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Published on Jun 15, 2026
Daily PIB Summaries
PIB Summaries 15 June 2026
PIB Summaries 15 June 2026

PIB Analysis - 15 June 2026


Contents01

Indore Declaration: BRICS Places Farmers at the Heart of Global Agriculture

16th BRICS Agriculture Ministers' Meeting, Indore · Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare

GS 2GS 3

02

NIUA at 50: Building a “Resilient Urban India @2047”

National Institute of Urban Affairs Golden Jubilee · Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs

GS 1GS 2GS 3

03

Global Wind Day 2026: Charting India's Path to 100 GW and Beyond

Global Wind Day Conference, Goa · Ministry of New & Renewable Energy

GS 3GS 2

Article 01

Article 01

Indore Declaration: BRICS Places Farmers at the Heart of Global Agriculture

16th BRICS Agriculture Ministers' Meeting, Indore (12–13 June 2026) · Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare

Relevance: GS 2 (bilateral, regional and global groupings; international institutions) · GS 3 (agriculture, food security, climate-resilient farming, science & technology).

GS 2GS 3

Image: 16th BRICS Agriculture Ministers' Meeting and adoption of the Indore Declaration. [Replace src with image URL]

Key Data at a Glance

16thBRICS Agriculture Ministers' Meeting, Indore (12–13 June 2026)

~42%of global agricultural land held by BRICS nations

~42%of global foodgrain production from BRICS

11BRICS full members in 2026; India holds the Presidency

4new institutional initiatives launched under the Declaration

~100delegates, including ~60 from member & partner countries

Issue in Brief

  • The 16th BRICS Agriculture Ministers' Meeting (12–13 June 2026, Indore) concluded under India's BRICS Presidency with unanimous adoption of the Indore Declaration.
  • The declaration is farmer-centric, prioritising smallholder farmers, food security, climate-resilient agriculture, trade and digital agriculture across member and partner countries.

Static Background — What is BRICS?

  • The acronym “BRIC” was coined by economist Jim O'Neill of Goldman Sachs in 2001 to flag four fast-growing emerging economies set to reshape the global order.
  • As a political grouping it was formalised in 2006 at the first BRIC Foreign Ministers' meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly (UNGA), New York.
  • The first BRIC Summit was held in Yekaterinburg, Russia, in 2009; South Africa joined in 2010, making it BRICS.
  • 2024 expansion: Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, the UAE and Saudi Arabia were admitted; Indonesia joined in January 2025, taking full membership to 11.
  • A “partner country” category was created at the Kazan Summit (October 2024), letting invited states (e.g. Belarus, Bolivia, Vietnam) join select meetings without full membership.

Static Background — Institutions & India's Role

  • Key bodies: the New Development Bank (NDB) (HQ Shanghai, est. 2014) for infrastructure finance and the Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA) for liquidity support — alternatives to Bretton Woods institutions.
  • BRICS works by consensus, with no charter or permanent secretariat; the rotating chair sets the agenda. India holds the 2026 Presidency and hosts the 18th Summit in New Delhi.
  • On agriculture: ICAR (Indian Council of Agricultural Research) is India's apex farm-research body; PPV&FRA administers the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers' Rights Act, 2001, which uniquely recognises farmers' rights.

Key Dimensions — Four New Institutional Initiatives

  • BRICS Network of Centres of Excellence on Agroecology & Regenerative Agriculture — coordinated by ICAR–IIFSR, Modipuram; promotes natural, organic and climate-resilient farming through joint research.
  • BRICS Network on Digital Agriculture — led by IIT Delhi; fosters cooperation in artificial intelligence (AI), geospatial technologies, digital public infrastructure and data-driven farm solutions.
  • Global Forum on Farmers' Rights in Seed Systems — coordinated by PPV&FRA, New Delhi; protects farmers' seed rights, indigenous seed diversity and traditional knowledge.
  • BRICS AgriN (Agro-Inputs, Genetic Resources & Information Network) — strengthens cooperation on seeds, inputs and genetic resources, aiding members with limited access.

Key Dimensions — Strengthened Platforms & Trade

  • The existing BRICS Agricultural Research Platform (BARP) is to become a “Knowledge-to-Action Hub”, embodying the “Lab to Land” approach of translating research into field solutions.
  • On trade, BRICS reaffirmed a fair, equitable, inclusive and transparent multilateral trading system; a Special Dialogue on the BRICS Grain Exchange built operational momentum.
  • A Ministerial Dialogue — “Small Farmers, Women and Youth” — stressed market, finance, technology and capacity access for marginalised producers.

Critical Analysis — Strengths

  • Converts diplomatic intent into four concrete mechanisms with named nodal coordinators, reducing the risk of declarations remaining purely aspirational.
  • India coordinates three of four initiatives, reinforcing its leadership in agroecology, seed sovereignty and South-South cooperation.
  • Strong alignment with India's domestic priorities — natural farming, indigenous seed conservation and digital agriculture.

Critical Analysis — Structural Questions

  • BRICS members hold divergent interests (large importers and exporters; Russia under sanctions), which may complicate the proposed Grain Exchange and trade harmonisation.
  • Outcomes are frameworks and networks, not binding commitments; effectiveness depends on sustained funding, institutional continuity and follow-through.
  • The farmers' rights agenda can sit in tension with commercial seed and IPR regimes, requiring reconciliation under instruments like UPOV and the International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources (ITPGRFA).

Way Forward

  • Establish time-bound roadmaps and dedicated secretariats for each network so coordination survives presidency rotations.
  • Operationalise the Grain Exchange with clear rules on pricing, settlement and reserves to cushion members against import-price volatility.
  • Mainstream women, youth and smallholder participation through measurable targets in credit, market linkage and technology access.

Prelims Pointers

BRICS Presidency 2026: India; the 16th Agriculture Ministers' Meeting was held at Indore; outcome — the Indore Declaration.

Origins: “BRIC” coined by Jim O'Neill (Goldman Sachs, 2001); first summit Yekaterinburg 2009; 11 full members in 2026.

Core institutions: New Development Bank (NDB) and Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA); partner-country category created at Kazan Summit 2024.

Initiative coordinators: ICAR–IIFSR Modipuram (agroecology); IIT Delhi (digital agriculture); PPV&FRA (farmers' rights in seeds).

BARP: BRICS Agricultural Research Platform — being transformed into a “Knowledge-to-Action Hub”.

PPV&FRA: administers the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers' Rights Act, 2001.

Practice Mains Question

BRICS has emerged as an influential voice in global agricultural governance. Examine the significance of the Indore Declaration (2026) for India's food security and South-South cooperation objectives.

GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks

Practice MCQs

Q1. Consider the following statements regarding the Indore Declaration (2026): (1) It was adopted under India's BRICS Presidency. (2) The BRICS Network on Digital Agriculture is to be coordinated by ICAR–IIFSR, Modipuram. (3) It was the first BRICS agriculture meeting to include partner countries. Which are correct?

A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 1 and 3 onlyC) 2 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3

Q2. Match List I (Initiative) with List II (Coordinating body): A. Agroecology Centres of Excellence · B. Digital Agriculture Network · C. Farmers' Rights Seed Forum // 1. PPV&FRA · 2. ICAR–IIFSR · 3. IIT Delhi. Choose the correct match:

A) A-2, B-3, C-1B) A-1, B-3, C-2C) A-2, B-1, C-3D) A-3, B-2, C-1

Q3. The PPV&FRA, referenced in the Indore Declaration, is associated with:

A) Fixing minimum support prices for foodgrainsB) Protecting plant varieties and farmers' rights over seedsC) Regulating fertilizer subsidy disbursementD) Certifying organic produce for export


Article 02

Article 02

NIUA at 50: Building a “Resilient Urban India @2047”

National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA) Golden Jubilee · Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs · 13 June 2026

Relevance: GS 1 (urbanisation, problems of urban areas) · GS 2 (governance, institutions, capacity building) · GS 3 (infrastructure, climate resilience).

GS 1GS 2GS 3

Image: NIUA 50th anniversary celebrations — theme “Resilient Urban India @2047”. [Replace src with image URL]

Key Data at a Glance

50 yrsNIUA golden jubilee (established 1976)

1976year NIUA was set up under the Societies Registration Act, 1860

1,000+participants (online & offline) at the jubilee

127students at the Urban Renaissance Tech Programme convocation

9technical deliberations on urban resilience

~35%+of India's population is urban, rising toward ~50% by 2047

Issue in Brief

  • The National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA) — premier think tank under the Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs (MoHUA) — marked its golden jubilee (50 years) at Vigyan Bhawan.
  • Held under the theme “Resilient Urban India @2047”, the event launched key publications, a new learning platform and frameworks for climate-resilient, evidence-based urban planning.

Static Background — Why NIUA?

  • NIUA was established in 1976 as an autonomous society under the Societies Registration Act, 1860, to bridge research, policy and practice in the urban sector.
  • Its 50th year coincides with a structural shift: the 74th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992 created the third tier — Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) — whose fiscal and technical capacity remains the binding constraint.
  • India's urban population (~35%+, rising toward ~50% by 2047) drives flagship missions — Smart Cities, AMRUT, PMAY-Urban, Swachh Bharat (Urban) — that NIUA supports.

Static Background — The DEGURBA Frame

  • DEGURBA (Degree of Urbanisation) is a UN/EU-endorsed global method to classify settlements as urban, semi-dense or rural by population density and contiguity.
  • NIUA's Modified DEGURBA adapts it to Indian realities, addressing the rigid Census definition that undercounts fast-growing peri-urban settlements.

Key Dimensions — Launches & Initiatives

  • “Vision for a Resilient Urban India” — strategies across planning, housing, construction, water and mobility for future-ready cities.
  • “Understanding the New Geography of India's Urbanisation” — introduces the Modified DEGURBA geospatial framework for sharper settlement classification.
  • The National Urban Learning Platform launched as the urban arm of iGOT–Mission Karmayogi, delivering hybrid technical capacity building with four new courses.
  • The Urban Renaissance Tech Programme convocation honoured 127 students trained in technology-led urban governance.

Key Dimensions — Nine Themes of Resilience

  • Sessions spanned climate-responsive planning, housing and new construction technologies, circular resource systems, urban mobility and livelihoods for informal workers.
  • Urban finance discussions covered PPPs, blended finance, the Urban Challenge Fund, and deepening the municipal bond market including green bonds.
  • Cross-cutting emphasis on ESG principles, data-driven governance and strengthening Urban Local Body technical capacity (“Team Urban”).

Critical Analysis — Strengths

  • Positions urban policy proactively around climate resilience and 2047 goals, moving beyond a narrow growth-only lens.
  • The Modified DEGURBA framework addresses a long-standing weakness — the rigid Census definition that undercounts emerging peri-urban areas.
  • Integration with Mission Karmayogi links knowledge production to frontline capacity building of urban functionaries.

Critical Analysis — Structural Questions

  • NIUA's outputs are advisory; impact hinges on uptake by states and ULBs, which face chronic fiscal and staffing constraints.
  • Resilience financing remains weak — India's municipal bond market is shallow, and most ULBs depend on transfers rather than own-revenue.
  • Frameworks like Modified DEGURBA need statutory adoption (e.g. by the Census system) to translate into governance change.

Way Forward

  • Embed the Modified DEGURBA classification into official statistical and planning systems for consistent settlement data.
  • Strengthen municipal finance — own-revenue, green bonds and the Urban Challenge Fund — to fund resilience investments.
  • Scale Mission Karmayogi-linked training so capacity reaches small and medium towns, not only metros.

Prelims Pointers

NIUA: established 1976; autonomous body under MoHUA; premier urban think tank; Director — Dr Debolina Kundu.

74th CAA (1992): created the third tier of governance — Urban Local Bodies (ULBs).

DEGURBA: Degree of Urbanisation — a UN/EU settlement-classification method; NIUA released a “Modified DEGURBA” version.

iGOT–Mission Karmayogi: national capacity-building programme; the National Urban Learning Platform is its urban arm.

Urban Challenge Fund: Union-budget instrument supporting city infrastructure transformation.

Jubilee theme: “Resilient Urban India @2047”, aligned with Viksit Bharat @2047.

Practice Mains Question

Strengthening the institutional and financial capacity of urban local bodies is central to building climate-resilient Indian cities. Discuss in the context of recent urban-sector reforms.

GS Paper 2 · 250 words · 15 marks

Practice MCQs

Q1. With reference to the National Institute of Urban Affairs (NIUA), consider the following: (1) It functions under the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. (2) It was established as an autonomous body in 1976. (3) The National Urban Learning Platform is its arm under iGOT–Mission Karmayogi. Which are correct?

A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3

Q2. The term “Modified DEGURBA”, seen in the news, relates to:

A) A carbon-credit accounting standard for citiesB) A framework for classifying settlements / degree of urbanisationC) A municipal green-bond rating systemD) A disaster early-warning protocol for urban floods

Q3. The “National Urban Learning Platform” launched at the NIUA jubilee is the urban arm of:

A) Smart Cities MissionB) iGOT–Mission KarmayogiC) AMRUT 2.0D) Digital India Programme


Article 03

Article 03

Global Wind Day 2026: Charting India's Path to 100 GW and Beyond

Global Wind Day 2026 Conference, Goa (15 June 2026) · Ministry of New & Renewable Energy (MNRE)

Relevance: GS 3 (energy, renewable energy, infrastructure, climate change) · GS 2 (international cooperation in clean energy).

GS 3GS 2

Image: Global Wind Day 2026 — India's path to 100 GW wind capacity. [Replace src with image URL]

Key Data at a Glance

56.09 GWinstalled wind capacity (March 2026); India ranks 4th globally

6.05 GWrecord annual wind addition in 2025–26 (vs 4.15 GW prior)

100 GWwind capacity target by 2030; 156 GW by 2036

1,163.9 GWgross wind potential at 150 m hub height

₹6,853 crVGF for 1,000 MW offshore wind (Gujarat + Tamil Nadu)

70–80%indigenisation in wind turbine manufacturing

Issue in Brief

  • India hosts the Global Wind Day 2026 Conference (15 June, Goa), themed “Wind Energy: From Ambition to Acceleration”, charting the route to 100 GW by 2030 and 156 GW by 2036.
  • The event releases the report “Elevating India's Wind Turbine Exports for Global Markets” and convenes CEA, SECI, IREDA, NIWE, Grid India and industry bodies.

Static Background — Global Wind Day & India's RE Framework

  • Global Wind Day (15 June) was initiated by WindEurope and the Global Wind Energy Council (GWEC) to raise awareness of wind power's role in decarbonisation.
  • Wind is a variable renewable — output rises with hub height, so potential is mapped at 50/80/100/120/150 m (695.5 GW @120 m → 1,163.9 GW @150 m).
  • India's targets flow from the Panchamrit pledges (COP26, Glasgow 2021): 500 GW non-fossil capacity by 2030 and net-zero by 2070.
  • Institutional backbone: MNRE sets policy; NIWE (National Institute of Wind Energy, Chennai) assesses resources; SECI and IREDA handle bidding and financing; CEA and Grid India manage integration.

Key Dimensions — Capacity & Resource Base

  • Installed wind capacity rose from 21.04 GW (March 2014) to 56.09 GW (March 2026) — a 2.66-fold increase; an additional 28 GW is under implementation.
  • 2025–26 saw a record annual addition of 6.05 GW, surpassing the previous best of 4.15 GW (2024–25).
  • Eight states (led by Rajasthan 284.2 GW, Gujarat 180.8 GW, Maharashtra 173.9 GW) hold most of the assessed potential at 150 m.
  • Nearly 45% of wind generation occurs during peak demand hours, complementing solar and strengthening grid reliability.

Key Dimensions — Manufacturing & Government Interventions

  • Turbine manufacturing capacity grew from 10 GW (2014) to ~24 GW (March 2026), with 70–80% indigenisation across blades, towers and gearboxes.
  • ₹6,853 crore Viability Gap Funding (VGF) approved for 1,000 MW offshore wind (500 MW each off Gujarat and Tamil Nadu).
  • A 500 MW pilot under Contracts for Difference (CfD) — a mechanism giving developers revenue certainty against price volatility.
  • Enablers: ALMM (Approved List of Models & Manufacturers), a dedicated wind RPO (Renewable Purchase Obligation), Green Energy Open Access Rules and Round-the-Clock (RTC) renewable projects.

Key Dimensions — Global Partnerships

  • India–UK Offshore Wind Taskforce (Feb 2026) under Vision 2035 — market design, ports, supply chains and blended finance.
  • India–Denmark MoU (2019, renewed May 2025) covers power-system modelling and variable-RE integration; India–Belgium cooperation was reaffirmed at WEF 2026.

Critical Analysis — Strengths

  • Record 6.05 GW annual addition and a strong manufacturing base (70–80% indigenised) signal genuine acceleration and Atmanirbhar depth.
  • Wind's peak-hour generation profile complements solar, strengthening the case for storage-linked, round-the-clock clean power.
  • New instruments — CfD, VGF for offshore, wind-specific RPO — directly de-risk investment and address past stagnation.

Critical Analysis — Structural Questions

  • The 2030 target of 100 GW requires nearly doubling capacity from 56 GW in under five years — steep given land, transmission and forecasting constraints.
  • Offshore wind remains nascent (pilots only); high capital costs and the absence of operational projects make scalability unproven.
  • Concentration in eight states raises grid-evacuation and inter-state transmission pressures; emerging states (MP, Telangana, Odisha) need enabling infrastructure.

Way Forward

  • Accelerate transmission build-out and AI-based forecasting to absorb variable wind and reduce curtailment.
  • Launch offshore wind decisively via the Gujarat–Tamil Nadu leasing areas, leveraging UK and Denmark technology transfer.
  • Integrate wind into storage-linked RTC models and diversify into emerging states to ease grid concentration.

Prelims Pointers

Global Wind Day: 15 June; initiated by GWEC and WindEurope. The 2026 Conference is at Goa.

India's rank: 4th in installed wind capacity; 56.09 GW (March 2026); 3rd in overall renewable energy capacity (IRENA 2026).

Targets: 100 GW wind by 2030, 156 GW by 2036; from Panchamrit (COP26) — 500 GW non-fossil by 2030, net-zero by 2070.

Potential: 695.5 GW @120 m and 1,163.9 GW @150 m hub height; top state — Rajasthan.

CfD: Contracts for Difference — a revenue-certainty mechanism; VGF ₹6,853 cr for 1,000 MW offshore (Gujarat + Tamil Nadu).

Key bodies: NIWE (National Institute of Wind Energy, Chennai), SECI, IREDA, CEA, Grid India — all under/with MNRE.

Practice Mains Question

India's wind energy sector is transitioning “from ambition to acceleration”. Critically examine the opportunities and structural challenges in achieving the 100 GW target by 2030.

GS Paper 3 · 250 words · 15 marks

Practice MCQs

Q1. Consider the following statements: (1) India ranks first globally in installed wind power capacity. (2) India's gross wind potential at 150 m hub height exceeds 1,000 GW. (3) Contracts for Difference (CfD) is a mechanism to provide revenue certainty to renewable developers. Which are correct?

A) 1 and 2 onlyB) 2 and 3 onlyC) 1 and 3 onlyD) 1, 2 and 3

Q2. (Assertion–Reasoning) Assertion (A): Wind energy strengthens grid reliability in India. Reason (R): Nearly 45% of wind generation occurs during peak demand hours, complementing solar power.

A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of AB) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of AC) A is true, R is falseD) A is false, R is true

Q3. The ₹6,853 crore Viability Gap Funding announced for offshore wind covers projects off the coasts of:

A) Kerala and KarnatakaB) Gujarat and Tamil NaduC) Odisha and Andhra PradeshD) Maharashtra and Goa