rchives
(PRELIMS Focus)
Burmese pythons
Category: ENVIRONMENT
Context: Florida authorities are testing robot rabbits to help control invasive Burmese pythons, which have devastated local wildlife due to their lack of predators and strong camouflage.
Python Control Efforts
Since the late 20th century, pythons have decimated native species like rabbits, birds, and even alligators. Current measures include hunting contests, tracking devices, snake-catchers, and now robot rabbits that mimic real rabbits’ heat and scent.
Robot Rabbit Strategy
These devices simulate body heat and behavior, luring pythons out of hiding to make capture easier. Early trials show promise in overcoming camouflage challenges.
Ecological Impact
Unchecked pythons have caused severe ecological imbalance. In some areas, rabbit populations have dropped by more than 95% since 1997.
Future Implications
If successful, robot rabbits could become a key tool in restoring Florida’s ecosystem.
Learning Corner:
Burmese Pythons
Native to Southeast Asia, Burmese pythons (Python bivittatus) are among the largest snake species in the world, capable of growing over 5 meters long.
They are non-venomous constrictors, killing prey by coiling and suffocation.
Introduced to Florida (likely through the pet trade), they have become a highly invasive species in the Everglades.
With no natural predators in the region, they feed on a wide range of animals including mammals, birds, and even alligators.
Their rapid spread has caused drastic declines in native wildlife populations, making them a major ecological threat.
Control methods include hunting programs, radio-tracking, trained snake catchers, and experimental tools like robot rabbits to lure them out.
Source: THE INDIAN EXPRESS
Exercise Bright Star 2025
Category: DEFENCE
Context : Over 700 Indian Armed Forces personnel are set to take part in Exercise Bright Star 2025, a major multinational drill in Egypt from August 28 to September 10, 2025
Overview
Bright Star, co-hosted by Egypt and the US since 1980, is one of the largest military exercises in the Middle East. The 2025 edition will see participation from 43 nations—13 with active contingents and 30 as observers.
Indian Participation
India’s Army, Navy, and Air Force personnel will engage in live firing, command post exercises, and modern warfare training. Expert exchanges will cover cyber warfare, logistics, and strategic communication.
Significance
With over 7,900 troops expected, the exercise enhances interoperability, regional security, and defence diplomacy. For India, it strengthens tri-service synergy and international military cooperation, supporting its role in peace, stability, and coalition operations.
Learning Corner:
Exercise Name
Participants
Domain
Varuna
India–France
Naval
Komodo
India + multiple regional navies
Naval
SIMBEX
India–Singapore
Naval
La Perouse
Indo-Pacific navies
Naval
Sea Dragon
Quad/allied navies
Naval
Malabar
Quad (India, U.S., Japan, Australia)
Naval
Aikeyme
India + African navies
Naval
India–Africa Maritime
India + African nations
Naval
India–Philippines Drill
India–Philippines
Naval
Talisman Sabre
India + Australia, U.S., others
Multi-domain
Dharma Guardian
India–Japan
Land (Army)
Cyclone
India–Egypt
Special Forces
Shakti
India–France Army
Land (Army)
Yudh Abhyas
India–USA
Land (Army)
Ekuverin
India–Maldives
Land
Khanjar
India–Kyrgyzstan
Land (Army)
Bongosagar
India–Bangladesh
Naval
Source: PIB
Starship
Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Context: SpaceX’s Starship successfully completed a critical test flight, marking a major step toward Moon and Mars missions.
Test Flight Highlights
The 10th flight launched from Starbase, Texas, after three failed attempts.
The Super Heavy booster made a controlled splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico, while Starship splashed down in the Indian Ocean after deploying eight mock Starlink satellites.
Key milestones included in-orbit engine re-ignition and a reusable heat shield stress test.
Features
Height: 120 m – taller than Saturn V.
Engines: 33 Raptor engines with ~74 meganewtons thrust, nearly twice Saturn V.
Payload: 100–150 tons to LEO; up to 100 astronauts in crew configuration.
Fuel: Liquid methane + oxygen.
Design: Fully reusable two-stage system with largest payload volume in history.
Significance
The success restores confidence in Starship for NASA’s Artemis Moon mission and future Mars plans. It demonstrates reusability, massive payload capacity, and cost-effectiveness—potentially revolutionizing space access and exploration.
Learning Corner:
SpaceX’s Starship
World’s largest rocket: At 120 meters tall, Starship is bigger than the Saturn V and designed for deep-space missions.
Structure: Two-stage system — Super Heavy booster and the Starship spacecraft.
Power: Powered by 33 Raptor engines using liquid methane and liquid oxygen, generating ~74 meganewtons of thrust.
Capacity: Can carry 100–150 tons to low Earth orbit and up to 100 astronauts in crew configuration — the largest payload capacity ever.
Reusability: Both stages are fully reusable, aiming to drastically cut launch costs and enable frequent missions.
Heat shield: Equipped with a reusable heat shield to withstand re-entry from the Moon or Mars.
Purpose: Developed to support NASA’s Artemis missions, future Mars colonization, and revolutionize space access through cost-effective, high-capacity launches.
Source: THE INDIAN EXPRESS
Mahatma Ayyankali
Category: HISTORY
Context: Prime Minister Narendra Modi paid tribute to Mahatma Ayyankali on his Jayanti, honoring his legacy as a pioneering social reformer who fought caste-based discrimination and worked for the upliftment of marginalized communities in Kerala.
Legacy of Ayyankali
Born in 1863, he led movements like the Villuvandi (cart) journey and Kallumala struggle, challenging social inequalities.
Advocated education, access to public spaces, and basic rights for Dalits, reshaping Kerala’s social fabric.
His reforms laid the foundation for greater equality and continue to inspire struggles for social justice in India.
Learning Corner:
Mahatma Ayyankali (1863–1941)
Ayyankali was a prominent social reformer from Kerala, known for challenging caste oppression and working for the upliftment of Dalits.
He fought for education rights, access to public spaces, and basic dignity for oppressed communities.
His famous struggles include the Villuvandi (bullock cart) movement, asserting the right of Dalits to use public roads, and the Kallumala agitation, demanding social equality and dignity for Dalit women.
He also organized agricultural labourers to fight for better wages and working conditions.
Ayyankali’s efforts laid the foundation for Kerala’s later progress in social justice and equality, earning him the title Mahatma.
Source: PIB
Amoebic Encephalitis
Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Context: Kerala has reported another case of amoebic encephalitis, a rare and often fatal brain infection, bringing the total cases this year to 42.
About the Disease
Caused mainly by Naegleria fowleri and other free-living amoebae found in warm, untreated water.
Symptoms include severe headache, fever, vomiting, neck pain, confusion, seizures, and coma.
Infection occurs when contaminated water enters the nose; it is not contagious.
Response
Authorities are chlorinating and cleaning water sources, and local panchayats have imposed bathing bans in affected areas.
Kerala’s mortality rate is around 25%, far lower than the global average of 97%, due to strong healthcare interventions.
Risk Factors
Rising cases are linked to climate change, warmer waters, better testing, and pollution.
Transmission can also occur via dust, soil, or mud exposure.
Amoebic encephalitis remains a serious health challenge, demanding vigilance, safe water practices, and rapid medical response.
Learning Corner:
Amoebic Encephalitis
Definition: A rare but serious brain infection caused by free-living amoebae, most commonly Naegleria fowleri, though other species like Acanthamoeba and Balamuthia can also cause it.
Transmission: Not contagious; occurs when contaminated water, soil, or dust containing amoebae enters the body, usually through the nose.
Symptoms: Severe headache, fever, nausea, vomiting, stiff neck, confusion, seizures, and in advanced stages, coma.
Fatality: Globally, the mortality rate is very high (around 97%), though early diagnosis and intensive treatment can improve survival chances.
Risk Factors: Warm freshwater sources (ponds, lakes, poorly maintained pools), climate change (rising water temperatures), and urban pollution increase risk.
Prevention: Avoid swimming in untreated water, use proper chlorination, maintain hygiene, and seek immediate medical care if symptoms appear after exposure.
Source: THE HINDU
(MAINS Focus)
From Smart Cities to Smart Villages (GS Paper II – Governance)
Introduction (Context)
The Smart City Index 2025 released by the International Institute for Management Development (IMD) highlights global urban development trends, with Swiss cities dominating.
Indian cities, while participating in the smart city movement, remain outside the top 20, prompting a review of India’s Smart Cities Mission (SCM).
Beyond urban areas, the concept of “Smart and Intelligent Villages” is emerging as a tool for rural development.
Key Highlights of Smart City Index 2025
A smart city is “an urban setting that applies technology to enhance the benefits and mitigate the drawbacks of urbanisation for its citizens.”
Evaluation Parameters: Health & Safety, Mobility, Activities, Opportunities, Governance.
Top 5 Smart Cities (2025):
Rank
City
Country
2024 Rank
Change
1
Zurich
Switzerland
1
—
2
Oslo
Norway
2
—
3
Geneva
Switzerland
4
▲1
4
Dubai
UAE
12
▲8
5
Abu Dhabi
UAE
10
▲5
New Entrants: AlUla, Astana, Caracas, Kuwait City, Manama, San Juan.
Indian Cities’ Ranking (2025):
Indian cities continue to be part of the global smart city movement, but they remain outside the top 20.
While progress has been made in infrastructure, digital adoption, and citizen services, challenges in governance, mobility, and human development still place them lower in the global hierarchy.
City
Rank
Delhi
104
Mumbai
106
Hyderabad
109
Bengaluru
110
This context brings the Smart Cities Mission (SCM) into focus as a major policy initiative aimed at transforming India’s urban landscape.
About Smart Cities Mission
The Smart Cities Mission (SCM) was launched by PM Narendra Modi on 25 June 2015 under the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs.
The mission aims to develop cities with core infrastructure, a clean and sustainable environment, and a good quality of life using smart solutions.
Its broader goal is to drive economic growth and promote inclusive development by creating replicable “lighthouse” models for other cities.
SCM is implemented as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme (CSS).
Key focus areas: Walkways, pedestrian crossings, cycling tracks, efficient waste management, integrated traffic management, and assessment.
Fundamental principles of Smart City:
There is no standard definition or template for a smart city in India. The six fundamental principles are:
Communities at the core of planning and implementation.
Greater outcomes using fewer resources.
Corporative & Competitive Federalism – competitive city selection and flexible project execution.
Innovative, integrated, and sustainable solutions.
Technology as a tool, not the goal; selected carefully according to city context.
Convergence – sectoral and financial alignment.
Strategic components of SCM include area-based development, covering:
City improvement (retrofitting)
City renewal (redevelopment)
City extension (greenfield development)
Pan-city initiatives applying smart solutions across larger urban areas.
Present status
According to the Smart Cities Mission dashboard (June 2025):
7,626 projects completed (95% of total 8,063 projects).
437 projects (5%) worth ₹10,795 crore are still ongoing.
Extending the Idea: Smart and Intelligent Villages
While smart cities address urban challenges, the majority of India still resides in villages. Hence harnessing technology for rural development can ensure inclusive growth and reduce urban-rural disparities.
A Smart and Intelligent Village leverages IoT, AI, and digital connectivity to improve living conditions, farming, healthcare, education, and governance.
Case Study: Satnavari Smart Village
Satnavari has been set up as India’s first “Smart and Intelligent Village” in the Nagpur district. It is equipped with technologies ranging from smart farming and telemedicine to AI-powered water monitoring and digital classrooms.
Some of the smart interventions are:
Agriculture:
IoT sensors monitor soil moisture, crop health, and environmental conditions in real time.
Benefits: 25–40% water saved, fertiliser costs reduced by 30%, crop yield increased by up to 25%.
Mobile apps help farmers adopt climate-smart and natural farming practices using accurate, verifiable digital data.
Fisheries:
Water-quality sensors track oxygen levels, pH, and temperature in ponds.
Improved fish yield by 20–30% and reduced operational costs.
Drones in Farming:
GPS-based drones spray fertilisers and pesticides precisely.
AI-enabled pest detection allows early identification of pest attacks.
Benefits: Reduces chemical use by 20–50%, improves crop health, and lowers environmental impact.
Safety & Convenience:
IoT streetlights automatically adjust brightness based on movement, time, or ambient light.
CCTV cameras and drones monitor farms and public spaces in real time.
Benefits: Energy savings of 50–70%, better safety, and lower maintenance costs.
Drinking Water:
AI-powered monitoring systems track water supply and quality continuously.
Ensures 55 litres per capita per day, meeting rural water standards.
Healthcare:
On-site testing for 120+ health parameters, including blood tests, cardiac checks, cancer and TB screening.
Telemedicine allows remote consultation with doctors, providing urban-grade healthcare in rural areas.
Education:
Smart classrooms with e-learning platforms, interactive Zoom sessions, and BharatNet Wi-Fi (100 Mbps) for students.
Enables digital learning and access to quality educational resources.
Security:
Central control system coordinates emergency response.
Integrated with police, NDRF (National Disaster Response Force), and SDRF (State Disaster Response Force) for faster response.
Waste Management:
IoT-enabled bins track garbage collection and disposal.
Data-driven strategies ensure safe disposal and prevent environmental pollution.
Fire Control:
Automatic fire extinguishers activated on contact with flames.
Drones can deliver extinguishers to remote areas for quick action.
Network Management:
Central Network Operations Centre (C-NOC) monitors all devices in the village.
Tracks uptime, detects problems, and ensures smooth functioning of all smart systems.
Terminologies
IoT (Internet of Things): A network of devices connected to the internet that can collect, exchange, and analyse data automatically. It helps monitor and control systems like sensors, streetlights, and agricultural tools in real time.
AI (Artificial Intelligence): Technology that enables computers or machines to perform tasks requiring human intelligence, such as recognising patterns, predicting outcomes, or making decisions, e.g., detecting pests in crops or analysing water quality.
GPS (Global Positioning System): A satellite-based navigation system that provides accurate location and time information. It is widely used in drones for precise farming, mapping, and transportation.
Telemedicine: The delivery of healthcare services remotely using digital communication tools like video calls, apps, and online platforms. It allows patients in rural or remote areas to consult doctors without travelling.
BharatNet: A government initiative to provide high-speed internet connectivity to villages across India. It facilitates digital education, e-governance, and online services in rural areas.
C-NOC (Central Network Operations Centre): A centralised monitoring hub that oversees all smart systems in a village or city. It ensures devices function smoothly, tracks performance, and alerts for maintenance or problems.
Conclusion
The transition from Smart Cities to Smart Villages represents India’s effort to leverage technology for inclusive and sustainable development.
Initiatives like Satnavari Smart Village demonstrate how technology can bridge the rural-urban divide, improve resource efficiency, and empower communities, making development truly participatory and holistic.
The planned and strategic use of technology can not only make villages ‘smart’ but also aim for meaningful improvements in various aspects of life, striving toward the goal of inclusive development in India.
Mains Practice Question
Q The concept of Smart Villages complements the Smart Cities Mission in India. Examine how technology-driven interventions in villages can promote inclusive and sustainable development. Illustrate your answer with examples.” (250 words, 15 marks)
Source: UPSC Issue at a Glance | From Smart Cities to Smart Villages : What UPSC aspirants must-know for Prelims and Mains
Alternatives to Ethanol (GS Paper III – Science and technology)
Introduction (Context)
Biofuels have emerged as a significant alternative to fossil fuels in the renewable energy transition. While ethanol remains the most commonly used biofuel, discussions are expanding toward advanced alternatives that offer greater efficiency, sustainability, and compatibility with modern energy demands.
Why alternative to Ethanol needed?
Ethanol has a lower calorific value compared to petrol or butanol, meaning vehicles require more ethanol to produce the same amount of energy, reducing fuel efficiency.
It absorbs water easily, which complicates storage and transportation since water contamination can reduce fuel quality and damage engines.
Ethanol is corrosive to existing pipelines and engine parts, leading to higher maintenance costs.
Large-scale ethanol production relies heavily on food crops like maize and sugarcane, which creates competition between food supply and fuel needs.
In countries like Brazil, soybean is more valuable as an export food commodity than as a feedstock for biodiesel, highlighting the economic trade-off between food and fuel use.
Expanding cultivation of crops for ethanol often leads to deforestation or conversion of natural ecosystems, creating a long-term ‘carbon debt’ that offsets climate benefits.
Intensive use of fertilisers, depletion of groundwater, and soil degradation associated with biofuel feedstock cultivation reduce long-term agricultural sustainability.
Alternatives to Ethanol
Butanol and ABE biofuels
The ABE process involves the fermentation of acetone, butanol, and ethanol
These products are synthesised naturally by solventogenic Clostridia – bacteria capable of fermenting a broad spectrum of cellulosic and hemicellulosic substrates.
Butanol has higher energy content and is less volatile than ethanol.
It is compatible with existing fuel infrastructure.
Challenges:
ABE downstream processing for product recovery is more complex than a single product like ethanol, as the former involves separating multiple solvents (acetone-butanol-ethanol) while the latter needs water-ethanol separation.
Low economic viability at large scale.
Requires advanced microbial strains and cost-efficient processing.
Biohydrogen
Biohydrogen can be made by fermenting glucose, where it gets converted into mixtures like acetone-butanol-ethanol (ABE) or acids like butyric and acetic acid.
In this process, the main enzyme that helps produce hydrogen is called hydrogenase.
Certain bacteria such as Clostridium are high-yield producers of biohydrogen, while Bacillus species have also been used to produce hydrogen from wastewater.
A special heat-loving bacterium, Caldicellulosiruptor saccharolyticus, can produce about 92% of the possible hydrogen yield from glucose and can also use waste from industries like pulp and paper.
Challenges:
Storage and distribution infrastructure is underdeveloped.
Hydrogenase enzymes used in production are oxygen-sensitive.
High costs compared to fossil fuels.
Photosynthetic biohydrogen production
Photosynthetic organisms (algae, cyanobacteria, bacteria) can produce hydrogen using sunlight, water, and CO₂.
The key enzyme (hydrogenase) is oxygen-sensitive, so microbes use tricks like separating hydrogen production in different cells (heterocysts) or at different times (day/night).
Scientists are modifying enzymes to work even in the presence of oxygen.
Alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii can sustain hydrogen production for ~100 hours in low-sulphur conditions.
Thermophilic bacteria can make hydrogen for weeks with little light (photo-fermentation), and some bacteria can generate hydrogen through water–gas shift reactions at room temperature.
Challenges:
The main enzyme (hydrogenase) stops working in the presence of oxygen.
Large-scale production is difficult due to low efficiency and high costs.
Maintaining suitable lab or industrial conditions is technically challenging.
Biodiesel
Biodiesel is made by a chemical process called transesterification, which converts plant or animal fats into fuel.
These fats are made of glycerol (the head) and fatty acids (long carbon chains) and can be saturated or unsaturated depending on double bonds in the chains.
Triglycerides form when multiple fatty acid chains attach to glycerol.
During transesterification, the glycerol part is replaced with methanol using a catalyst, usually potassium hydroxide.
Newer catalysts like amorphous carbon, SiO₂-ZrO₂, or ion exchange resins are cleaner, reusable, and more environmentally friendly.
Using high temperature and pressure under supercritical conditions can improve biodiesel production efficiency.
Challenges
Oils with high free fatty acid content, like raw Jatropha oil, can form soap (saponification), which reduces efficiency.
Enzymatic methods using lipases are green but costly and unstable in methanol.
Biodiesel is not completely carbon-neutral, but it can reduce CO₂ emissions by 55% and also lower SO₂, CO, and particulate matter.
However, biodiesel can increase NOx and hydrocarbon emissions and may produce soot with mutagenic risks.
Chemically synthesised Liquid fuels
Liquid diesel fuels can be made through a process called pyrolysis, which produces a gas mixture of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H₂) known as syngas.
This syngas can be converted into liquid fuels using metal catalysts.
Lignocellulosic biomass, such as plant waste and wood, is a good raw material for this process because it can cut fossil fuel emissions by up to 90% and produces very little sulfur dioxide (SO₂).
It can also use low-quality land for woody material, so it does not compete much with agricultural land.
The main challenge is that producing these fuels is still more expensive than using fossil fuels, which makes them less competitive in the market.
If production costs can be reduced, these chemically made fuels could be more effective than E85 (a gasoline-ethanol mix) in lowering CO₂ and air pollution.
Challenges
High production costs reduce competitiveness.
Large-scale commercialisation not yet viable.
Microalgal Biodiesel
Microalgae can produce biodiesel at rates up to 100 times higher than the best land-based oilseed crops.
They can be grown in ponds where CO₂ from power plant emissions is supplied, helping both fuel production and carbon capture.
It is estimated that using only 5% of the land area of the US for microalgae cultivation could produce enough diesel to meet the world’s petroleum needs without using farmland meant for food.
Certain algae, like Chlorella protothecoides and Scenedesmus obliquus, can grow in the dark using carbon sources such as corn powder hydrolysate.
These algae can store high amounts of triglycerides, which are used to make biodiesel.
Growing algae in the dark (heterotrophic cultivation) produces triglycerides in a way similar to fermentation, making it an efficient method for biodiesel production.
Challenges
Requires controlled cultivation (costly infrastructure).
Energy-intensive harvesting and processing.
Large-scale commercialisation is still limited.
Conditions for Biofuel sustainability
Biofuels can replace fossil fuels only if two conditions are met:
All feedstocks are naturally renewable.
Biomass supply is abundant and reliable.
In practice, neither condition is fully achievable, making large-scale biofuel sustainability challenging.
A resource is sustainable only if it can be maintained indefinitely without loss of quality and without harming the supporting environment.
Agricultural practices for biofuel crops often violate sustainability principles.
Fertile topsoil takes 300–400 years to regenerate 1 cm, making repeated cropping unsustainable.
Groundwater recharge is slow, and heavy irrigation depletes water resources.
Use of fossil-based fertilizers and mechanised tilling compacts soil and accelerates fertility loss.
Cropping for biofuels can cause rapid moisture loss and salt accumulation in soils.
These environmental impacts are largely irreversible and cannot be fully corrected by biotechnology.
Conclusion
While advanced alternatives like butanol, biohydrogen, biodiesel, chemically synthesised fuels, and microalgal biodiesel show promise, their scalability and sustainability remain contested.
Ethanol alternatives can reduce fossil fuel dependency, but only if integrated into a balanced renewable energy portfolio.
Mains Practice Question
Q Discuss the advanced alternatives to ethanol as a biofuel. Critically analyse their benefits and challenges in the context of India’s energy transition. (250 words, 15 marks)
Source: UPSC Science Current Affairs 2025: What are the advanced alternatives to ethanol?