising internal radicalisation. Critically analyse how the evolving security landscape on both flanks, combined with new forms of urban terrorism, challenges India’s national security strategy.(250 Words) India’s National Security Environment India’s security has historically depended on: Stable neighbourhood (SAARC region). Deterrence stability with Pakistan and China. Internal cohesion against terrorism and radicalisation. Diplomatic activism in global theatres. Today, all four pillars are under strain. India as an Emerging ‘Outlier’ in World Affairs Despite diplomatic credentials, India appears: Absent in global crisis management — West Asia war, Russia–Ukraine, Red Sea disruptions. Less involved in emerging Indo-Pacific dynamics shaped by US–China rivalry. India is not shaping outcomes in key theatres where it previously had influence. Implication: Reduced global agency may affect India’s strategic leverage, energy security, maritime interests. Neighbourhood in Turmoil South Asia is experiencing systemic instability: Afghanistan: extremist resurgence, humanitarian collapse. Nepal: political flux. Maldives: strategic drift toward China. Myanmar: civil war. Sri Lanka: economic distress. India lacks dependable partners across its periphery. Strategic consequence: Weak regional environment magnifies India’s security burdens. Hostility on Both Flanks Western Front: Pakistan Threat level rising due to: Surge in anti-India rhetoric. Approval of the 27th Constitutional Amendment. Creation of Chief of Defence Forces (CDF) with: Complete command over three services. Exclusive control of nuclear assets. Freedom to act against “enemies” without parliamentary restraint. Risks Military dictatorships historically take adventurist, short-sighted decisions. Concentrated power → increased probability of miscalculation, proxy escalation, and conflict generation. Chances of another India–Pakistan conflict, though speculative, cannot be ruled out. Eastern Front: Bangladesh Interim government showing unprecedented hostility. Warmer ties with Pakistan — including a Pakistan Navy ship docking in Bangladesh for the first time in ~50 years. Opens space for Pakistan to regain presence in Bay of Bengal. Security implications: Encirclement risk intensifies. Maritime vulnerabilities increase. India’s Act East maritime posture faces friction. Rise of Urban Terror: A New Chapter First major indigenous urban terror module in years. Characteristics: Operated from Srinagar → Faridabad → Delhi. Perpetrators mostly medical practitioners linked to Al-Falah University. Ideological driver: Babri Masjid demolition (1992). Accumulated ~3,000 kg explosives; breached security; executed blast near Red Fort. Why this is qualitatively different Not sponsored by Pakistan (unlike 2008). Not executed by lumpen elements (unlike 1992–93). Composed of educated elite — showing: Deep ideological radicalisation. Growing internal fault lines. Risks of networked recruitment, encrypted coordination. Grave concerns Contradicts state claim that no locals have joined terror groups in J&K recently. Funding & logistics mobilised through: Academic/professional networks. Social/charitable fronts. Encrypted channels. Possible linkages to Pakistan, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Türkiye. The Civilisational Fault Line Educated urban youth engaging in ideologically motivated terror reflects: Weakening of social cohesion. Persistence of grievance-based narratives decades after triggering events. Vulnerability of multicultural fabric to polarisation. This is the most alarming dimension — a sign of deeper internal societal fractures. Strategic Takeaways for India India faces a multi-front security challenge: Hostile Pakistan + hostile Bangladesh. Turbulent neighbourhood. Internal radicalisation. Strategic marginalisation globally. Requires: Sharpened counter-terror intelligence. Neighbourhood diplomacy reset. Hardening of internal security grid. Prevention of ideological radicalisation through community engagement. Avoiding coercive measures that fuel alienation.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 05 December 2025

Content How the Mahad satyagraha(s) shaped constitutional discourse Mahad Satyagraha (1927) U.S. Deportations of Indian Nationals (2025) Digital Addressing Reform: DHRUVA and DIGIPIN Airborne Microplastics in India India’s Rising Road Fatalities (2024) Flex Fuel Vehicles After E20 Rollout How the Mahad satyagraha(s) shaped constitutional discourse  Why is this in news? New scholarship foregrounds Mahad as the birthplace of one of India’s earliest human rights movements, led by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar in 1927. Highlights how Mahad shaped: India’s constitutional ethics Discourse on water democracy, caste annihilation, and gender equality December 25 (Manusmriti Dahan) is increasingly viewed as Indian Women’s Liberation Day. Relevance GS-1 (Society & Social Movements) Caste system, untouchability, Bhakti–Dalit reform movements. Social justice movements and their historical roots. Intersection of caste and gender. GS-2 (Polity & Constitution) Evolution of constitutional morality. Foundations of Article 17, equality, dignity, and Fundamental Rights. Human rights discourse and Ambedkarian constitutional philosophy. Basic understanding Mahad Satyagraha was launched by Ambedkar in 1927 at Chavadar Tank (Mahad) to assert Dalit right to access public water. It operationalised the 1923 S. K. Bole Resolution permitting untouchables to use public tanks. It marked the shift from reformist charity to rights-based mobilisation. Social and regional background Mahad, in the Bombay Presidency, had rigid caste norms and denial of public water to Dalits. Region had a reformist legacy: Gopalbaba Walangkar, N. M. Joshi, Sambhaji Gaikwad, and later R. B. More. Local incidents at Goregaon and Dasgaon showed early resistance by untouchables. The Bole Resolution (1923) Recommended allowing untouchable communities to use all public water bodies funded or maintained by public authorities. Directly challenged Brahmanical control over public resources. Gave Ambedkar a legal and legislative foundation for Mahad. Mahad 1.0 (March 19–20, 1927) Thousands followed Ambedkar to assert water rights. Local caste groups denied access despite the 1923 resolution. Dalits had to purchase water for ₹40, illustrating extreme exclusion. Upper castes carried out purification rituals after Dalits touched the tank. Significance First mass assertion of dignity, equality, and human rights by Dalits. Ambedkar compared it to the French Revolution for its transformative ethos. The phase between Mahad 1.0 and 2.0 Court issued a stay claiming the tank was privately owned → blocked Dalit access legally. Ambedkar launched Bahishkrut Bharat, articulating democratic and human rights ideals. Violent reprisals in the region → creation of Ambedkar Seva Dal. Ambedkar engaged in the Ambabai Temple Satyagraha. Mahad 2.0 (December 25–26, 1927) Ambedkar avoided direct satyagraha due to ongoing court case. The gathering became a philosophical and political intervention. The Manusmriti was burned, symbolising a break with Brahmanical patriarchy and graded inequality. Ambedkar addressed women explicitly, foregrounding gender as central to human rights. Ambedkar’s gendered imagination of the nation Ambedkar’s 1916 paper theorised caste as a system sustained through control of women. At Mahad 2.0, women and men gathered as equal participants—an embryonic National Assembly of the oppressed. Contrasted with the French Revolution, which excluded women; Mahad corrected this gap. Rights were framed through Buddhist ethics of maitri, manuski, liberty, equality, fraternity. Intellectual significance Mahad redefined political struggle as a human rights movement, not a reformist appeal. Key ideas that emerged: Dignity as a non-negotiable right Equality independent of religious sanction Fraternity as a social ethic, not sentiment repudiation of scriptures that legitimised hierarchy Formed the ethical foundation of: Article 17 Constitutional morality Fundamental Rights framework Why Mahad marks a turning point ? First organised movement asserting human rights in modern India. Introduced the idea of water as a democratic right. Brought women into the rights discourse, preceding global constitutional feminism. Transformed anti-caste struggle into a constitutional ethic. Provided Ambedkar the philosophical base for a republic rooted in dignity, equality, and fraternity. U.S. Deportations of Indian Nationals  Why is this in news? The External Affairs Minister informed the Rajya Sabha that 3,258 Indian nationals were deported from the U.S. in 2025, the highest since 2009. The case of 73-year-old Harjit Kaur, reportedly maltreated in U.S. detention, triggered questions on deportee treatment, women’s safety, and bilateral coordination on migration issues. Deportation trends have intensified after a new U.S. policy (April 2025) causing visa cancellations and pressure on students to self-deport. Relevance GS-2 (International Relations) India–U.S. diplomatic engagements on migration and consular protection. Sovereignty vs. human rights in immigration enforcement. Diaspora issues. GS-2 (Governance) State responsibility towards citizens abroad. Data privacy and surveillance concerns (public social-media vetting). Deportation processes and legal safeguards. Key facts Total deportees since 2009: 18,822 Indians. Deportees in 2025: 3,258, highest in 16 years. Transportation mode: 2,032 (62.3%) on commercial flights 1,226 (37.6%) on ICE/US Customs–charter flights Issue of maltreatment in detention raised formally by India. U.S. visa scrutiny increasing: Applicants being asked to make social media profiles public. New April 2025 policy triggered cancellations even for minor offences. Students faced pressure to self-deport. Background: Why deportations are rising  The U.S. has tightened vetting, linking even minor infractions to immigration risk. Post-pandemic labour adjustments and domestic political pressure on immigration. Enhanced digital surveillance of migrants, including social media monitoring. Stricter student visa compliance and checks to prevent misuse of F-1 visas. Case study: Harjit Kaur (73 years old) Not handcuffed but maltreated in ICE detention before deportation. Issues reported: Slept on floor despite double knee replacements Denied appropriate food Given ice instead of proper support for medication 60–70 hours in uncomfortable detention conditions India raised the issue strongly with U.S. authorities and the U.S. Embassy. Major issues emerging 1. Treatment of deportees Instances of women and elderly migrants facing harsh detention environments. Raises concerns over compliance with international human rights standards. 2. Student visa vulnerability Minor infractions triggering visa cancellations. Pressure to self-deport undermines due process. Impact on India’s large student community in the U.S. (current estimates: 2.7 lakh+). 3. Sovereignty vs. diplomacy Visa issuance is a sovereign right, but India can raise concerns regarding: Detention conditions Discrimination Deportation processes 4. Surveillance expansion Requirement to make social media public indicates: Data-intensive vetting Lower privacy thresholds for visa applicants Potential misuse of digital footprints in immigration decisions 5. Humanitarian concerns Elderly, women, and undocumented workers most vulnerable. Charter flights suggest deportations of individuals held in longer detention cycles. Implications for India–U.S. relations Migration is becoming a sensitive bilateral issue, alongside trade and technology. India must balance: Protecting diaspora interests Respecting U.S. immigration laws Ensuring due process and humane treatment Could push for: Consular access protocols Humanitarian detention standards Better notification mechanisms before deportation Digital Addressing Reform: DHRUVA and DIGIPIN Why is this in news? The Department of Posts released a draft amendment to the Post Office Act, 2023 proposing a new digital addressing system called DHRUVA (Digital Hub for Reference and Unique Virtual Address). The system aims to replace textual addresses with UPI-like labels (e.g., name@entity) and standardise digital addresses across services. The proposal includes a DIGIPIN, rolled out earlier in March 2025, as the foundational layer for precise geolocation-based addressing. Relevance GS-2 (Governance) Digital public infrastructure (DPI). Consent-based data architecture, privacy frameworks. Citizen service delivery modernisation. GS-3 (Economy & Technology) Logistics efficiency, e-commerce, gig-economy enablement. Standardising geolocation systems; technological innovation. GS-3 (Disaster Management) Last-mile identification for emergency services. Improving reliability of address databases for crisis response.   Basic understanding DHRUVA is a proposed interoperable, user-centric digital addressing system. Users would receive address labels (similar to UPI IDs), which act as proxies for their physical locations. Firms and platforms can access the actual address via a consent-based architecture managed by address information agents (AIAs). Intended to reduce repetitive manual entry of addresses across e-commerce, delivery, gig platforms, and government services. Key features of DHRUVA Address as a digital label Users can choose labels like name@entity, comparable to UPI handles. Labels can be shared instead of full addresses. Consent-driven sharing The user authorises an entity for a specified duration. After expiry, re-authorisation is required to access the address again. Governance structure A Section 8 not-for-profit entity will implement the system under government oversight. Modeled on institutions like the National Payments Corporation of India which oversees UPI. Role for private companies E-commerce, logistics, gig platforms, and hyperlocal delivery apps are expected to be early adopters. DIGIPIN: the underlying technology Nature of DIGIPIN A 10-character alphanumeric code derived mathematically from latitude and longitude. Encodes an area of roughly 14 sq. metres. Designed for locations where textual addresses are ambiguous or absent, especially in rural regions. Scale Potential for around 228 billion unique DIGIPINs across Indian territory. Open-source origin Developed and open-sourced by the postal department to encourage adoption and interoperability. Why this system matters ? Current limitations in India’s addressing Non-standard, inconsistent, and often missing addresses. Delays and errors in delivery services. Inefficiencies in logistics, disaster response, last-mile governance. DHRUVA’s intended benefits Standardisation of addresses across sectors. Streamlined onboarding for e-commerce and delivery firms. Reduced friction for users: no repeated address entry. Potential integration with digital public infrastructure frameworks. Consent and privacy architecture Users control who sees their address, and for how long. AIAs mediate access between the label and actual geographical coordinates. Designed to prevent centralised misuse of location data. Challenges and open questions Adoption by private firms is voluntary; success depends on network effects similar to UPI. Data security and risks of geolocation misuse need rigorous safeguards. Public trust must be built around the consent mechanism. Integration with state/local addressing databases may be complex. Airborne Microplastics in India Why is this in news? Over 80 Padma awardee doctors issued a joint national advisory warning that airborne microplastics and nanoplastics have become a major emerging health threat in India. They urged authorities to take immediate action amid rising air pollution and evidence of plastic particles infiltrating the human body, increasing risks of cardiovascular disease, diabetes, inflammation, organ damage, and insulin resistance. Advisory highlights a shift from seasonal smog concerns to all-year health crisis, especially affecting infants, elderly, pregnant women, and those with chronic illness. Relevance GS-3 (Environment) Emerging contaminants, air pollution science. Waste mismanagement, microplastic pathways. Intersections between environment and public health. GS-2 (Health) NCDs of environmental origin (cardiac, metabolic, endocrine disorders). Public health advisories and regulatory gaps. Vulnerable populations: elderly, infants, pregnant women. Basic understanding: What are airborne microplastics? Microplastics are plastic fragments <5 mm; airborne variants include particles <10 microns, small enough to enter lungs, bloodstream, and organs. Sources include: Vehicle tyre wear Road dust Broken plastic waste Synthetic textiles Industrial emissions Once airborne, they mix with fine particulate matter (PM2.5), enhancing toxicity. Key scientific concerns raised by Padma doctors Exposure and infiltration Airborne microplastics detected in Delhi’s traffic-heavy corridors at some of the highest global concentrations. Particles <10 microns can penetrate deep into lungs, enter bloodstream, and reach organs. Role as carriers of pathogens Research shows microplastics can carry bacteria, viruses, and toxic chemicals adsorbed on their surfaces. Direct health impacts Inflammation Oxidative stress Tissue and organ damage Hormonal disruption Gut microbiota imbalance Potential neurotoxicity Emerging medical linkages highlighted 1. Cardiovascular risk Microplastics associated with higher risk of heart disease and stroke. Example: 4.5× increased risk of stroke within 3 years in certain exposure cohorts. 2. Diabetes and metabolic disorders Doctors note a strong connection between air pollution, microplastics, and rising diabetes. India has 10 crore+ diabetics, and 3 crore prediabetics. Inflammation and endocrine disruption from microplastics may be contributing in overlooked ways. 3. Insulin resistance Microplastics & related chemicals (e.g., BPA) linked to impaired glucose metabolism. 4. Immune and hormonal disruption Chronic exposure damages cellular function, elevates chronic disease risk. Structural and environmental sources Urban concentration High levels in commercial areas, traffic corridors, markets, and construction-heavy zones. Indoor risk Indoor air often contains synthetic fiber particles from furnishings, carpets, and plastic materials. Accumulation pattern Microplastics do not degrade; they accumulate in human organs, causing long-term chronic damage. Why doctors call this an “unmanageable scale” crisis ? Microplastics are now infiltrating multiple pathways: air, food, water, indoor environments. Unlike traditional pollutants, they are persistent, invisible, chemically complex, and difficult to filter. India’s existing air pollution crisis amplifies microplastic exposure intensity. Infants, children, and elderly face disproportionate harm due to lower physiological resilience. Advisory by Padma awardee doctors: Recommended precautions At household level Use air purifiers when possible Reduce plastic use Mop and wipe surfaces to reduce dust Avoid microwaving food in plastic containers Improve kitchen ventilation At community level Aim for cleaner indoor air Enhance waste management to prevent fragmentation of plastic litter Promote alternatives to single-use plastics At policy level Recognise microplastics as an air pollutant category Strengthen monitoring systems (like AQI) to capture microplastic load Promote R&D on health impacts and mitigation technologies India’s Rising Road Fatalities   Why is this in news? The Union Minister for Road Transport and Highways informed Lok Sabha that 1.77 lakh people died in road accidents in 2024, an increase of 2.31% over 2023. India missed its target to reduce road accidents, despite a global commitment (Stockholm Declaration, 2020) to halve road traffic deaths by 2030. India recorded 4.80 lakh accidents in 2024, indicating a persistent upward trend after a temporary pandemic dip. Relevance GS-2 (Governance) Public safety, policy implementation constraints. Institutional gaps in enforcing the Motor Vehicles Act. Centre-State coordination on road safety. GS-3 (Infrastructure & Economy) Transport infrastructure, logistics efficiency. Economic cost of road accidents (~3% of GDP). Technology adoption: e-DAR, intelligent transport systems. Basic understanding India has the highest number of road accident deaths globally. Road safety depends on the “4Es”: Education (awareness & behaviour) Engineering (safer roads & vehicles) Enforcement (laws & compliance) Emergency care (golden hour response) India’s road safety ecosystem consistently struggles across all four pillars. Key facts from the report Fatalities (2023 → 2024) 2023: 1,72,809 deaths 2024: 1,77,177 deaths Rise: 2.31% States with highest fatalities (2024) Uttar Pradesh – 24,118 Tamil Nadu – 16,932 Maharashtra – 17,870 Madhya Pradesh – 12,987 Karnataka – 11,727 Global comparison Highest road deaths: India, followed by China and the U.S. Other observations India’s road crash rate per lakh population: 43.4 World average: lower than India U.S.: 11.89 U.K.: 3.13 Why are fatalities increasing? 1. Rapid motorisation without corresponding road safety infrastructure Increased vehicle ownership, especially 2-wheelers. Poorly designed intersections, absence of pedestrian infrastructure. 2. Weak enforcement Overspeeding, drunk driving, helmet non-compliance, seatbelt violations remain common. Low deterrence due to inconsistent policing. 3. Engineering gaps Blackspots remain uncorrected. Inadequate signage, poor road maintenance, lack of crash barriers. 4. Behavioural challenges Risky driving culture, fatigue among truck drivers, phone usage while driving. 5. Emergency care deficits Limited golden-hour response; absence of standardised trauma-care systems. 6. Pandemic rebound effect After 2020–21 dips, traffic volumes surged sharply. Government’s position & ongoing measures Investment pattern Funds allocated for road safety constitute 2.21%–5.10% of total development expenditure for National Highways construction. Electronic Detailed Accident Report (e-DAR) Real-time accident data from police; operational but evolving. Toll collection modernisation Existing system to be replaced with a new electronic mechanism within a year for smoother traffic flow. Expansion of new road safety system Rolled out in 10 locations, to be scaled nationally. Promotion of cleaner vehicles Minister mentioned experimentation with biofuels, green hydrogen, and Toyota’s Mirai hydrogen fuel-cell car. Structural policy gaps No nationwide Unified Road Safety Authority. Fragmented responsibilities between Centre, States, and local bodies. Insufficient monitoring of post-crash response. Weak implementation of the Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act, 2019 due to States not enforcing enhanced penalties. Data inconsistencies between police reporting and hospital/emergency-care systems. Why India is missing the 2030 Stockholm target ? Fatalities still rising instead of declining. Behavioural change is slow. States vary widely in enforcement intensity. Vehicle safety compliance remains uneven, especially among 2- and 3-wheelers. Infrastructure expansion (expressways, high-speed corridors) outpaces safety design upgrades. Flex Fuel Vehicles After E20 Rollout Why is this in news? With E20 fuel (20% ethanol–petrol blend) now mandatory across India, Toyota Kirloskar Motor’s country head Vikram Gulati stated that the next policy priority should be the promotion of flex fuel vehicles (FFVs). He argued that global experience shows countries move to flex fuels after stabilising initial ethanol blends, and that India is now at that juncture. The discussion is significant for India’s goals of reducing oil import dependence, supporting the ethanol economy, and decarbonising transport. Relevance GS-3 (Economy) Import substitution and energy security. Ethanol economy, rural income, diversification of farmers’ revenue streams. GS-3 (Environment & Climate Change) Low-carbon transport transition. Biofuel policy, lifecycle emissions, cleaner combustion. GS-3 (Science & Tech) FFV engine technology, ethanol compatibility. Technological pathways in transport decarbonisation. What are flex fuel vehicles (FFVs)? FFVs can run on any blend of petrol and ethanol, from E20 to E85 or even E100, depending on design. The engine, fuel system, and electronic controls are adapted to handle higher ethanol concentrations. Ethanol has: higher octane number lower greenhouse gas emissions lower cost in countries with strong biofuel sectors India’s current stage: E20 rollout India mandated E20-compatible vehicles starting 2023; nationwide availability is expanding. E20 reduces emissions and cuts fuel import bills, but requires vehicle & fuel system modifications. Gulati notes that once a country successfully reaches this stage, global trends indicate transition to FFVs. Why push for flex fuels now?  1. Global evidence Countries like Brazil moved to FFVs once ethanol blends stabilised. Brazil mandates that E100 (ethanol) is cheaper than petrol by around 30%, driving consumer uptake. 2. Consumer economics Pricing parity between E20 and petrol is insufficient; FFVs allow higher ethanol use, reducing running cost. Flex fuels become viable only when ethanol is consistently cheaper than petrol at retail level. 3. Industry readiness Automotive firms (Toyota, Honda, others) are aligned that the next disruption in India will be FFVs, not merely higher ethanol blends. Small EVs face cost issues; hybrid EVs and FFVs can bridge the transition. 4. Technology maturity Legacy vehicles risk compatibility issues as ethanol percentages rise. FFVs reduce uncertainty and avoid frequent re-testing/re-homologation as blends evolve. Key challenges highlighted 1. Legacy vehicles and compatibility Increasing ethanol blends affect older vehicles’ materials, seals, pumps, and combustion characteristics. Without FFVs, retrofitting or re-homologation costs rise. 2. Taxation and GST issues India taxes vehicles primarily based on size, not fuel technology. Better taxation differentiation is needed to make FFVs competitive. 3. Pricing regulation For mass adoption, ethanol blends must be consistently cheaper than petrol at the pump. The Brazilian model succeeded because the government ensured favourable pricing. 4. Need for policy incentives Without targeted GST rationalisation, FFVs may remain niche. Stakeholders want a clear roadmap similar to the push given to EVs. Why flex fuels matter for India ? Energy security India imports ~85% of its crude oil. Scaling ethanol helps cut import bills and diversifies fuel sources. Farmer income & rural economy Ethanol is produced from sugarcane, grains, and agri-residues. Higher ethanol demand creates predictable markets for farmers. Cleaner combustion Ethanol has lower CO₂ emissions and particulate output. Supports India’s climate commitments under NDCs. Industrial diversification Encourages investment in: first-generation ethanol second-generation ethanol (agri-waste) biomass refineries Bridge technology FFVs act as a transition between ICE engines and electric mobility, suited to India’s current infrastructure realities. What the government needs to consider going forward ? 1. Differential fuel pricing Guarantee ethanol blends (E85/E100) at a significant discount to petrol. 2. Taxation framework GST rationalisation for FFVs. Reduced GST for flex fuel-compatible components and hybrids. 3. National FFV roadmap Clear timelines for: increasing blend levels phasing in FFV norms for OEMs developing high-ethanol fueling infrastructure 4. Consumer awareness Highlight lower running costs and environmental benefits. 5. Coordination between ministries Petroleum, Transport, Agriculture, and Environment must align on pricing, supply, and infrastructure.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 04 December 2025

Content Sailing Towards Self-Reliance: The Indian Navy’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat Journey India’s Transition from Women’s Development to Women-Led Development Sailing Towards Self-Reliance: The Indian Navy’s Aatmanirbhar Bharat Journey Why is this in News? Navy Day (4 December) highlights India’s maritime power, commemorating Operation Trident (1971). INS Mahe commissioned on 24 Nov 2025, adding to accelerated indigenous naval inductions. INS Udaygiri & INS Himgiri commissioned in Aug 2025 as India’s 100th & 101st indigenous warships. Indian Naval budget doubled from ₹49,623 crore (2020–21) to ₹1,03,548 crore (2025–26). 51 large indigenous ships under construction (₹90,000 crore) signalling peak indigenous shipbuilding. Indigenisation ratios achieved: 90% (Float), 60% (Move), 50% (Fight). INIP 2015–2030 implementation enters mature phase. Relevance:   GS II – Governance Defence procurement reforms: DAP 2020, IDDM, Positive Indigenisation Lists. Innovation governance through NIIO, iDEX, SPRINT, SRIJAN. GS III – Internal Security Maritime security, SLOC protection, anti-piracy, EEZ surveillance. Strengthening India’s naval deterrence and crisis-response capability. GS III – Science & Technology Indigenous AIP, sonars, radars, EW systems, torpedoes, missiles. R&D ecosystem: DRDO–IIT–private sector collaboration. Basics: Why Indigenisation Matters for a Navy Operational Autonomy Avoids foreign supply-chain disruptions during conflict, sanctions, or crises. Combat Readiness Reduces downtime, ensures assured spares, faster upgrades. Cost Efficiency & Lifecycle Control Domestic manufacturing lowers lifetime costs. Strategic Sovereignty Essential for a leading naval power in IOR. Industrial Growth Boosts MSMEs, shipyards, defence research, and high-tech manufacturing. Blue-Economy & SLOC Security India’s 90% trade volume, 80% critical freight moves by sea; naval indigenisation is economic security. India’s Maritime Context: Why India Needs a Strong Indigenous Navy 11,098 km coastline; 2.4 million sq. km EEZ. 50% global trade & 40% oil flow through the Indo-Pacific. India’s own economy depends on coal, crude, iron ore, fertiliser imports. 3765 merchant vessels escorted in anti-piracy missions since 2008; 27,260 seafarers protected. Increasing roles: EEZ surveillance Anti-piracy Maritime Domain Awareness HADR missions Protection of offshore assets Cooperative security in IOR INIP 2015–2030: Vision, Strategy, Outcomes Objectives Indigenise equipment across Float, Move, Fight categories. Create an R&D + industry + DRDO collaborative ecosystem. List capability gaps & future requirements. Move from Buyer’s Navy → Builder’s Navy. Key Recommendations Prioritise Buy Indian / Buy & Make Indian. Build domestic capabilities in propulsion, electronics, sensors, underwater systems. Absorb ToT, promote standardisation. Deep MSME integration. Execution 5,000+ items identified for domestic sourcing. Major indigenisation of sonars, EW systems, UAVs, CMS, propulsion auxiliaries, submarine subsystems. From Buyer’s Navy to Builder’s Navy: Structural Shift Over 100 indigenous warships built by Indian shipyards. Warship Design Bureau drives indigenous design. Navy–IIT partnerships accelerate materials, propulsion & hydrodynamics R&D. Swavlamban 3.0 (2023) lays roadmap for industry & academia collaboration. Private sector participation targeted to 50% or more. Indigenisation Status Float systems: 90% Move systems: 60% Fight systems: 50% (key shortfall area—missiles, radars, advanced sensors) Indigenous Surface Fleet: Major Achievements 51 Ships under Construction Worth ₹90,000 crore, showcasing robust shipyard capability. Flagship Projects INS Vikrant (IAC-1) 76% indigenous content 30,000 tonnes of indigenous steel (SAIL) Symbol of large-platform self-reliance Project-15B Visakhapatnam-class Destroyers INS Visakhapatnam (2021), INS Mormugao (2022), INS Imphal (2023), INS Surat (2025) Advanced air-defence & surface warfare capabilities Project-17A Nilgiri-class Frigates (Stealth) INS Nilgiri, Himgiri, Udaygiri (all 2025) Taragiri delivered Nov 2025; Dunagiri, Vindhyagiri, Mahendragiri under construction Survey Vessels (Large) Sandhayak (2024), Nirdeshak (2024), Ikshak (2025), Sanshodhak (under construction) ASW Shallow Water Craft Arnala (2025), Androth (2025), Mahe (2025) 80% indigenous components Submarine & Underwater Systems: Aatmanirbhar Progress Project-75 Kalvari-class Six conventional submarines: Kalvari (2017) → Vagsheer (2025) Indigenous AIP (DRDO-NMRL) To be retrofitted on Kalvari-class Extends underwater endurance significantly Indigenous Sonars & Underwater Sensors USHUS-2 HUMSA NG/UG ABHAY ALTAS towed array AIDSS (submarine distress system) Indicates deepening underwater warfare ecosystem. Weapons & Combat Systems: Indigenisation Push Missiles VL-SRSAM (2025) BrahMos (joint but high Indian content) Torpedoes & Anti-Torpedo Systems Varunastra Maareech ATDS ALWT lightweight torpedo (trials complete) MIGM mines EW & Combat Systems EW Suite Shakti ESM Varuna EW Sangraha These systems replace legacy imports and strengthen fight component. Aviation: Indigenous Shipborne Capabilities HAL ALH Dhruv Mk-III for shipborne roles (SAR, surveillance). 340+ Dhruvs produced; operated by Mauritius & Nepal → export footprint. Integration of indigenous radars & sensors on ALH Mk-III. Shipyard Ecosystem & Industrial Base Major Shipyards Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Ltd (MDL) Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers (GRSE) Cochin Shipyard Ltd (CSL) Industrial Integration BEL, BHEL, L&T, Kirloskar, Keltron Over 100 MSMEs supplying to INS Vikrant alone Naval-grade Steel Developed jointly by DRDO + SAIL + Navy → strategic independence Budgetary Trends: Sharp Rise in Naval Expenditure Navy Budget Growth ₹49,623 crore → ₹1,03,548 crore (2020–21 to 2025–26) Share in defence budget: 15% → 21% Capital Expenditure ₹26,688 crore → ₹62,546 crore Focus: submarines, surface combatants, naval aviation, undersea warfare Revenue Spending ₹22,935 crore → ₹38,195 crore Indicates sustained government push for maritime modernisation. Policy Framework Driving Indigenisation DAP 2020 & DPM 2025 Prioritise Indian vendors Emphasise Buy Indian – IDDM NIIO (2020) Connects Navy, startups, academia Accelerates technology adoption SPRINT Challenges (2022– ) Target: 75 new technologies Collaborations with 213 MSMEs & startups iDEX (2018– ) Up to ₹10 crore funding per innovation DISC challenges drive naval solutions SRIJAN Portal 38,000 items listed; 14,000+ indigenised by Feb 2025 Positive Indigenisation Lists 5,500+ items barred from import 3,000 indigenised by Feb 2025 Conclusion: India’s Maritime Self-Reliance Trajectory 40+ indigenous ships delivered since 2014. New vessel inducted every 40 days in 2024–25. Navy transforming into a Builder’s Navy, not a Buyer’s Navy. Deepening synergy of industry–academia–research ecosystem. Enhances India’s status as IOR’s first responder and credible blue-water naval power. Supports strategic autonomy, industrial growth, and long-term maritime security. “Jalmev Yasya, Balmev Tasya” — Control over the sea is control over power. India’s Transition from Women’s Development to Women-Led Development Why is this in News? Government briefing in Rajya Sabha (Dec 2025) highlighted: Shift from “women’s development” to “women-led development” as a national policy direction. Implementation of all four Labour Codes from 21 Nov 2025 with major gender reforms. Operationalisation of SHe-Box portal with expanded features in 22 languages. Strengthened legal protections under BNS–BNSS–BSA (effective July 2024) for crimes against women. Mission Shakti progress report including One Stop Centres, 181 helpline, BBBP, Sakhi Niwas, PMMVY, Palna, etc. Massive increase in women’s participation in SHGs (10 crore members) and livelihood programmes. New STEM-focused schemes and procurement mandates to boost women’s economic agency. Relevance: GS I – Society Gender empowerment, social change, SHG movement (10 crore women). BBBP, sanitary hygiene, behavioural transformation. GS II – Polity & Governance Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (33% reservation). Labour Codes (gender-equal workplaces). Mission Shakti, SHe-Box, OSCs, 181 helpline. Basics: What is Women-Led Development? A governance and development paradigm where women: Lead economic decisions Participate in political power structures Direct community development Are creators of economic and social value, not passive beneficiaries Central to SDG 5, but India’s model emphasises mainstreaming women in all dimensions of development. Constitutional & Political Empowerment: Deep Structural Shift Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam, 2023 (106th Constitutional Amendment) 33% reservation for women in: Lok Sabha State Legislative Assemblies Delhi Legislative Assembly Represents the largest political empowerment reform since independence. Significance Increases descriptive and substantive representation. More women in policy, budgeting, lawmaking → accelerates women-led growth. Labour Codes Implemented (21 Nov 2025): Gender-Transformative Provisions Gender Equality at Work Equal pay mandated across sectors. Gender discrimination prohibited in recruitment and employment. Women allowed to work: In all sectors, including those previously barred. Night shifts, with consent + safety provisions. Heavy machinery & underground mining, with safeguards. Impact Expands labour force participation. Formalisation boosts wage equality, social security coverage, and mobility. Workplace Safety Transformation: SHe-Box (National e-Platform) Key Features Single-window portal for complaints under SH Act (2013). Automatically forwards complaints to relevant IC/LC. Public database of all workplace committees. Nodal officer for every organisation. Available in 22 languages for remote accessibility. Significance Ensures compliance, accountability, and real-time monitoring. Reduces barriers for reporting harassment. Criminal Justice Reforms: Stronger Legal Protections (BNS–BNSS–BSA) Effective from 1 July 2024. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS) Chapter V consolidates offences against women & children. Key strengthened provisions: Section 69: sexual intercourse on false promises (marriage/job/promotion). Section 70: gang rape – enhanced punishment. Section 99: buying children for prostitution – stricter minimum punishment. Section 111: organised crime – includes trafficking networks. Sections 75 & 79: expanded definition of sexual harassment. Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) e-FIR & zero FIR for faster action. Witness Protection Schemes (Section 398). Victim-centric focus for prosecution & trial support. Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA) Digital evidence expanded: emails, smartphone messages, voice recordings. Helps workplace sexual harassment cases under SHe-Box. Social Empowerment: Mission Shakti Framework Components Sambal (Safety & Security) One Stop Centres (OSCs) nationwide for counselling, shelter, legal and medical support. 181 Women Helpline (24×7). BBBP—curb sex-selective practices + promote education & value of girl child. Samarthya (Empowerment) PMMVY: Cash benefits via DBT for pregnant & lactating women. Sakhi Niwas: Safe accommodation for working women & students. Shakti Sadan: Shelter support for distressed women, trafficking survivors. Palna: Anganwadi-cum-crèche for increasing workforce participation. Hubs for Empowerment of Women: Address information gaps at national, state, district level. Impact Integrated, ecosystem-based intervention across safety, welfare, and skilling. Education, Health & Welfare: Life-Cycle Continuum Approach Girl Education Samagra Shiksha + separate girls’ toilets → improved enrolment. Scholarships and low-cost sanitary napkins (Janaushadhi). Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana: incentivised savings for girl child. Health (Ayushman Bharat) 141 women-specific medical packages. Screening for 7 major conditions: TB, hypertension, diabetes, oral cancer, breast cancer, cervical cancer, cataract. 1.5 lakh Health & Wellness Centres operational. Affordable Medicines 16,000+ Janaushadhi Kendras, including: 40 women-specific items Suvidha pads @ ₹1 per pad Social Protection NSAP, APY, PMSBY, PMJJBY Insurances + pensions create safety net for widows, elderly, vulnerable women. Economic Empowerment & Financial Inclusion Livelihood Revolutions DAY-NRLM: 90 lakh women SHGs 10 crore women members Transformed rural entrepreneurship, micro-enterprises, credit access. NULM: urban livelihood support. Credit & Enterprise Schemes PM MUDRA Yojana Stand-up India Start-up India PM SVANidhi Women constitute a majority of beneficiaries. Public Procurement Preference 3% mandatory procurement from women-owned MSMEs. Digital Skilling PMGDISHA, PMKVY, Skill India Faster integration into digital & formal economies. Women in STEM & Knowledge Economy Key Schemes Women Scientist Scheme Vigyan Jyoti Overseas Fellowship Scheme Significance Addresses underrepresentation in high-tech sectors. Facilitates research careers, scholarships, mentorship, lab access. Cultural Transformation: Gender-Inclusive Communication Guide (2023) Addresses linguistic bias. Promotes gender-neutral, inclusive communication norms. Enables behavioural change across media, institutions, workplaces. Big Picture: Why This Indicates Women-Led Development Institutional Level Constitutional reservation increases women’s leadership. Labour Codes formalise gender-equal workplaces. Safety & Justice Stronger criminal laws + digital evidence + witness protection. Economic Level SHGs → 10 crore members → world’s largest women’s cooperative movement. Livelihood + credit + procurement mandates enhance agency. Health & Education Better maternal benefits, cancer screening, school access. Governance Mission Shakti integrates safety, welfare, empowerment under one umbrella. Digital Governance SHe-Box, e-FIR, digital evidence elevate access and accountability. Conclusion: India at a Structural Turning Point India has moved beyond welfare-centric policies to agency-based development. Women are now decision-makers, entrepreneurs, legislators, and drivers of economic growth. This “women-led development” vision aligns with Sustainable Development Goals and transforms India’s socio-economic landscape.

Editorials/Opinions Analysis For UPSC 04 December 2025

Content To scale up our climate ambition, a seven-point plan A missing link in India’s mineral mission To scale up our climate ambition, a seven-point plan Why is this in News? India must submit new NDCs (Nationally Determined Contributions) under the Paris Agreement for the period up to 2035. The authors propose a seven-point plan to enhance India’s climate ambition while staying aligned with economic-growth priorities. The article argues that credible climate ambition is essential for: financing from MDBs and global markets lowering long-term energy & transport costs meeting India’s net-zero trajectory (2070) Relevance GS-II (Polity & Governance) Climate governance mechanisms India’s NDC formulation process Centre–state coordination in energy transition GS-III (Environment & Economy) Climate change mitigation strategies Renewable energy transition, storage, grids Carbon markets, emissions trading Practice Question   “India’s 2035 NDCs must integrate energy, industry, and finance to drive a credible low-carbon transition.” Analyse with reference to the seven-point plan discussed in recent debates.(250 Words) What are NDCs? National climate targets submitted under the Paris Agreement every five years. Include: Emissions reduction commitments Renewable energy targets Adaptation goals Finance & technology needs India’s current key NDC features (2030): Reduce emissions intensity of GDP by 45% from 2005 levels 50% installed electricity capacity from non-fossil sources Create 2.5–3 billion tonnes carbon sinks Why New NDCs for 2035 Matter ? They determine India’s long-term energy structure for the next decade. Overlap with: Net-zero planning Infrastructure investment cycles MDB financing requirements Global carbon markets The Seven-Point Plan 1. Higher Target for Reducing Emissions Intensity of GDP Current: 45% reduction vs 2005 by 2030 Suggested for 2035: further 20% reduction, implying 65% reduction from 2005 levels over 2005–2035. Rationale: Reflects economic maturation Strengthens India’s climate credibility Drives industrial decarbonisation 2. Higher Share of Non-Fossil Electricity Existing: 50% non-fossil installed capacity by 2030. Proposed (2035): Non-fossil share in overall electricity generation to rise to 55%. Requires: 1,600 GW total capacity by 2035 Renewables rising to ~1,200 GW Faster energy storage deployment (~50–70 GW) 3. Explicit Target for Phasing Down Coal-Based Generation Extremely contentious internationally. Authors propose: No new unabated coal after 2030 Coal-based capacity replaced gradually Total coal output peaks by 2030, begins decline thereafter Motivation: Avoid stranded assets Align with India’s net-zero (2070) Improve air quality & energy security 4. Transform the Transport Sector (EV Push + Rail Electrification) Railways: 100% electrified by 2033 Road transport: 50% EV for buses by 2030; 100% shortly after Stronger EV penetration for 2W & 3W Automobile industry to adjust sales targets This sector is India’s fastest-growing emitter → early action lowers long-term costs. 5. Operationalise the Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) Effectively Starts April 2026. Must: Expand beyond current limited sectors Set strict emission limits Avoid weak, voluntary systems Significance: Creates large-scale market incentives Enables international trading in future Mobilises private finance 6. Strengthening Renewable Energy Integration Challenges: Variability Grid management Storage costs Recommendations: Support pumped storage + battery systems Modernise grid infrastructure Reform tariffs & contracts (time-of-day pricing, firming contracts) 7. Mobilising Finance at Scale Expansion of grid + storage + renewables needs USD 62 billion annually (2026–2047). Domestic banks alone cannot meet demand. Solutions: Increased MDB borrowing International climate finance Private investments via blended finance Policy consistency to reduce risk India’s Structural Challenges Highlighted in the Article Coal dependence for baseload power State-level financial stress in DISCOMs Land & transmission constraints for RE expansion Slow EV adoption outside major cities Weak carbon market coverage initially Strengths of the Proposed Approach Integrates energy, transport, finance, and climate policy into one coordinated pathway. Enables India to: Retain high economic growth Meet rising electricity demand Reduce long-term fossil fuel import dependence Prepares India for: Global carbon border taxes Competitiveness in green industries Critical Assessment Positive Realistic balancing of climate ambition and economic growth. Recognises future geopolitical and trade pressures. Provides quantifiable sector-wise targets. Concerns Coal phase-down politically and economically challenging. Transmission expansion may lag renewable targets. EV infrastructure requires massive urban reforms. Carbon market success depends heavily on strict enforcement, currently uncertain. Conclusion India must submit new NDCs for the 2035 period. The article proposes a seven-point plan to enhance climate ambition while sustaining growth. It recommends raising emissions-intensity reduction targets, increasing the non-fossil share of electricity to 55%, phasing down coal after 2030, accelerating EV and railway electrification, strengthening the new Carbon Credit Trading Scheme, enabling renewable integration through storage and grid upgrades, and mobilising large-scale finance including MDB support.  A missing link in India’s mineral mission  Why is this in News? The Union Cabinet has approved a ₹7,280 crore Rare-Earth Magnet Scheme aimed at building India’s domestic magnet manufacturing and processing ecosystem. Comes alongside: the new G-20 Critical Minerals Framework, emphasising value addition, refining, and manufacturing, China’s tightening export controls on rare earths, graphite, and battery technologies. India has reformed its mining laws but still lacks commercial-scale refining and midstream capacity. Article highlights: India must rapidly build processing & refining capability, not just mining. Relevance GS-III: Environment Recycling of fly ash, slag, red mud Sustainable mining & waste utilisation GS-II: International Relations Mineral diplomacy G-20 critical minerals framework Geopolitics of supply chains Practice Question “India’s critical minerals strategy will remain incomplete without mastering midstream processing and refining.” Examine.(250 Words) What Are Critical Minerals? Minerals essential for clean energy, electronics, semiconductors, defence, space, and EV batteries. Examples: Lithium, cobalt, nickel, rare-earth elements, graphite, silicon, titanium, copper. Value chain: Exploration → Mining → Processing/Refining (midstream) → Component manufacturing → Final products. Most value lies in the midstream. Countries without refining capacity remain raw material exporters and lose control of strategic supply chains. India’s Current Position — The Core Problem Mining sector reformed (MMDR Act amendments) → improved exploration & auctions. But processing capacity is extremely limited: India imports almost all lithium, nickel, cobalt in refined form. Even for minerals produced domestically (copper, graphite, silicon, tin, titanium, zirconium, rare earths), refining is small-scale or low-purity. China controls: >90% global rare earth refining 90% graphite refining Significant share of battery cathode/anode processing With U.S.–China technology and mineral trade tensions rising, India’s supply chain vulnerability increases. Why Processing (Midstream) Matters More than Mining ? For solar modules → need polysilicon & wafers For EVs → need battery-grade graphite, nickel sulphate, cobalt sulphate For wind turbines → need rare-earth magnets For chips → need high-purity silicon, gallium, germanium Without processing, mining reforms don’t translate into industrial strength. Government Measures So Far A. Rare-Earth Magnet Scheme (₹7,280 crore) Boost domestic production of NdFeB magnets, used in EV motors, wind turbines, robotics, defence. B. Critical Minerals Recycling Scheme (₹1,500 crore) Recover minerals from e-waste, spent batteries, fly ash, red mud. C. Amendments to MMDR Act Exploration licences for strategic minerals National mineral auctions Mining-associated minerals category National Mineral Exchange (future) But these measures strengthen mining, not refining. India’s Exposure to Global Disruptions China’s recent steps: Export controls on rare-earth tech, graphite, magnet technology. Additional restrictions in recent weeks. Geopolitical triggers: U.S.–China trade conflict → higher tariffs + export bans Without refining capability, India remains dependent and vulnerable. Five Steps India Must Take  Convert Centres of Excellence into Industrial Innovation Engines Use the nine Centres of Excellence under NCMM to develop: Commercial-scale processing & refining technologies High-purity compounds (battery-grade, magnet-grade) Life-cycle & cost analysis for quick adoption Strong collaboration between IITs–NITs–CSIR–industry. Unlock Secondary Resources for Domestic Recovery India generates: 250 million tonnes of coal fly ash → contains rare earths Red mud → gallium Zinc residues → cobalt Steel slag → vanadium CSIR & IIT pilots show technical viability. Need large-scale recovery in Critical Mineral Processing Parks. Build a Skilled Workforce in Process Metallurgy Critical minerals require: Hydrometallurgy Solvent extraction High-temperature refining Allocate NCMM’s ₹100 crore for: Train-the-trainer programmes Diploma-level curricula CSIR lab-linked practical training Could create thousands of high-skilled jobs. De-risk Industry Investment (Demand Assurance + Finance Tools) Use stockpiling not just for security but as a market-maker: Government buys during downturns Releases during demand spikes Model: US Department of Defense + MP Materials agreement. Mandate partial domestic sourcing for: Defence Pharmaceuticals Electronics Encourage processors to meet international quality standards. Align Mineral Diplomacy with Processing Capability India’s overseas acquisitions currently secure ore, not refined inputs. If India demonstrates high-purity refining, partnerships shift from: Buyer–seller → Joint processing & co-investment alliances Critical mineral parks can act as hubs for: Foreign JV refineries Technology transfer Shared processing units Strategic Implications A. Economic Capture more value domestically → boost manufacturing & exports. Integrate into clean-energy, semiconductor, defence supply chains. B. Geopolitical Reduce dependence on China Enhance bargaining power in G-20 and Indo-Pacific minerals platforms Become a partner in new global mineral alliances (QUAD, IPEF) C. Industrial Strengthen EV, battery, solar, wind, electronics, telecom sectors. Support semiconductor grade material development. Challenges Ahead High capital costs for refineries Environmental clearances for processing facilities Technology gaps (solvent extraction, pyro-metallurgy) Global competition from established Chinese, Korean, European processors Long gestation periods for refining plants Conclusion The Union Cabinet’s ₹7,280 crore rare-earth magnet scheme and new G-20 critical minerals framework highlight the urgency of building India’s refining capability, not just mining. India imports most battery-grade and semiconductor-grade materials despite mining some critical minerals. China dominates global processing, creating supply-chain vulnerabilities amid intensifying U.S.–China trade frictions. The article argues that India must focus on the midstream—processing and refining—through five steps: powering Centres of Excellence into innovation hubs; recovering minerals from secondary sources; skilling metallurgists; de-risking private investment via stockpiling and quality standards; and linking mineral diplomacy to processing capacity. Processing is the missing link that will determine whether India remains a raw-ore supplier or becomes a resilient clean-industrial power.

Daily Current Affairs

Current Affairs 04 December 2025

Content Govt. withdraws order to install Sanchar Saathi app Why is volcanic ash a safety concern for flights? SC flags issues in payouts, free care for acid attack survivors Haircuts, asset valuation Why a landmark US lawsuit is accusing big brands of engineering addictive, unhealthy foods Govt. withdraws order to install Sanchar Saathi app Why is this in News? The Department of Telecommunications (DoT) has withdrawn its earlier order directing smartphone manufacturers to mandatorily pre-install the Sanchar Saathi app on all new devices from 2025. The withdrawal follows: Public and civil society backlash Concerns over privacy, surveillance, and regulatory overreach Opposition objections in Parliament Leaks showing the order was never publicly released Government now argues the app’s rising voluntary downloads mean a mandatory preload is unnecessary. Relevance GS-II: Governance Executive power, regulatory overreach Transparency in rule-making Digital governance frameworks Centre vs private sector regulation under TIUE GS-II: Polity Fundamental Right to Privacy (Puttaswamy judgment) Proportionality in restrictions State surveillance concerns GS-III: Internal Security Cyber fraud detection (CEIR, TAFCOP) Telecom-based security infrastructure Digital identity misuse prevention What is the Sanchar Saathi App? A DoT-developed platform aimed at consumer security in telecom. Includes: CEIR (Central Equipment Identity Register) — block stolen phones TAFCOP — identify SIMs issued in one’s name Fraud reporting tools SIM misuse detection Core purpose: prevent cyber fraud, identity misuse, and phone theft. What Triggered the Controversy? A. Mandatory Preinstallation Directive (Not Publicly Released) DoT issued a confidential direction to smartphone makers: “Preload Sanchar Saathi on all devices from 2025.” B. Why It Alarmed Citizens? Appeared to be: Forced installation of a government app Without user consent On all smartphones sold in India Raised fears under: Privacy rights (K.S. Puttaswamy judgment) Overbroad surveillance capabilities No explicit parliamentary oversight Legal Backdrop: TIUE Rules (Telecommunication Identifier User Entities) DoT recently granted itself new powers to regulate TIUEs, meaning ANY entity that uses mobile numbers— including: Banks E-commerce platforms Payment apps Smartphone manufacturers These rules allow DoT to directly issue binding directives to private businesses beyond telecom operators. The Sanchar Saathi preload order was one of the first major exercises of these expanded powers. The Opposition & Civil Society Concerns 1. Surveillance & Privacy Mandatory government app on all devices could enable: Data harvesting Behavioural tracking Expanded profiling through telecom identifiers Lacked a legal necessity test under Puttaswamy proportionality. 2. Regulatory Overreach TIUE rules allow DoT to intervene in non-telecom sectors using mobile numbers. Critics argue this creates a “backdoor” regulatory expansion. 3. Lack of Transparency The order was not public, but leaked. No consultation with: Industry Citizens Cybersecurity experts 4. Precedent for Mandatory Digital Tools Similar concerns were raised earlier with: Aarogya Setu mandatory requirements Mandatory KYC updates Aadhaar-related device integrations 6. Government’s Defence Communications Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia stated: 1.5 crore fraudulent mobile connections disconnected 26 lakh lost phones recovered “We only aimed to make the app accessible to every citizen.” However, admitted: “This app’s success is premised on public support; if feedback demands changes, we are ready.”   The eventual withdrawal demonstrates a conciliatory shift. Why the Withdrawal Happened? Massive surge in voluntary downloads in recent months. DoT claims mandatory preload became “unnecessary”. Attempt to defuse political and public backlash. Avoid conversations around: Overreach of TIUE rules Digital surveillance fears Discretionary executive power Broader Implications A. Digital Governance Shows tension between security-driven digital policy and privacy rights. B. Regulatory Process Highlights need for: Transparency Public consultation Clear legal authority C. Precedent for Future Digital Mandates Government may revisit similar mandates for: Security KYC Device-level integrations depending on political climate. D. Scope of TIUE Rules These rules may significantly expand DoT’s influence over non-telecom sectors—likely to be debated in courts or by data protection bodies. Why is volcanic ash a safety concern for flights?  Why is this in News? The Hayli Gubbi volcano in northern Ethiopia erupted on November 23, 2025, for the first time in nearly 12,000 years. It released massive ash plumes up to 14 km altitude, which travelled across the Red Sea, Middle East, and drifted into India’s western airspace on November 24–25. The DGCA (India’s aviation regulator) issued an advisory to airlines and airports due to the risk volcanic ash poses to aircraft engines and flight safety. Several Indian carriers (Air India, Akasa) cancelled flights to West Asian destinations. Relevance GS-I: Geography Volcanism Atmospheric circulation Transboundary ash transport GS-III: Science & Tech Jet engine functioning Impact of foreign particles on aviation systems Safety protocols What Is Volcanic Ash? Why Is It Dangerous? Volcanic ash is NOT like soft household ash. It is a mixture of: Silicate glass particles Pulverised rock and minerals Sulphur dioxide (SO₂) Abrasive, microscopic, sharp-edged materials These particles are hard, abrasive, and heat-resistant. Ash clouds spread due to: High-altitude winds (jet streams) Updrafts that carry particles tens of thousands of feet up Long-range atmospheric transport (sometimes global) Ash Movement from Ethiopia to India — What Happened? The eruption shot ash 14 km upwards. Winds carried the plume across the Red Sea → Yemen → Oman → Iran → India. Plume altitude: 15,000–25,000 feet Speed: 100–120 km/hour Entered Indian airspace: Nov 24, 5.50 pm (Rajasthan border) Passed over Gujarat, Delhi-NCR, Punjab, UP Exited India: Nov 25, 10.30 pm, towards China. This rapid transboundary movement triggered aviation safety concerns. How Volcanic Ash Damages Aircraft Engines (The Science) A jet engine: Sucks air in Compresses it Mixes with fuel Burns it at ~1,600°C Produces thrust Why ash is dangerous: Silicate ash melts at high temperature, forming glass-like deposits. These stick on hot engine parts, blocking: cooling air passages turbine blades fuel nozzles sensors Result: Engine overheating Compressor stall Power loss Complete engine shutdown Even small amounts of ash can cause millions of dollars in engine damage. Ash also: Sandblasts the cockpit windshield, making it opaque Damages sensors (like pitot tubes) Contaminates cabin air Scratches fuselage and fan blades Historical Incidents Proving the Risk 1. British Airways Flight 9 (1982) – Mount Galunggung, Indonesia Boeing 747 flew through ash at 37,000 ft. All 4 engines failed. Cabin lost pressure → oxygen masks deployed. Aircraft descended 25,000 ft before pilots restarted engines. Cockpit windscreens became opaque from ash. 2. KLM Flight 867 (1989) – Mount Redoubt, Alaska Boeing 747-400 hit ash at 24,000 ft. All 4 engines shut down. Restarted after multiple attempts. Aircraft saved, but US$ 80 million engines were scrapped. These events are central case studies in global aviation safety. What Did DGCA Order in India? The DGCA issued a safety advisory to: 1. Airlines Avoid ash-affected regions and altitudes. Modify flight routes/levels. Report: engine performance anomalies cabin smoke/odour suspected ash ingestion 2. Airports Inspect runways for ash deposits. Suspend or restrict operations if contamination detected. Be ready with emergency protocols. 3. Flight Operations Adjust air traffic flow to prevent aircraft from entering ash zones. Maintain updated volcano advisories (VAAC alerts). 4. Carriers’ Response Air India cancelled nine flights (Dubai, Doha, Dammam etc.). Akasa cancelled flights to/from Jeddah, Kuwait, Abu Dhabi. How Has the Eruption Affected Global Flights? Airlines across West Asia and East Africa altered flight paths. Some flights experienced delays due to routing changes. VAACs (Volcanic Ash Advisory Centres) issued continuous warnings. Indian carriers took precautionary cancellations to avoid risk. Broader Implications Aviation Safety Reinforces global standards: “Avoid all visible ash” (ICAO) Highlights vulnerability of long-haul and Middle East-bound flights. Climate & Atmospheric Concerns Ash clouds can cool regions temporarily. SO₂ emissions can cause acid rain. Regional Cooperation Need for coordinated: meteorological services VAAC advisories air navigation planning across nations SC flags issues in payouts, free care for acid attack survivors Why is this in News? The Supreme Court has decided to re-examine why acid attack survivors—mostly young women— are not receiving the minimum ₹3 lakh compensation, and are still being denied free emergency treatment by private hospitals, despite clear Supreme Court directions for more than a decade. The case was heard by a Bench led by Justice B.V. Nagarathna. The Court has sought detailed data from NALSA on compensation disbursed across States. Relevance GS-II: Polity & Governance Failure of State machinery to enforce SC orders Role of NALSA, SLSAs, DLSAs Victim compensation schemes Criminal justice system reforms Rights of vulnerable groups GS-II: Social Justice Gender-based violence Intersection of poverty, disability, and violence Rehabilitation of victims Access to healthcare Background: How Did SC Start Intervening? A. Landmark 2006 Beginning → Laxmi Case In 2006, SC took suo motu cognisance after hearing Laxmi, an acid attack survivor. Recognised: the lifelong physical, mental, and social trauma survivors face State’s obligation to rehabilitate victims B. Key SC Orders (2013 & 2015) The Supreme Court issued binding directions: Minimum ₹3 lakh compensation for every acid attack survivor ₹1 lakh within 15 days Remaining ₹2 lakh within 2 months Ban on over-the-counter sale of acid Acid to be sold only with ID proof and justification. Mandatory free treatment for survivors Private hospitals criminally liable for refusal Immediate stabilisation + referral to specialised facilities District Legal Services Authorities (DLSAs) To function as Criminal Injuries Compensation Boards To process claims and disburse compensation quickly C. March 20, 2024 Order Survivors can approach: State Legal Services Authorities (SLSA) District Legal Services Authorities (DLSA) when compensation is delayed or denied. What Is the Issue Now? What Did Petitioners Say? The NGO Acid Survivors Saahas Foundation submitted: States (especially Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh) are giving only the initial ₹1 lakh. The remaining ₹2 lakh is not being paid at all. Private hospitals are refusing treatment until full payment is made. Survivors face: catastrophic medical costs repeated surgeries disability & loss of livelihood long rehabilitation periods The NGO said this is a humanitarian failure and a violation of multiple SC orders. Why Compensation & Free Treatment Matter (Basics) Acid attacks cause: Severe burns, disfigurement, blindness Loss of facial function, mobility 20–30 corrective surgeries Long-term psychological trauma Inability to work for months or years Thus, immediate compensation and free emergency care are vital for survival. What Did the Supreme Court Observe Now? A. SC Will Examine Why Years of Orders Are Not Followed The Court noted: Compensation remains unpaid Private hospitals continue to deny treatment Monitoring by States is weak B. SC Issued Notice to NALSA NALSA to gather: State-wise data on compensation paid Cases where payment is pending C. NALSA Statement in Court Between March 2024 – April 2025, approx. ₹484 crore has been disbursed. SC seeks detailed breakup to assess compliance. D. Direction to Chief Secretaries Bring all judicial orders to their attention. Ensure funds are released promptly to: State Legal Services Authorities District Legal Services Authorities E. Next hearing scheduled for February 3, 2026 Why the Problem Persists (Structural Issues) 1. Delays in State funding Budgets for victim compensation often inadequate. 2. Weak District Legal Services Authorities Slow verification Lack of coordination with police and hospitals 3. Poor enforcement against private hospitals No criminal cases filed Survivors forced to pay out-of-pocket 4. Acid sale continues informally Black-market sales persist Poor implementation of SC ban 5. No nationwide rehabilitation framework Limited shelters, counselling services, skill training Survivors abandoned after initial treatment Broader Social Implications Acid attacks are gendered crimes—targeting women rejecting advances or asserting autonomy. Survivors face: lifelong stigma social isolation difficulty finding employment Delays in compensation deepen inequality and exploitation. Haircuts, asset valuation Why is this in News? A Parliamentary Standing Committee on Finance has expressed serious concern about: Excessive haircuts in many Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC) cases Opaque valuation practices Low recovery rates Delays in resolution The observations were made while examining the IBC Amendment Bill 2025. Committee said these issues may be undermining creditor confidence and IBC’s long-term credibility as a resolution framework. Relevance GS-III: Indian Economy Bankruptcy reforms Bad loans & NPAs Role of IBC in improving credit flows Haircuts, recovery rates, asset valuation Banking sector stability Insolvency infrastructure & NCLT reforms GS-II: Governance Parliamentary oversight Accountability in regulatory institutions (IBBI, IPs) What is the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC)? Enacted in 2016 to: Consolidate insolvency laws Prioritise creditor control (CoC) Enable time-bound resolution of distressed firms Improve credit discipline Key timelines: 180 days + 90-day extension = maximum 330 days But many cases exceed these timelines. What is a “Haircut”? Definition A haircut refers to the difference between: Total amount owed by the debtor, and Actual amount recovered by creditors through an IBC resolution. Formula Example: If a company owes ₹1,000 crore and creditors recover ₹200 crore → Haircut = 80% Why Do Haircuts Happen? Borrower distress leading to low enterprise value Deterioration of assets during long insolvency timelines Poor management or diversion of funds Low interest of bidders Inefficient information memorandum Litigation & delays reducing asset value Liquidation value being low for many stressed assets Why Haircuts Are Controversial? Creditors (especially banks) incur massive losses Taxpayer money indirectly suffers (public sector banks) Questions about: valuation integrity conflict of interest among valuers collusion between bidders and promoters misuse of Section 29A loopholes High haircuts reduce trust in the insolvency ecosystem. What the Parliamentary Committee Flagged? 1. Excessive Haircuts Several cases show 95–99% haircuts. Example trends noted: Average recovery rate under IBC is only 32.8% of admitted claims. This is far below original expectations. 2. Concerns about Asset Valuation Allegations of: Inconsistent valuation methodologies “Forced sale value” ambiguities Lack of transparency in the valuers’ work In some cases, resolution value < liquidation value, indicating inefficiency. 3. Delay in Resolution Delays erode enterprise value and increase haircuts. 4. Inefficiency among Insolvency Professionals (IPs) Questions about skill levels, oversight, and accountability. 5. Low bidder participation Due to: litigation risks lack of clarity in asset value uncertain timelines Why Are Haircuts Rising? Economic Factors Many companies reach IBC at terminal stage, assets eroded. Bad loans often unresolved for years before IBC. Institutional Weakness IPs overloaded CoC not always equipped to evaluate business viability Poor documentation by debtors Legal Issues Endless litigation in NCLT/NCLAT/Supreme Court Promoters resisting takeover Challenges to eligibility of bidders Valuation Problems Discrepancies between two mandatory valuers Assets often overvalued pre-IBC, undervalued during IBC Information asymmetry hurting bidder interest What the Committee Recommended ? 1. Reduce Haircuts through Better Monitoring Strengthen oversight on resolution professionals and valuation firms. 2. Improve Transparency in Valuation Standardised procedures Independent audits of valuation in major cases Use of tech-based tools + AI for forensic valuation 3. Ensure Time-Bound Resolution Strict enforcement of 330-day limit Fast-track disposal of litigation 4. Strengthen Information Flow Digitised data rooms Standardised info memorandum 5. Improve Cross-Border Insolvency Mechanisms Critical for foreign creditor confidence. Current IBC Performance Snapshot (As of March 2023 / 2024 Updates) 1,940 cases resolved under IBC. Average recovery: 32.8% of admitted claims, up to 68% of enterprise value. Banks have realised ₹3.89 lakh crore, but haircuts remain large. High-profile cases (Essar Steel, Bhushan Steel) performed better; others have not. Why This Matters for the Indian Economy? A. Bank Balance Sheets High haircuts → high losses → poor credit growth. B. Investor Confidence Lower foreign investment because of uncertain recoveries. C. Credit Culture Borrowers may exploit delays. D. Industrial Revival Faster resolution = revival of productive assets. Why a landmark US lawsuit is accusing big brands of engineering addictive, unhealthy foods  Why is this in News? San Francisco has filed a first-of-its-kind lawsuit against 10 major global food companies—including Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Nestlé, Mondelez, Kellogg—accusing them of: Deliberately engineering ultra-processed foods (UPFs) to be addictive Hiding scientific evidence on health impacts Deceptive and predatory marketing, especially targeting children Creating a public health crisis similar to the tobacco and opioid epidemics The legal action is globally significant as UPF-related obesity and diabetes are rising in India too. Relevance GS-II: Governance Consumer protection Public health regulation Corporate accountability Comparative regulatory models (tobacco, opioids) Judicial interventions in health crises GS-III: Public Health & Economy NCD burden in India Ultra-processed foods and metabolic diseases Food safety standards (FSSAI) Behavioural addiction science Market failures in food systems What Are Ultra-Processed Foods (UPFs)? Defined under the NOVA classification system as industrially manufactured edible products made from food-derived substances, not whole foods. Characteristics High content of: Added sugars (fructose, HFCS, maltodextrin) Modified fats Refined starches Salt Artificial flavours, colours, emulsifiers Low in: Fibre Protein quality Essential micronutrients Purpose Maximise palatability, shelf life, sales volumes, and brand loyalty. Designed to replace real food in diets. Examples Chips, biscuits, namkeen Soft drinks, energy drinks Breakfast cereals Sweetened yoghurts, processed meats Ice creams, ready-to-eat snacks Why Are UPFs Considered “Engineered Addictive”? UPFs use precise combinations of salt + sugar + fat + additives to trigger brain reward pathways. Mechanisms Stimulate dopamine release similar to addictive substances. Increase cravings and reduce satiety, promoting overeating. Artificial flavours trick the brain into expecting nutrition that the food does not deliver → nutritional mismatch. Highly soft textures reduce chewing → faster calorie intake. Marketing reinforces habit-loop behaviours. Evidence Global meta-analyses: UPF addiction prevalence 14–20% (similar to alcohol-use disorder rates). Linked to: Obesity, diabetes Cardiovascular disease Dementia Depression Cancer What Does the Lawsuit Claim? Filed under California’s Unfair Competition Law and Public Nuisance Law. Core Allegations Deliberate Engineering of Addictive Food Products Companies knowingly created UPFs designed to trigger compulsive overeating. Deceptive Marketing Targeting children, minorities, low-income families with ads emphasising fun, sports, and happiness. Withholding Evidence Comparing companies to: Tobacco firms — hiding dangers of cigarettes Opioid manufacturers — downplaying addiction risks Public Health Damage UPFs linked to: soaring rates of obesity diabetes & metabolic syndrome mental health disorders Government Cost Burden The city seeks: restitution for public health expenses civil penalties injunctions restricting marketing tactics Why Is This Considered a Landmark Case? First lawsuit directly accusing the global food industry of creating addictive edible products. Could shape global regulations similar to: tobacco warning labels trans-fat bans sugar taxes May compel food companies to disclose: formulation data internal research papers addiction-related documentation Global Context & Public Health Crisis A. Obesity Epidemic US adult obesity: nearly 42% India: obesity and diabetes rising sharply (urban + rural) B. UPF Dominance UPFs now constitute: 58% of US calories 25–30% of India’s urban calorie intake (and rising) C. Low-income households disproportionately affected UPFs are cheaper, heavily marketed, require no cooking. Why the India Link Matters ? India faces: Rising NCDs (non-communicable diseases) High soft-drink, biscuit, chips consumption among youth Weak front-of-pack labelling norms No regulation on additives linked to overeating Aggressive marketing by multinational and domestic brands School food environments dominated by UPFs UPFs are now a public health challenge for India too. Possible Implications for India Regulatory Could push India to adopt: warning labels front-of-pack nutrition grading restrictions on advertising to children Judicial Indian courts may soon face PILs challenging: aggressive UPF marketing misleading health claims school availability Economic Reformulation costs may increase for FMCG companies. Health Systems Escalating NCD expenditure if consumption trends continue.

Daily PIB Summaries

PIB Summaries 03 December 2025

Content Food Irradiation India’s Commitment to Disability Rights Food Irradiation Why is it in News? Government announced major push for multi-product food irradiation units under ICCVAI, PMKSY. ₹1,000 crore outlay (July 2025) exclusively earmarked for 50 new irradiation units. As of Aug 2025: 16 proposals approved, 9 operational. As of June 2025: 395 cold chain projects approved, 291 operational, 25.52 LMT preservation capacity created. Objective: reduce post-harvest losses, improve food safety, boost export competitiveness. Relevance:   GS-III: Indian Economy — Agriculture, Food Processing Modernisation of food value chains under PMKSY and ICCVAI. Reducing post-harvest losses (20–40%) → direct link to farmers’ income and agri-efficiency. Expansion of cold chain + irradiation → critical for doubling agri-exports. Enhances competitiveness via compliance with global SPS standards (Codex, FAO/WHO). GS-III: Science & Technology — Applications of Radiation Use of gamma, X-ray, and e-beam technologies in food safety. Demonstrates peaceful applications of atomic energy (BRIT, DAE role). Supports safe, non-chemical alternatives to fumigation (methyl bromide phase-out). What are Processed Foods? Any food altered from natural state using techniques like heating, canning, drying, freezing, irradiation. Objectives: safety, extended shelf life, nutritional enhancement, marketability, waste reduction. Why Food Processing Matters? Reduces spoilage & microbial hazards (Pasteurisation, sterilisation, irradiation). Extends shelf life → stabilises markets for perishables. Leads to value addition, higher farmer income, stronger agri-food chains. Supports nutritional interventions (fortification, germination, fermentation). What is Food Irradiation? Application of controlled ionising radiation to food to: Kill bacteria, viruses, moulds Destroy insects & pests Delay ripening & sprouting Extend shelf life Does not make food radioactive. Radiation Sources Used Gamma Rays (Cobalt-60) Supplied by BRIT (DAE); MoU with BRIT mandatory. X-rays High-energy photons generated via electron beam–metal target. Electron Beam (e-beam) Fast electrons, rapid processing, shallow penetration. Applications in India Potatoes, onions Spices Mangoes Cereals, pulses, oilseeds Export quarantine treatment (especially mangoes) International Scientific Endorsement Approved by Codex Alimentarius, FAO/WHO, IAEA. Supported by American Medical Association, American Dietetic Association, Institute of Food Technologists. Studies show no toxicological or nutritional risks. Benefits of Food Irradiation Prevents sprouting of tubers. Extends shelf life of fruits & vegetables. Eliminates insect infestation → boosts export quality. Reduces microbial load → prevents food-borne diseases. Complements cold chain infrastructure. Reduces post-harvest losses (India loses 30–40% fruits & veggies annually). Supports agri-exports (e.g., mangoes to US/EU). Consumer Information & Labelling FSSAI licence number. Logos: Organic, Fortification (F+), HACCP, ISO22000, FSSC, BIS, AGMARK, Vegan. Irradiation symbol (Radura). Examine nutrition labels: calories, sodium, added sugar, saturated fats. Avoid misleading claims: “natural”, “low fat”, “home-made” etc. Government Support – ICCVAI under PMKSY ICCVAI (Integrated Cold Chain & Value Addition Infrastructure) Component of PMKSY (Pradhan Mantri Kisan Sampada Yojana). Objective: end-to-end cold chain from farm gate → retail. Addresses post-harvest losses, farmer distress sales, supply chain inefficiencies. Key Functions Scientific storage Value addition (processing, packaging) Refrigerated transport Irradiation units for perishables Funding Pattern General areas: 35% of eligible project cost (max ₹10 cr). Difficult Areas / SC–ST / FPOs / SHGs: 50% (max ₹10 cr). Difficult Areas include NE states, J&K, Ladakh, Islands, ITDP regions. Eligibility Individuals, FPOs, FPCs, SHGs, NGOs, Firms, Companies, PSUs. Land requirement: Minimum 1 acre for standalone/integrated irradiation units. Proposals online: sampada-mofpi.gov.in. Strategic Objectives of ICCVAI Reduce post-harvest losses (currently 20–25% fruits/vegetables). Increase farmer income via storage & value addition. Improve quality & safety of perishables. Stabilise market prices. Ensure year-round availability. Boost export competitiveness via global-standard safety. Major Components of ICCVAI Farm Level Infrastructure (FLI). Distribution Hub (DH). Pack Houses, Ripening Chambers. CA/Cold Stores. Refrigerated/Insulated Transport. Radiological processing units. Funding requires FLI + linkage to DH/transport. Progress & Achievements Cold Chain Infrastructure (as of June 2025) 395 approved, 291 operational since 2008. Preservation capacity: 25.52 LMT/year. Processing capacity: 114.66 LMT/year. Jobs created: 1.74 lakh. Financial Milestones 2016–17 onwards: Grants approved: ₹2,066.33 crore Released: ₹1,535.63 crore Projects operationalised: 169 Food Irradiation Units (as of Aug 2025) 16 proposals approved 9 operational, 7 under implementation Total Grants-in-aid approved: ₹112.99 crore Released: ₹68.38 crore Expanded Outlay (July 2025) Additional PMKSY allocation: ₹1,920 crore Total PMKSY allocation: ₹6,520 crore (till March 2026) Includes: 50 irradiation units (20–30 LMT additional capacity) 100 NABL-accredited FTLs Significance for India Economic Reduces wastage → raises farm incomes. Enhances competitiveness of Indian exports. Boosts food processing sector (contributes ~12% of manufacturing GVA). Food Security Stabilises supply of perishables. Enhances safety & reduces food-borne illness burden. Environmental Reduces food waste → lower climate footprint (FAO: food waste emits 4.4 Gt CO₂-eq globally). Efficient utilisation of harvest surpluses. Strategic Supports Atmanirbhar Bharat in agri-value chain. Strengthens India’s compliance with global SPS norms. Reduces dependence on chemical fumigation (e.g. methyl bromide). Challenges High initial CAPEX for irradiation units. Limited awareness among farmers & consumers. Misconceptions about “radiation” & food safety. Need for trained radiation safety personnel. Logistics integration with wider cold chain still uneven. Rural connectivity gaps affect collection & distribution efficiency. Way Forward Strengthen farmer awareness through Krishi Vigyan Kendras & FPO networks. Incentivise private investment through expanded subsidies. Integrate irradiation with digital traceability (blockchain, QR-based tracking). Promote irradiation for export-oriented clusters (mango, spices, onions). Facilitate BRIT capacity enhancement for Cobalt-60 production & supply. Strengthen last-mile refrigerated transport networks. Conclusion Food irradiation is emerging as a scientifically robust, economically efficient, and export-enabling technology within India’s modernising food ecosystem. With strong government push under ICCVAI/PMKSY, India is creating a resilient, integrated cold chain that minimises losses, enhances safety, increases farm incomes, and ensures reliable availability of high-quality food. The scaling of irradiation units, alongside testing labs and cold chain expansion, marks a critical transition towards a future-ready, low-waste, high-value food system. India’s Commitment to Disability Rights Why Is This in News? Government highlighted major achievements in disability inclusion ahead of International Day of Persons with Disabilities (3 December). Launch of revamped Sugamya Bharat App, expanded ISL Digital Repository (3,189 e-content videos), and updates on national schemes (ADIP, SIPDA, UDID, PM-DAKSH). Recent large-scale events (Divya Kala Mela, Purple Fest 2025) showcased government efforts on accessibility, skilling, and digital inclusion. Relevance:   GS-II: Welfare Schemes for Vulnerable Sections Disability inclusion aligned with RPwD Act, SIPDA, UDID, ADIP, NDFDC. Government interventions for assistive devices, livelihood, education, rehabilitation. National institutes, CRCs, PM-DAKSH enabling skilling and job linkage. GS-II: Social Justice, Equality, Rights Enforcement of Articles 14, 15, 16, 41, 46 for equitable access. Rights-based approach replacing charity model → core constitutional values. Reservation in jobs and education; anti-discrimination mandates. GS-II: Governance & Administration Digital public infrastructure: UDID, Sugamya Bharat App, ISL e-library. Standardisation of disability certification and service delivery. Regulation of rehabilitation professionals (RCI Act). Disability Rights — Constitutional & International Context Constitutional grounding: Equality before law (Article 14), non-discrimination (Articles 15–16). Social justice and empowerment under Directive Principles (Articles 41, 46). UNCRPD: India is a signatory (2007), driving accessibility-centric laws and programmes. Census 2011: PwDs: 2.68 crore (2.21% of population). Male: 1.50 crore, Female: 1.18 crore. Legal and Policy Framework 1. Rights of Persons with Disabilities (RPwD) Act, 2016 Replaced 1995 Act; effective from 19 April 2017. Expanded disability categories from 7 to 21. Mandates: 4% reservation in government jobs, 5% in higher education. Barrier-free access in public buildings, transport, ICT. Inclusive education and community-based living. Centralised disability certification (UDID integration). 2. National Trust Act (1999) Welfare for persons with Autism, Cerebral Palsy, Intellectual Disability & Multiple Disabilities. Runs group homes, respite care, and guardian systems. 3. Rehabilitation Council of India (RCI) Act, 1992 Regulates training and certification of rehabilitation professionals; maintains national register. 4. SIPDA (Scheme for Implementation of RPwD Act) Umbrella programme supporting Ministries/States in accessibility, awareness, skill development, and inclusion. Key Government Schemes & Initiatives 1. Accessible India Campaign (Sugamya Bharat Abhiyan), 2015 Aims for universal accessibility in: Built environment Transport systems ICT services Revamped Sugamya Bharat App (2025): Accessibility mapping/rating of public spaces. Digital directory of schemes, jobs, scholarships. Grievance redressal for accessibility complaints. Supports assistive tech, voice navigation, multi-language UI. 2. ADIP Scheme (1981) Provides assistive aids/devices + corrective surgeries. Covers hearing aids, wheelchairs, prosthetics, cochlear implants. Case Highlight: Cochlear implant success story of Kritika (Nagpur). 3. Deendayal Divyangjan Rehabilitation Scheme (DDRS) Financial assistance to NGOs for special education, training, and rehabilitation services. 4. National Divyangjan Finance & Development Corporation (NDFDC) Concessional loans for entrepreneurship. DSY: Loans for self-employment. VMY: Microfinance via SHGs/JLGs. 5. Artificial Limbs Manufacturing Corporation of India (ALIMCO) Only Indian PSU manufacturing a full range of assistive devices. Setting up Pradhanmantri Divyasha Kendras (PMDKs) across national institutes. 6. Unique Disability ID (UDID) Centralised national database. Single ID ensures uniformity, transparency, and targeted delivery. Includes online applications, renewals, MIS tracking, future scalability. 7. PM-DAKSH-DEPwD Portal One-stop platform for skill development and employment: Divyangjan Kaushal Vikas: 250+ skill courses, UDID-based enrolment. Rozgar Setu: 3,000+ geo-tagged job listings; MoUs with private companies. 8. National Institutes & CRCs 9 National Institutes + 30 CRCs providing rehabilitation, training, R&D, and outreach. Purple Fest 2025 (Goa) India’s largest inclusion festival. Key launches: Revamped Sugamya Bharat App. IELTS Handbook for PwDs. RPL Certification for ISL interpreters/SODA/CODA. Training programmes in ASL/BSL for ISL professionals. Promotion of Indian Sign Language (ISL) ISLRTC (Nodal Body) Established 2015 under DEPwD. Key achievements: World’s largest ISL Digital Repository (3,189 videos; 2,200+ glossary videos). ISL Dictionary > 10,000 terms. Channel 31 under PM e-Vidya dedicated to ISL training. ISL translation of NCERT textbooks (Classes 1–12) to be completed by 2026. PRASHAST App: screened 92 lakh+ students for early disability detection. Strengths Strong rights-based legislative framework aligned with UNCRPD. Digital-first inclusion strategy (UDID, Sugamya Bharat App, PM-DAKSH). Rapid expansion of ISL ecosystem — repository, dictionary, training channels. Economic empowerment through NDFDC, skill programmes, Divya Kala Melas. Challenges Physical accessibility in public spaces remains uneven across States. Delayed disability certification; rural areas lack trained assessors. Assistive devices market still dependent on imports despite ALIMCO. Learning materials in ISL need faster translation cycles. Employment for PwDs remains below 1% in many sectors. Way Forward Seamless integration of disability inclusion in Smart Cities and urban design. Strengthening local-level rehabilitation services via Panchayati Raj institutions. Incentivising private sector hiring via tax benefits and accessibility ratings. Expanding ISL interpreter workforce and formalising ISL as a recognised language. Conclusion India’s disability rights movement has shifted from a welfare approach to a rights-based, accessibility-driven model. The combination of strong legislation, digital inclusion tools, targeted financial schemes, assistive technology expansion, and large-scale awareness festivals reflects a maturing, institutionalised framework. These initiatives collectively aim to build a society where persons with disabilities participate fully and independently, with dignity and equal opportunity.