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Apr 6, 2026 Daily Prelims CA Quiz

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here

Apr 6, 2026 IASbaba's Daily Current Affairs

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) War and Stagflation: Global Economic Fallout Subject: Economy / International Relations Why in News? The ongoing US-Israel war on Iran (since late February 2026) has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, triggering the largest oil supply disruption since 1973. Global economists now warn of a return to stagflation.   What is Stagflation? A macroeconomic condition where slow growth + high unemployment (stagnation) occurs together with rising prices (inflation). Defies the traditional Phillips Curve (which assumed inflation and unemployment move in opposite directions). Last major global stagflation: 1970s oil crises (1973 Arab embargo & 1979 Iranian Revolution). Primary cause: A negative supply shock – external event that shifts Aggregate Supply (AS) leftward → output falls, prices rise.   What Triggered It? The War & Hormuz Closure Strait of Hormuz: Strategic chokepoint between Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman. Before war, 25-30% of global oil passed through it. Current status: Nearly closed. Daily ship transits fell from 129 to just 6 (95% collapse) – IEA calls it “largest supply disruption in history”. Supply loss: Estimated 12-15 million barrels per day (up to 15% of global supply). Oil price surge: ~$70/barrel (pre-war) → $112-115/barrel (current). Jet fuel: $99 → $197/barrel.   Global Economic Impact (The Stagflation Scenario) Growth Slowdown: Global GDP growth for 2026 being revised sharply downward. Merchandise trade growth expected to halve (from 4.7% to ~1.5-2.5%). Inflation Surge: Transmission channels: Higher energy → higher production costs (electricity, manufacturing, transport) → higher food prices (fertilizer shortages from Gulf). G20 inflation projected 1.2% higher due to sustained commodity pressures. Low-income countries worst hit (food is 36% of household consumption vs. 9% in rich nations). Financial Market Turbulence: Dow and Nasdaq entered correction territory. Developing country currencies weakened (Africa -2.9%, Latin America -2.3%, Asia -1.0%). 3.4 billion people live in countries spending more on debt service than health/education.   India-Specific Impact 85%+ crude oil import dependent → highly vulnerable. Brent crude >$100/barrel → imported inflation already at 5.4% (SBI Research). Rupee weakened beyond 93 per dollar (from ~87 pre-war). CPI may exceed 4.5% for next 3 quarters. India’s growth (FY27 projected 7.2%) relatively resilient, but global trade disruptions and financial volatility will weigh. Helium crisis: India 100% import-dependent for helium (critical for MRI, semiconductors). ~50% from Qatar (now disrupted). Inventory only 7-10 days.   Two Possible Resolutions: Supply-side solution (ideal): End the war → reopen Hormuz → oil prices normalize. Demand-side sacrifice (painful): Aggressive rate hikes → deep recession accepted to break inflation (1979 Volcker model).   Key Terms for Prelims Stagflation: Stagnation + Inflation together. Phillips Curve: Inverse relationship between unemployment and inflation (breaks down during stagflation). Supply shock: Sudden event that shifts Aggregate Supply curve (war, oil crisis, pandemic). Strait of Hormuz: Key oil chokepoint between Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman. Imported inflation: Domestic price rise due to costlier imports (fuel, fertilizer, food). Negative supply shock: AS curve shifts left → output falls, prices rise. Cost-push inflation: Inflation caused by rising production costs.   Source/Reference: https://indianexpress.com/article/explained/explained-economics/iran-war-prospect-stagflation-lpg-10621075/ Food Prices and Oil Shocks: The Fertiliser-Food Nexus Subject: Economy / Agriculture Current Context The ongoing West Asia conflict (Feb-April 2026) has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting global energy and fertiliser supplies. While global food prices remain stable for now, experts warn that the energy shock is transmitting through fertilisers, threatening future harvests and food inflation. The Critical Transmission Channel: Fertilisers Unlike past oil shocks, the current crisis has not yet caused a food price spike—the FAO Food Price Index for March 2026 is only 1% higher year-on-year. However, this masks a deeper vulnerability: Urea (nitrogen fertiliser): 30-34% of global urea trade passes through the Strait of Hormuz; supplies are severely restricted  Phosphate fertilisers: Saudi Arabia produces about 20% of global supply; region exports over 40% of sulphur (key ingredient)  Prices rising: Urea and DAP prices up 20% since conflict began; sulphur and ammonia shipments blocked  India’s Exposure India is acutely vulnerable across multiple dimensions: Commodity Import Dependence West Asia Share Crude oil 80-90% ~55% LPG ~62% Over 90% DAP (fertiliser) 50-60% ~30% of total imports MOP (potash) 100% Significant Effective fertiliser import reliance (including feedstocks): ~69% (ICRIER estimate)  Domestic gas shortage: Plants shutting as gas diverted to households, reducing local fertiliser output  Impact Pathways Direct Channels: Higher fertiliser prices → increased subsidy burden (Ukraine war saw subsidy bill balloon 2.5x budget)  Supply delays → reduced yields → lower harvests → higher food prices later  Edible oils: Vegetable oil sub-index up 13.2% (biofuel linkage; Indonesia launching B50)  Indirect Channels (Moody’s/FinMin analysis): Higher transport costs (fuel pass-through) Logistics disruptions (rerouting via Cape of Good Hope adds 6,000-10,000 nautical miles) Remittance vulnerability (Gulf accounts for ~40% of India’s remittances) India’s Buffers (Temporary) Rice stocks: 12 times buffer norm Wheat stocks: Nearly double buffer norm Fertiliser inventory: ~18 million tonnes (~2 months consumption)  Risks Ahead Critical concern: The shock comes just as Northern Hemisphere planting season begins. “In the worst case, this means lower yields and crop failures next season,” warned World Food Programme’s Carl Skau. Potential double-hit: If conflict persists and an El Niño follows, India could face a repeat of 2022-23 when cereal inflation stayed above 10% for over a year. Economic Impact Summary (FY27 projections): Moody’s: GDP growth cut to 6% (from 6.8%); inflation at 4.8% EY: GDP erosion of ~1 percentage point; inflation +1.5 percentage points ICRA: WPI inflation at 21-month high of 3.2% in March 2026 Policy Implications Government measures taken: Exploring alternatives from Indonesia, Belarus, Morocco, China  Approved new fertiliser types to shift toward alternatives Daily meetings with farmers to restrain excessive urea usage  Recommendations: Proactive management of stocks and supplies Keep import window open Prepare for extended uncertainty UPSC Prelims Keywords Strait of Hormuz: Chokepoint for 30% of global fertiliser trade, 25-30% of oil Urea: Most widely used nitrogen fertiliser; production gas-intensive DAP (Diammonium Phosphate): India 50-60% import-dependent MOP (Muriate of Potash): India 100% import-dependent Biofuel linkage: Palm/soyabean oil diversion to diesel (Indonesia B50, US mandates) El Niño risk: Weather shock compounding fertiliser shock Source/Reference https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/its-time-to-insulate-food-from-oil-shocks-10620885/ Plastic Waste Management (Amendment) Rules, 2026: Loopholes, Flexibility & Diluted Compliance Subjects: Environment & Ecology / Polity & Governance  News Context: The Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change’s 2026 amendments retain targets but add flexibility like carry-forward and tradable EPR certificates, signaling enforcement limits. With firms reportedly meeting only 50–60% obligations and no verified 100% compliance data, concerns over weak implementation persist.   Key Details & Important Facts: Legislative Background: Parent Framework: Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016 (amended periodically) EPR Regime: Came into force February 16, 2022  Original Collection Targets (2022): 35% (2021-22) → 70% (2022-23) → 100% (2024-25)  What the 2026 Amendment Does: New Mandates (Recycled Content & Reuse) Companies must ensure minimum recycled content in plastic packaging annually: Category Description 2025-26 2028-29 Category I Rigid plastic (PET bottles, HDPE containers) 30% 60% Category II Flexible plastic (carry bags, snack wrappers) 10% 20% Category III Multi-layered (Tetra Pak, foil wrappers) 5% 10% Reuse obligations for rigid packaging (Category I): 10% for smaller containers (0.9-4.9 litres), 70% for large water packaging in 2025-26. Carry-Forward Provision (The “Elastic” Clause) Companies failing to meet 2025-26 targets may carry forward the shortfall for up to three years (until 2028-29), provided at least one-third of the deficit is met annually. In effect, the 2025-26 target can be met in 2028-29. Tradable EPR Certificates (Formalised) Companies can meet obligations by purchasing certificates from those exceeding targets  Creates market flexibility but allows firms to avoid recycling their own plastic footprint  CPCB operates centralised online portal for certificate exchange  End-of-Life Disposal Provisions Explicitly endorses energy recovery methods: co-processing (cement/steel), waste-to-energy (WTE), waste-to-oil, and road construction. This remains controversial due to emissions of dioxins, furans, heavy metals. Exemptions Targets do not apply where other regulations (e.g., food safety standards) restrict recycled plastic use—potentially excluding significant food/beverage packaging. Challenges in EPR Implementation: Informal sector exclusion: Most waste collection done by informal workers; EPR certificates do not necessarily formalise them  Certificate market manipulation: Recyclers generated certificates 38 times their claimed capacity  Under-capacity for flexible plastics: 29% under-capacity for hardest-to-recycle Category II plastics  Low certificate prices: PIBOs paying less than 10% of actual collection cost for multi-layered plastics  Relevant Keywords for Prelims: Legislation: Plastic Waste Management Rules, 2016; Environment Protection Act, 1986 Concepts: Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), Polluter Pays Principle, Environmental Compensation, Carry-forward mechanism, Tradable certificates Institutions: CPCB (Central Pollution Control Board), SPCBs, MoEFCC Categories: Category I (rigid), Category II (flexible), Category III (multi-layered plastic) Controversial provisions: End-of-life disposal (WTE, co-processing), food safety exemptions Scam: 6-7 lakh fake EPR certificates (2023) Core Theme: The 2026 amendments dilute India’s plastic waste framework by allowing compliance deferral through carry-forward provisions, despite progressive targets. Coupled with unverifiable collection data and past certificate scams, the EPR regime risks becoming a trading mechanism rather than ensuring real recycling and waste management.   UPSC-Oriented Analysis (Static-Dynamic Linkage): Static Link: India’s environmental framework is anchored in Article 48A and Article 51A(g), supported by the Environment Protection Act, 1986, and guided by the Polluter Pays Principle under the Rio Declaration 1992. Dynamic Link: India’s plastic waste policy balances ambition with feasibility through carry-forward provisions, but its market-based certificate system has faced manipulation due to weak oversight.  The 2024 price controls are legally challenged by firms like Samsung and LG, while globally—unlike the EU Single-Use Plastics Directive—India’s approach remains less stringent and weakly enforced. Source/Reference: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/elastic-rules-on-the-plastic-waste-management-amendment-rules-2026/article70826842.ece OPEC+ Decision: Production Hike Amidst War and Supply Disruption Subject: Economy, International Relations, Current Affairs Why in News? In a significant development for global energy markets, eight OPEC+ member countries held a meeting on April 5, 2026, and decided to increase crude oil production quotas. This decision comes at a time when the ongoing Iran-Israel-US war has disrupted oil supplies through the strategic Strait of Hormuz, pushing crude prices to near $120 per barrel. The Decision: What Has Been Agreed? Production Increase The eight countries agreed to raise oil output by 206,000 barrels per day (bpd) starting from May 2026. This continues the group’s existing plan to gradually phase out voluntary production cuts that were announced in April 2023. Participating Countries The decision was taken by: Saudi Arabia, Russia, UAE, Iraq, Kuwait, Kazakhstan, Algeria, and Oman. Flexibility Clause The group has retained full flexibility to increase, pause, or reverse the phase-out based on evolving market conditions. They have agreed to hold monthly meetings to review the situation, with the next meeting scheduled for May 3, 2026. The Critical Context: War and the Strait of Hormuz Massive Supply Disruption The war has effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz since the end of February 2026. Before the conflict, about one-fifth of global oil and LNG passed through this strait. The disruption has removed an estimated 12 to 15 million bpd (up to 15% of global supply) – the largest oil supply disruption on record. Symbolic vs. Actual Impact The quota increase of 206,000 bpd represents less than 2% of the supply lost due to the Hormuz closure. Key Gulf members (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq) – the only ones capable of significant production hikes – cannot currently increase output because their exports are blocked by the conflict. Warning on Infrastructure Damage OPEC+ has expressed concern over attacks on energy infrastructure, noting that restoring damaged assets is “costly and takes a long time“. Gulf officials have indicated it could take months to resume normal operations even if the war stops immediately. India Connect: Why This Matters for India India’s Energy Dependence India is the world’s third-largest oil importer, meeting over 85% of its crude oil requirements through imports. Persian Gulf countries traditionally account for a significant portion of India’s crude imports. Shifting Supply Dynamics Due to sanctions on Russian oil, Indian refiners have been increasingly turning to Middle Eastern sour crude. OPEC+ supply increases help ensure adequate cargo availability for Asian buyers, including India. Price Impact Dubai market structure (key for Middle East oil pricing to Asia) has retreated sharply following the supply hike announcement. This is expected to lead to lower Official Selling Prices (OSPs) for Asian buyers, benefiting Indian refiners. Long-term Diversification Even with OPEC+ hikes, Japanese refiners (similar to Indian concerns) acknowledge over 95% Persian Gulf reliance is too high. India is also exploring diversification towards US, South American, and other non-Middle Eastern sources. Key Terms for Prelims OPEC+: Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries plus allied non-members (including Russia, Kazakhstan, Oman). V8 (Voluntary Eight): The eight countries currently managing monthly production decisions within OPEC+. Strait of Hormuz: Strategic waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman; vital for global oil transit. Dubai Market Structure: Spread between front-month cash Dubai and Dubai swap; key component in monthly OSP calculations of Middle Eastern producers. JMMC (Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee): OPEC+ panel that monitors market conditions and compliance. Declaration of Cooperation (DoC): The framework agreement among OPEC+ members for coordinating oil production policies. Source/Reference https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2026/4/5/opec-agrees-to-hike-oil-output-warns-of-slow-recovery-after-attacks Hectocotylus Subject: Science & Technology (Biology/Zoology) Current Context A groundbreaking study published in the journal Science (April 2, 2026) has revealed that the hectocotylus is not merely a sperm-delivery organ but a sophisticated sensory tool that can “taste” female hormones. The Discovery Researchers discovered that the hectocotylus is equipped with chemotactile receptors that detect progesterone—a hormone produced by the female octopus’s reproductive tract and skin.  Key Findings The hectocotylus contains up to three times more chemotactile receptors and neurons than normal arms  A specialized receptor called CRT1 evolved from ancestral neurotransmitter receptors to specifically recognize progesterone with high affinity  When the hectocotylus detects progesterone, it triggers the male to locate the oviduct and release sperm  This ability works even in complete darkness  Why This Matters (Evolutionary Significance) The discovery explains how solitary octopuses—which rarely encounter mates and are prone to aggression—can reproduce efficiently without direct visual contact.  The hectocotylus merges sensory assessment and gamete delivery into a single appendage, allowing males to fertilize females “at arm’s length” while avoiding potentially lethal attacks. Research Methodology The study involved placing male-female octopus pairs in tanks separated by a divider with holes. Scientists were surprised to find males reaching their hectocotylus through the holes to mate without ever seeing their partners—the same behavior occurred in total darkness. Relevance for UPSC This discovery is significant in Zoology (Phylum Mollusca, Class Cephalopoda) as it: Demonstrates evolutionary adaptation in reproductive biology Shows how sensory systems can be repurposed for mating (chemotactile receptors) Provides insights into speciation—how sensory innovations can drive reproductive isolation and biodiversity    Source/Reference https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/why-do-octopuses-have-the-hectocotylus/article70826373.ece   (MAINS Focus) Transforming India's Nuclear Power Landscape: Realising the 100 GW Target UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper III – Economy (Energy) | GS Paper III – Science & Technology Sub-topic: Nuclear Energy; Energy Security; Viksit Bharat; Net-Zero Emissions   Introduction In the Union Budget 2025–26 India, Finance Minister set an ambitious target to expand nuclear capacity to 100 GW by 2047. The SHANTI Act 2025 India replaces the Atomic Energy Act 1962 India and Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act 2010 India, enabling private and foreign participation, granting statutory status to the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board India, and easing liability norms. However, achieving this goal hinges on resolving key issues—tariffs, fuel ownership, waste management, insurance, dispute resolution, and ensuring true regulatory independence.   Main Body Driving Forces: Viksit Bharat & Net-Zero Twin Goals: Achieving Viksit Bharat (developed nation) by 2047 and net-zero emissions by 2070 drive the nuclear expansion. Per Capita Electricity Gap (2024): India at 1,418 kWh vs. China at 7,097 kWh, US at 12,701 kWh, and OECD average above 8,000 kWh—illustrating the immense distance to Viksit Bharat. Energy Consumption Pattern: In 2024, India’s per capita energy consumption was 7,893 kWh, but only one-fifth came from electricity—indicating massive headroom for electrification. Net-Zero Conditionality: The shift away from fossil fuels necessitates low-carbon baseload power, for which nuclear is uniquely suited. Current Energy Mix: Installed Capacity vs. Actual Generation Installed Capacity (June 2025 – 476 GW total): Renewable sources: 227 GW (solar 111 GW, wind 51 GW, hydro 48 GW, bioenergy 12 GW, micro-hydel 5 GW) – 50% of capacity Thermal (primarily coal): 240 GW – 50% of capacity Nuclear: 8.8 GW – 1.8% of capacity Actual Generation (2024-25 – 1,824 TWh total): Thermal power: 1,363 TWh – 75% of generation (with 50% of capacity) Renewables: 403 TWh (solar 144, wind 83, hydro 160, bioenergy 16) – 22% of generation (with 50% of capacity) Nuclear: 57 TWh – 3% of generation (with 1.8% of capacity) Key Insight: Thermal and nuclear provide steady baseload power; renewables require massive storage investment. Projects of 40 GW are languishing without power-purchase contracts due to intermittency challenges. Land Intensity: Solar and wind farms are about 10 times more land-intensive than thermal plants—a constraint as India scales up. India’s Nuclear Power Journey: Current Status First Reactor (1969): Tarapur – India’s nuclear journey began over five decades ago. Current Fleet: Nuclear Power Corporation (NPCIL) manages 24 reactors with 8,780 MW installed capacity (one at Rawatbhata shut down). Reactor Types: Two Boiling Water Reactors (BWR – Tarapur); two Russian VVERs (Pressurised Water Reactor – Kudankulam); remaining are Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWR). Low Construction Cost: India’s 700 MW PHWR costs $2 million per MW—among the lowest globally. Budget Constraint: DAE budget averages ₹24,000–26,000 crore annually. Adding 90 GW over two decades requires over $200 billion (₹18 lakh crore)—only feasible with private investment. The SHANTI Act: Transformative Changes Repeals: The 1962 Atomic Energy Act and the 2010 Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act (CLNDA) stand repealed. Private Participation: Brings private companies to build, own, and operate nuclear power plants—a first in India’s nuclear history. Regulatory Autonomy: Provides statutory status to the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB), freeing it from DAE control. Liability Revision: Revises the liability framework to encourage private and foreign investment. Strategic vs. Civilian Division: Conceptually attempts to separate strategic/defence-related nuclear activities from civilian power generation. Three-Front Nuclear Strategy for 100 GW Front 1: Large Foreign Designs (Indigenisation Needed) Jaitapur (Maharashtra): Six reactors of 1,650 MW each – French EDF design – under consideration for over a decade. Mithi Virdi (Gujarat): Six reactors of 1,000 MW – Westinghouse-Toshiba design. Kovvada (Andhra Pradesh): Six reactors of 1,000 MW – GE-Hitachi design. Challenge: Likely power generation cost over $5 million per MW vs. India’s $2 million benchmark. China’s Example: Built supporting industry base; plans 33 reactors of 1,000 MW each at below $2 million per MW over 10 years. Front 2: Indigenous Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) – R&D Focus Government Allocation: ₹20,000 crore for research and development of five indigenous SMR models (5 MW, 55 MW, 200 MW) by 2033. Research Priorities: Molten-salt reactor designs; Thorium cladding with HALEU (High Assay Low Enriched Uranium) as alternative to Breeder Reactor route for early exploitation of India’s thorium reserves. Captive Power Plant Market: Industries (steel, metals, cement, petrochemicals, paper, data centres) have 90 GW captive capacity (mostly fossil fuel-based). SMRs can replace these. Front 3: Indigenised 220 MW PHWR – Ready for Deployment Track Record: 15 units currently operational – reliable, proven technology. Modularisation Potential: With efficient project management, modularisation, and economies of scale, time from first concrete to commissioning can be reduced to 40 months. Captive Replacement: Ready as economically viable replacement for fossil-fuel captive power plants. Private Sector Role: Some Indian private companies have requisite design, fabrication, and construction experience. Implementation Challenges & Way Forward Fleet Mode Stalled: 2017 approval for 10 reactors of 700 MW each in fleet mode—work has not begun. Exclusion Zone Regulations: Existing regulations designed for multiple reactors at one site need modification for captive single-unit reactors. Financing Model: Nuclear power requires high upfront capital costs but low operating costs over a 60-year life—appropriate financing model needed. Rules & Regulations: The SHANTI Act’s promise depends on notified rules addressing: Nuclear power tariffs Ownership of nuclear fuel Waste management Insurance and liability framework Dispute settlement mechanism Autonomous regulator with real powers   Conclusion India’s nuclear push—from 8 GW to 100 GW by 2047—is key to Viksit Bharat and net-zero goals. The SHANTI Act 2025 India opens the sector, but success depends on execution—resolving tariffs, fuel, waste, and regulation, while scaling cost-effective deployment.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The SHANTI Act 2025 India can transform India’s nuclear sector, but achieving 100 GW by 2047 depends on execution.” Critically examine its drivers, key provisions, and implementation challenges in the context of Viksit Bharat and net-zero goals. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/transforming-indias-nuclear-power-landscape/article70827256.ece Plastic Waste Management (Amendment) Rules, 2026: Elastic Targets, Evasive Intent UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper III – Environment & Ecology (Waste Management) | GS Paper II – Governance Sub-topic: Plastic Waste; Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR); Circular Economy; Regulatory Compliance   Introduction The 2026 amendments to India’s Plastic Waste Management Rules dilute the Extended Producer Responsibility India framework through relaxed timelines, carry-forward of targets, and weak focus on collection. With low recovery rates, they risk undermining effective plastic waste control.   Main Body The Paradox of Plastic: Why Rules Are Necessary Ubiquity Drivers: Plastic is adaptable to a near-infinite range of consumer goods, easy to produce, accessible to all income groups, and flexible in ways metal can never be. The Same Qualities Become Problems: These very characteristics make it near impossible to incentivise collection and reuse—hence the necessity of regulatory intervention. Environmental Impact: Uncollected plastic waste ends up in landfills, rivers, oceans, and public spaces, causing long-term ecological damage. Evolution of the EPR Regime (2022–2026) Original EPR Targets (2022-2024): 2021-22: Collect and process 35% of plastic introduced into the market 2022-23: Increase to 70% 2024-25: Achieve 100% collection and processing Current Reality: Government’s own parliamentary responses indicate collection rates hover between 50-60% No evidence or claim that all companies are meeting 100% obligations No targets set for 2025 and beyond for collection Key Implication: The foundational collection target—the most basic metric of EPR success—remains unachieved, yet the government has shifted focus to new mandates. New Mandates Under 2026 Amendments Recycled Content Requirements (Rigid Plastic Packaging – Category I): 2025-26 onwards: Minimum 30% recycled material 2028-29: Increase to 60% Reuse Obligations: Similar mandates introduced for reuse of plastic packaging. The Critical Loophole – Shortfall Carry-Forward: Companies failing to meet 2025-26 targets may carry forward the shortfall for up to three years Condition: Must make up at least one-third of the deficit annually Effect: The 2025-26 target can effectively be met in 2028-29—three years later than intended Elasticity of Compliance: What It Signals Shift in Government Focus: From pushing companies to collect/recycle plastic → to having them use recycled content regardless of how it is sourced. Market Economics Logic: Provisions on using ‘trading certificates’ suggest that the government now wants market mechanisms, not regulatory mandates, to solve the environmental problem. Undermining EPR Intent: Without proper reckoning of collection and recycling targets, the new reuse targets—already elastic—risk being ignored entirely. No Accountability for Past Failures: There are no penalties or corrective actions for the 50-60% collection rates currently prevailing. Structural Flaws in the Amendment Issue Consequence Three-year carry-forward for shortfalls 2025-26 target can be met in 2028-29—defeats urgency No collection targets for 2025 and beyond Basic EPR metric abandoned Collection rate stuck at 50-60% Foundational failure unaddressed Trading certificates as primary mechanism Reduces environmental problem to market transaction Recycled content focus without collection assurance May incentivise diversion of already-collected plastic rather than new collection Way Forward: Strengthening the EPR Regime Fix Collection First: Before mandating recycled content, ensure collection targets are met with penalties for non-compliance. Remove Elastic Clauses: Carry-forward provisions should be eliminated or strictly limited to genuine force majeure. Transparent Data: Publicly disclose company-wise EPR compliance data; move away from opaque parliamentary responses. Enforce Accountability: Impose financial penalties for shortfalls; link trading certificates to verified collection, not just paper transactions. Targets for 2025 and Beyond: Set clear, annual collection targets with escalating percentages and no rollover options. Circular Economy Integration: Link plastic waste rules with Swachh Bharat Mission, urban local body solid waste management, and informal recycler formalisation. Conclusion The 2026 amendments weaken Extended Producer Responsibility India by allowing flexible timelines and carry-forward of targets, shifting focus away from collection. Without strong enforcement and infrastructure, accountability—and effective plastic waste management—remains undermined.   UPSC Mains Practice Question “The Plastic Waste Management (Amendment) Rules, 2026 dilute accountability under the Extended Producer Responsibility India regime.” Critically examine their provisions, highlight structural flaws, and suggest reforms. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/editorial/elastic-rules-on-the-plastic-waste-management-amendment-rules-2026/article70826842.ece  

Apr 5, 2026 Daily Prelims CA Quiz

The Current Affairs questions are based on sources like ‘The Hindu’, ‘Indian Express’ and ‘PIB’, which are very important sources for UPSC Prelims Exam. The questions are focused on both the concepts and facts. The topics covered here are generally different from what is being covered under ‘Daily Current Affairs/Daily News Analysis (DNA) and Daily Static Quiz’ to avoid duplication. The questions would be published from Monday to Saturday before 2 PM. One should not spend more than 10 minutes on this initiative. Gear up and Make the Best Use of this initiative. Do remember that, “the difference between Ordinary and EXTRA-Ordinary is PRACTICE!!” Important Note: Don’t forget to post your marks in the comment section. Also, let us know if you enjoyed today’s test 🙂 After completing the 5 questions, click on ‘View Questions’ to check your score, time taken, and solutions. .To take the Test Click Here