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Daily Prelims CA Quiz

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 3rd October – 2025

  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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 3rd October – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Sir Creek Category: International Relations Context: Defence Minister Rajnath Singh warned Pakistan that “any aggression by Pakistan in the Sir Creek area will be met with a resounding response that will change both history and geography.” About Sir Creek: Disputed area: Sir Creek is a 96-km strip of water disputed between India and Pakistan in the Rann of Kutch marshlands. Nomenclature: Originally named Ban Ganga, Sir Creek is named after a British representative. Acts as a boundary: The Creek opens up in the Arabian Sea and roughly divides the Kutch region of Gujarat from the Sindh Province of Pakistan. Importance: Apart from strategic location, Sir Creek’s core importance is fishing resources. Sir Creek is considered to be among the largest fishing grounds in Asia. Possibility of oil and gas: The area has possible presence of great oil and gas concentration under the sea, which are currently unexploited thanks to the impending deadlock on the issue. Background of dispute: The dispute lies in the interpretation of the maritime boundary line between Kutch and Sindh. Pakistan claims the entire creek as per paragraphs 9 and 10 of the Bombay Government Resolution of 1914 signed between then the Government of Sindh and Rao Maharaj of Kutch, which set the boundary as the eastern flank of the creek popularly known as Green Line. But India claims that the boundary lies mid-channel as depicted in another map drawn in 1925, and implemented by the installation of mid-channel pillars back in 1924. In its support, it cites the Thalweg Doctrine in International Maritime Law, which states that river boundaries between two states may be divided by the mid-channel if the water-body is navigable. UNCLOS favours India’s stand: Acceding to India’s stance would mean shifting of the land/sea terminus point several kilometres to the detriment of Pakistan, leading in turn to a loss of several thousand square kilometres of its Exclusive Economic Zone under the United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Sources: The Hindu Kathakali Category: History & Culture Context: Kerala Kalamandalam, Cheruthuruthy, witnessed history when 16-year-old Sabri, became the first Muslim girl to perform Kathakali at the prestigious institution since its founding in 1930. About Kathakali: Origin: Kathakali emerged in the 17th century in the kingdom of Travancore (present-day Kerala). The art form was initially performed in temple precincts and later gained popularity in the royal courts. Based on ancient texts: Kathakali is based on Natya Shastra, the ancient treatise on dance, written by Sage Bharata. However, It relies on Hasthalakshana Deepika, another classical text for its hand gestures. Precursors: Dance-drama art form called ‘Krishnanattam’ and Ramanattam based on Mahabharata and Ramayana are precursor of ‘Kathakali’. Composition: Kathakali combines elements of dance, music, mime, and drama. Features of dance: The four aspects of abhinaya – Angika, Aharya, Vachika, Satvikaand the Nritta, Nritya and Natya are combined perfectly in this dance form. Features of music: Kathakali music follows the traditional sopana sangeet of Kerala. It is said to be the ritual singing of the Ashtapadis on the flight of steps leading to the sanctum sanctorum. Use of Mudras: The movements are highly stylized and include intricate footwork, rhythmic swaying, and various hand gestures called mudras. Emphasis on facial expressions: The dancers use their facial expressions, known as rasas, to convey emotions and tell stories. Downfall in 20th century: Kathakali was in peril and on the verge of extinction in the beginning of 20th century. Revival: Renowned Poet Vallaththol Narayana Menon and Manakkulam Mukunda Raja took the initiative to set up Kerala Kalamandalam, a centre of excellence for classical art forms for the revival of kathakali. Major exponents: Kavungal Chathunni Panicker and Kalamandalam Gopi are its most eminent representatives. Source: The Hindu Thumri Category: History & Culture Context: Thumri (one of the ten main styles of singing in Hindustani music) lost its voice as Pandit Chhannulal Mishra passed away leaving a musical legacy. About Hindustani Music: Origin: While the historical roots of both the music types belong to the Bharata’s Natyasastra, they diverged in the 14th century. Focus: The Hindustani branch of music focuses more on the musical structure and the possibilities of improvisation in it. The Hindustani branch adopted a scale of Shudha Swara Saptaka or the ‘Octave of Natural notes’. Composition: The Hindustani music has elements of ancient Hindu tradition, Vedic philosophy and Persian tradition as well. Based on teacher-disciple tradition: Since ancient times, it has been passed from one to another through the Guru-Shishya Parampara. Musical instruments: The musical instruments used in Hindustani are Tabla, Sarangi, Sitar, Santoor, Flute and violin. Raga system: It is based on the Raga system. The Raga is a melodic scale comprising of basic seven notes. Major styles: There are ten main styles of singing in Hindustani music like the Dhrupad, Khayal, Tappa, Chaturanga, Tarana, Sargam, Thumri and Ragasagar, Hori and Dhamar. About Thumri: Origin: Originated in Eastern Uttar Pradesh, mainly in Lucknow & Benares, around 18th century. A romantic & erotic style of singing; also called “the lyric of Indian classical music.” Themes: Compositions are mostly on love, separation and devotion. Distinct feature: Erotic subject matter portrayed picturesquely from the various episodes of the lives of Lord Krishna & Radha. Language: Lyrics are typically in Brij Bhasha and are usually romantic & religious. Linkage with Khayal: A Thumri is usually performed as the last item of a Khayal concert. Gharanas: Three main gharanas of thumri are Benaras, Lucknow and Patiala. Exponent: Begum Akhtar is one of the most popular singers of thumri style. Source: The Hindu ICDS Scheme Category: Government Schemes Context: Recently, Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS) scheme completed 50 years of its launch. About ICDS:   Launch: Launched in 1975, it is one of the world’s largest programmes providing for an integrated package of services for the holistic development of the child.  Ministry: The Umbrella ICDS is a centrally sponsored scheme implemented by the Ministry of Women and Child Development. Flagship programme: The ICDS Scheme providing for supplementary nutrition, immunization and pre-school education to the children is a popular flagship programme of the government. Major objectives: To improve the nutritional and health status of children in the age-group 0-6 years.  To lay the foundation for proper psychological, physical and social development of the child. To reduce the incidence of mortality, morbidity, malnutrition and school dropout. To achieve effective coordination of policy and implementation amongst the various departments to promote child development. To enhance the capability of the mother to look after the normal health and nutritional needs of the child. To facilitate, educate and empower Adolescent Girls (AGs) so as to enable them to become self-reliant and aware citizens. Various schemes subsumed: Presently, various government schemes have been subsumed under the Umbrella ICDS. Various schemes under ICDS: Anganwadi Services Scheme: It is a unique programme for early childhood care and development. The beneficiaries under the Scheme are children in the age group of 0-6 years, pregnant women and lactating mothers. It provides a package of six services namely supplementary nutrition, pre-school non-formal education, nutrition & health education, immunisation, health check-up and referral services. Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana: It provides cash incentive amounting to Rs.5,000/- in three instalments directly to the Bank/Post Office Account of Pregnant Women and Lactating Mother (PW&LM) in DBT (Direct Benefit Transfer) Mode during pregnancy and lactation in response to individual fulfilling specific conditions. National Creche Scheme: It provides day care facilities to children of age group of 6 months to 6 years of working women. The facilities are provided for seven and half hours a day for 26 days in a month. POSHAN Abhiyaan: It targets to reduce the level of stunting, under-nutrition, anaemia and low birth weight babies by reducing mal-nutrition/undernutrition, anaemia among young children as also, focus on adolescent girls, pregnant women and lactating mothers. Source: The Hindu Tomahawk Missiles Category: Defence & Security Context: Russian President Vladimir Putin said that a decision by the United States to supply Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine would trigger a major new escalation with Washington. About Tomahawk Missiles: Development: It is a long-range, subsonic cruise missile developed by the United States Navy.  Launch: It is launched from ships or submarines through a Vertical Launch System and used for precision strikes on land-based targets. Range: These missiles have a range between 1,000 and 1,500 miles (1,550 to 2,500 km). Structure: Tomahawks measure 18.3 feet in length and weigh about 3,200 pounds. They carry a 1,000-pound conventional warhead or cluster munitions. Uniqueness: Tomahawks can fly at low altitudes, avoiding radar detection, and are guided by advanced GPS, inertial navigation, and terrain contour mapping. : This makes them highly accurate-with a margin of error of just 10 meters. Deceptive: It is built to follow a non-linear path, reducing the chance of interception. It is further powered by a solid propellant during its launch phase. Thereafter, it is powered by a turbofan engine that does not emit much heat, which makes infrared detection difficult. Past uses: Tomahawks were first deployed in combat during Operation Desert Storm in 1991. Since then, they have been used in several major conflicts, including strikes in Syria in 2017. (MAINS Focus) India’s Military Transformation: Towards Integrated Theatre Commands (GS Paper 3: Internal Security – Security challenges and their management in border areas; Various Security forces and agencies and their mandate) Introduction (Context) Artificial intelligence, drones, and hybrid warfare are lowering the cost of conflict but increasing operational risks. In a two-front threat scenario from China and Pakistan, India must shift from coordination to command through integrated theatre commands backed by structural reforms. From Coordination to Command New Rules of 2025: The Inter-Services Organisations (Command, Control and Discipline) Rules empower joint commanders with authority across services, moving beyond silos. Prime Minister’s Push: At the 2025 Combined Commanders’ Conference, the theme of “Year of Reforms” stressed integrated theatre commands as the future of Indian defence. Tri-Service Agencies: Cyber, Space, and Special Operations divisions have been raised under HQ IDS, enhancing India’s preparedness for new-age domains. Combat Formations: Rudra and Bhairav units integrate artillery, armour, engineers, and surveillance for modular, mission-specific deployment. Amphibious Doctrine: A declassified joint doctrine now provides an integrated framework for land, sea, and air operations. Doctrinal and Technological Evolution Earlier Doctrines: The Joint Doctrine (2017) and Land Warfare Doctrine (2018) laid the groundwork for synergy among the three services. Ran Samvad Seminar (2025): Emphasised hybrid warriors—capable of coding, information warfare, and tactical command—reflecting the demands of multi-domain conflict. Technology Induction: MQ-9B drones (2023 deal) enhance persistent ISR and precision strike. Rafale-M strengthens naval aviation and maritime strike power. Akashteer AI system integrates Army air defence with IAF’s IACCS. Pralay missile adds credible theatre-level firepower. Creating a Modern Force Integrated Battle Groups (IBGs): Rudra-type brigades designed for 12–48 hour deployment with combined arms, drones, and loitering munitions. Maritime Posture: A carrier-centred strategy is being developed; Rafale-M supports near-term aviation while a 15-year naval roadmap expands subsurface and unmanned capacity. Standardisation: Future force requires common data and interface systems across all services. Professional Military Education: PME must embed technologist-commanders into exercises, ensuring adaptability and joint leadership. Challenges and Drawbacks Slow Reform Pace: Despite a decade of emphasis, joint PME began only in 2024; China achieved theatre commands in 2016. Untested Jointness: Exercises like Operation Sindoor were largely aerial, never testing full mobilisation. Inter-Service Rivalries: Persistent disagreements over jurisdiction delay full implementation of theatre commands. Import Dependence: Key systems such as Rafale-M and MQ-9B highlight reliance despite Atmanirbhar Bharat. Weak Defence–Industry Links: The CAG (2022) flagged delays in DRDO projects, slowing indigenous modernisation. Reforms and Way Forward Phased Theatrisation: Begin with functional commands (cyber, space), then expand geographically, similar to the US Goldwater-Nichols Act (1986). Strengthen PME: Train hybrid technologist-commanders skilled in AI, coding, and information warfare. Civil–Military Fusion: Deepen collaboration between DRDO, DPSUs, private startups, and universities via iDEX and Defence Acquisition Procedure 2020. Expand IBGs: Convert trial brigades into permanent formations with joint logistics and firepower. Industrial Ecosystem: Build DARPA-style rapid testing and prototyping cycles to accelerate indigenous defence innovation. Conclusion  India must move beyond incremental coordination to genuine joint command. By activating theatre commands, reforming PME, and strengthening civil–military fusion, India can build a flexible and adaptive force capable of winning 21st-century hybrid and multi-domain wars. Mains Question Examine India’s move towards integrated theatre commands. How can reforms in doctrine, technology, and force structure prepare India for a possible two-front war? (250 words, 15 marks) Source: https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/the-battlefield-change-and-the-indian-armed-forces/article70118754.ece India’s Fight Against Cyber Frauds in the Digital Economy (GS Paper 3: Internal Security – Basics of cyber security) Introduction (Context) India’s digital revolution—driven by affordable internet, UPI payments, and e-commerce—has increased financial inclusion but also opened avenues for cybercrime. Rising phishing scams, identity theft, UPI/OTP frauds, and “digital arrests” expose systemic gaps in banks and cyber policing. Security Challenges in India’s Digital Transformation Social engineering at the core: Fraudsters manipulate fear, urgency, or trust rather than relying only on hacking. Elderly, rural populations, and job/loan seekers are most vulnerable. Rise of digital arrests: Criminals impersonate officials, threaten fake charges, and coerce large payments (e.g., ₹23 crore fraud of a retired banker). Systemic gaps: Banks miss red flags such as unusually large transactions and mule accounts with weak KYC, while cyber police lack tools and manpower. Underreporting of frauds: Many victims avoid complaints due to stigma or lack of trust, allowing fraudsters to thrive unchecked. Organised patterns: Layering of money through multiple accounts makes recovery nearly impossible, especially when the crucial 24-hour window is missed. Criticisms and Institutional Weaknesses Banks’ limited role: Restrict themselves to issuing generic advisories instead of proactive prevention. Weak KYC enforcement: Mule accounts with fake or incomplete details facilitate laundering. Cyber police constraints: Severely short of technology, trained workforce, and real-time coordination. Delayed responses: By the time fraud is reported and acted upon, funds are already dispersed. Data insecurity: Leaked customer data often circulates, exposing citizens to repeated fraud attempts. Reforms and Way Forward AI-driven monitoring: Create personalised transaction profiles and anomaly detection to flag unusual size, frequency, or timing of transfers. Cross-institutional collaboration: An AI-enabled fraud intelligence network across banks, payment systems, and telecom providers for real-time alerts. Empowering cyber police: 24/7 rapid-response units with automated AI alerts to act within the 24-hour window. Strengthening banks’ accountability: Audit mule accounts, plug KYC gaps, use Blockchain for tamper-proof data, and ensure timely customer compensation (RBI guidelines). Global cooperation: Cybercrime is transnational; India must strengthen cross-border intelligence-sharing and legal frameworks for effective action. Conclusion  India’s digital economy cannot thrive without trust. By shifting from reactive firefighting to AI-enabled proactive protection, strengthening bank accountability, and empowering cyber police, India can secure its digital transformation and safeguard citizens from escalating cyber fraud. Mains Question Cyber frauds are rising in India with the growth of digital transactions. What challenges do social engineering-based crimes pose, and what reforms are needed to protect citizens? (250 words, 15 marks) Source:https://epaper.thehindu.com/reader?utm_source=Hindu&utm_medium=Menu&utm_campaign=Header&_gl=1*19gcoyh*_gcl_au*MTUxNTgzNjMwLjE3NTczMTMxMTYuMTA0MzU4Nzc0MS4xNzU5NDY5NDg4LjE3NTk0Njk0ODc. Gandhi’s Quiet Courage: Lessons for Ethics and Leadership (GS Paper 4: Contributions of moral thinkers and philosophers from India and the world) Introduction (Context) For Gandhi, courage was not dramatic defiance but discipline, self-mastery, and loyalty to principles higher than fear or comfort. His life episodes — from plague service to Noakhali peace marches — illustrate quiet moral courage in action. Courage in Public Service Plague Relief in Johannesburg (1904): Gandhi nursed abandoned plague victims despite infection risks. His choice reflects selflessness and the ethical value of putting community welfare above personal safety. Noakhali Riots (1946): Gandhi walked barefoot through riot-torn villages without police protection. His reliance on truth and non-violence restored peace, showing the role of moral authority in conflict resolution. Facing Assassination Attempts: Even after bomb and knife attacks, Gandhi refused police protection, showing fearlessness and adherence to ahimsa (non-violence). Moral Integrity in Personal Life Kasturba’s Health Crisis: Gandhi respected his wife’s conviction as a vegetarian, refusing to override her conscience even at the risk of her life. This highlights respect for individual autonomy and moral integrity. Ashram and Untouchability: He admitted an “untouchable” family into his Ahmedabad ashram despite financial backlash. His stand for equality demonstrates courage in resisting societal prejudice. Family Discipline: Gandhi punished his son Manilal for disobeying ashram rules, proving impartiality in enforcing discipline, even against personal relationships. Ethical Values Demonstrated Integrity: Principles were non-negotiable even under personal loss. Empathy: Care for plague victims and riot survivors reflected compassion in action. Moral Courage: Choosing right action despite risks to life, family, and reputation. Justice and Equality: Opposition to untouchability exemplified fairness and inclusivity. Self-Discipline: Practised simplicity, restraint, and personal accountability as foundations of ethical leadership. Relevance for Ethics in Governance Administrators today must show courage of conviction, upholding fairness even against popular or political pressure. Respecting diverse beliefs and individual conscience builds trust in public institutions. Like Gandhi, civil servants must practise discipline and impartiality, ensuring rules apply equally to all. Non-violence and dialogue as tools of conflict resolution remain relevant in communal harmony and public order management. Gandhi’s courage shows that ethical authority can be more powerful than positional authority in leadership. Conclusion  Gandhi’s quiet courage lay in standing by truth, justice, and compassion regardless of consequence. For public administrators, his example underlines that ethical leadership requires inner strength, impartiality, and integrity — qualities essential for governance in a diverse democracy. Mains Question Mahatma Gandhi’s life was a demonstration of quiet moral courage rather than dramatic defiance. Discuss how such courage is essential for ethical leadership and public administration in India today. (150 words, 10 marks) Source:https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/gandhi-led-by-example-his-life-is-full-of-moments-of-quiet-courage-10284350/

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 1st October – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA) Category: Polity & Governance Context: The Union Ministry of Home Affairs directed NGOs to submit applications for renewal of their Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA) registration at least four months before expiry. About Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA), 2010: Nature: The Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA), 2010, regulates foreign contributions to protect national sovereignty and security. It governs the receipt and use of foreign contributions by individuals, associations, and companies operating in India. Objective: The FCRA 2010 aims to ensure that foreign donations do not compromise the nation’s sovereignty or internal security. Amendments: Amendments were made in 2020 which brought certain changes. About Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Act, 2020: Validity & Renewal: FCRA registration is valid for five years, and NGOs are required to apply for renewal within six months of the registration’s expiry. Mandates Aadhaar: Office bearers must provide an Aadhaar or passport/OCI card for registration. Need for SBI account: Contributions must be received in a designated SBI branch in New Delhi. Puts a cap on administrative Use: Administrative expense limits were reduced from 50% to 20%. Suspension Extension: Initially, registration suspension can be enforced for a period of 180 days. This suspension can be further extended by an additional 180 days. Prohibits certain activities The applicant must not represent fictitious entities. The applicant should not have been involved in religious conversion activities, either directly or indirectly. The applicant must not be engaged in activities related to sedition. The FCRA prohibits candidates, journalists, media companies, judges, government servants, politicians, and political organizations from receiving foreign funds. FCRA Rules 2022 In July 2022, the MHA introduced changes to FCRA rules. These changes included increasing the number of compoundable offences from 7 to 12. The rules also raised the limit for contributions from relatives abroad that do not require government intimation from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 10 lakh and extended the time limit for intimation of the opening of bank accounts. Source: The Hindu Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) Category: Science & Technology Context: Recently, NASA launched the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) to map the heliosphere’s boundary, trace energetic particles, and improve space weather forecasting. About IMAP: Nature: The Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe, or IMAP, will explore and map the very boundaries of our heliosphere, a huge bubble created by the Sun’s wind that encapsulates our entire solar system. Functioning: The IMAP mission will use 10 scientific instruments to chart a comprehensive picture of what’s roiling in space, from high-energy particles originating at the Sun, to magnetic fields in interplanetary space, to remnants of exploded stars in interstellar space. Mass of the spacecraft: It weighs around 900 kilograms (1,984 pounds). Launch vehicle: It is launched using Falcon 9, which is a partially reusable, two-stage-to-orbit, medium-lift launch vehicle designed and manufactured by SpaceX. Location: The IMAP spacecraft is situated at the first Earth-Sun Lagrange point (L1), at around one million miles from Earth toward the Sun. There, it can provide about a half hour’s warning to voyaging astronauts and spacecraft near Earth of harmful radiation coming their way. Investigating heliophysics: The mission will primarily investigate two of the most important overarching issues in heliophysics, viz. how charged particles from the Sun are energized to form what’s known as the solar wind and how that wind interacts with interstellar space at the heliosphere’s boundary. Help astronauts: The IMAP mission will additionally support real-time observations of the solar wind, which can flood the near-Earth space environment with dangerous particles and radiation that could harm technology and astronauts in space and disrupt global communications and electrical grids on Earth. Expected outcomes of the mission: Uncover fundamental physics at scales both tiny and immense.  Improve forecasting of solar wind disturbances and particle radiation hazards from space. Draw a picture of our nearby galactic neighborhood. Help determine some of the basic cosmic building materials of the universe. Increase understanding of how the heliosphere shields life in the solar system from cosmic rays. Source: The Hindu RoDTEP Scheme Category: Government Schemes Context: The Government has extended the Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products (RoDTEP) incentive scheme for exporters until March 31, 2026. About RoDTEP Scheme: Launch: It was launched in 2021 by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Objective: The RoDTEP scheme is designed to reimburse exporters for embedded duties, taxes, and levies that are not otherwise refunded under any other existing scheme. Eligibility: Manufacturer exporters and merchant exporters (traders) are both eligible for the benefits of this scheme. There is no particular turnover threshold to claim the RoDTEP. India as country of origin: The exported products need to have the country of origin as India. SEZs: The Special Economic Zone Units and Export Oriented Units are also eligible to claim the benefits under this scheme. Compliant with WTO norms: The RoDTEP scheme, which replaced the Merchandise Export from India Scheme (MEIS), is fully aligned with World Trade Organization norms. Role of CBIC: Rebates under RoDTEP Scheme will be issued as transferable duty credits or electronic scrips (e-scrips), maintained in an electronic ledger by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC). Multi-sector scheme: Under RoDTEP, all sectors, including the textiles sector, are covered, so as to ensure uniformity across all areas. Source: The Hindu Partition of Bengal Category: History & Culture Context: Recently, Undivided Bengal’ emerged as the popular theme of Durga Puja in West Bengal. About Partition of Bengal: Background: The Partition of Bengal in 1905 was initiated by Lord Curzon, the then Viceroy of India, citing administrative efficiency due to the vast size and population of Bengal. However, the underlying motive was to weaken the growing nationalist movement by dividing Hindus and Muslims. Bengal was split into two provinces: Eastern Bengal and Assam (Muslim-majority) and Western Bengal (Hindu-majority). The move was widely opposed by Indian nationalists, who saw it as a strategy of “divide and rule.” The partition sparked widespread protests and gave rise to the Swadeshi Movement, eventually leading to its annulment in 1911. Course of the Movement: Protests were organised all over Bengal, and the idea of boycotting foreign goods was put into practice. A huge gathering was held in Calcutta town hall on August 7, 1905, and a Boycott Resolution was passed. This marked the formal beginning of the Swadeshi movement. Krishna Kumar Mitra was the first to suggest the boycott of British goods in Bengal. Syed Haidar Raja led the Swadeshi movement in Delhi. Role of Moderates: Surendranath Banerjee led the Moderate group, which comprised Krishna Kumar Mitra, Jogeshchandra Chaudhuri, Bhupendranath Bose, Prithwishchandra Ray, etc. They worked ceaselessly from 1903 to intensify the agitation through press campaigns, meetings, petitions, conferences, etc. In their usual style, they forwarded anti-partition arguments in their pamphlets, and a few newspapers, like Sanjibani, Indian Mirror, and Ananda Bazar Patrika, carried their ideas widely. Impact of the Movement: Public meetings, protests, and the spread of nationalist literature galvanized the masses, especially the youth and middle class. The partition also deepened communal divisions, laying early seeds of communal politics. However, it unified different sections of Indian society against colonial rule and energized the freedom struggle. The British eventually annulled the partition in 1911 due to strong resistance, making it a landmark victory and reinforcing the power of mass mobilization in India’s fight for independence. Source: The Hindu Dugong Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Once widespread across the Gulf of Mannar, Palk Bay, the Gulf of Kutch and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India’s dugongs dwindled to a few hundred individuals. About Dugong: Nature: Dugongs (Dugong dugon), also called “sea cows,” are marine mammals that graze on seagrass beds, earning them the nickname “farmers of the sea.” Behaviour: The dugong is a long-lived species, capable of living up to 70 years. Typically solitary or found in small mother-calf pairs, large herds common in Australian waters are rare in India. Uniqueness: Dugongs (Dugong dugon) are the only herbivorous mammals found in India’s marine ecosystems. Appearance: It is known as the sea cow, but resembles a cross between a seal and a whale, and is distributed through the Indo-Pacific region. Distribution: They are found along the Indian coastline, primarily inhabiting warm waters around the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, the Gulf of Mannar, Palk Bay, and the Gulf of Kutch. The dugong is a long-lived species, able to live up to 70 years. Habitat: Due to their dependence on seagrass beds for habitat and food, dugongs are restricted to shallow waters, where they spend the day feeding on seagrasses of the genera Cymodocea, Halophila, Thalassia, and Halodule. Reproduction cycle: Individuals reach reproductive maturity after only nine or ten years and can give birth at intervals of around three to five years. Conservation status: IUCN: Vulnerable CITES: Appendix I Wildlife Protection Act 1972: Schedule I Threats: The threats they face worldwide include rapidly declining populations and the ongoing degradation of their seagrass habitats. Source: The Hindu (MAINS Focus) Reclaiming the District as a Democratic Commons (GS Paper 2: Governance, , Local Governance) Introduction (Context) India’s future hinges on its 65% young population. With 85% living in districts of birth, yet 60% of GDP concentrated in cities, reclaiming districts as democratic commons is vital to unlock inclusive growth and deepen democratic engagement. Main Arguments Demographic Dividend: In a world with aging populations, India’s 65% youth under 35 is an opportunity, but limited mobility and district neglect risk wasting it. Urban Bias: Cities occupy 3% land yet generate 60% GDP, while districts remain under-utilised despite housing the majority. This creates stark geographic and social concentration of growth. Centralised Governance: Policy paradigms prioritise efficiency, technocratic schemes, and digital delivery, but weaken local political agency and reduce elected leaders to entitlement mediators. Welfare Politics & Fatigue: Rising dependence on cash transfers, without structural transformation or jobs, leads to political fatigue among citizens, especially youth. District-First Framework: A shift from “district-first bureaucracy” to “district-first democracy” can disaggregate opaque schemes, localise accountability, track outcomes, and tailor solutions. Criticisms/Drawbacks Bureaucratic Dominance: Citizens interact with the state mainly as recipients, not participants, limiting ownership of development. Capacity Deficit: District administrations and panchayats lack funds, skilled manpower, and autonomy to plan holistically. Risk of Elite Capture: Local bodies may replicate inequalities without checks on capture by dominant groups. Weak Policy Linkages: MPs and local representatives are rarely held accountable for developmental outcomes within constituencies. Fragmented Efforts: Civil society, government, and private initiatives often work in silos, reducing district-level synergy.   Reforms/Proposals District-First Democratic Commons: Reimagine districts as civic spaces to strengthen participation in production, consumption, and innovation beyond elite and export-driven growth. Accountability & Transparency: Disaggregate schemes at district level, track outcomes locally, and bridge disparities in investment and opportunity. Strengthening Local Leadership: Empower elected representatives as conveners of developmental priorities rather than mediators of welfare entitlements. Shared Responsibility of Elites: Political leaders, corporates, and intellectuals (top 10%) must translate intent into targeted district interventions. Collaborative Ecosystem: Link MPs, civil society, private actors to co-create locally tailored reforms and innovations. Conclusion India already has a district-first bureaucracy. What it needs now is a district-first democracy. By redistributing power to communities, fostering accountability, and bridging policy–reality gaps, districts can become engines of inclusive growth. Without this shift, India risks hollowing democracy and squandering its demographic dividend. Mains Question  Discuss the challenges in transforming districts into democratic commons. What institutional reforms are needed to strengthen local political agency? (15 Marks) (250 words, 15 marks) Gaza Peace Plan: Trump’s Imprint and India’s Strategic Stakes (GS Paper 2: International Relations – India and its Neighborhood ) Introduction (Context) As the Gaza war enters its second year since Hamas’s October 2023 attacks on Israel, US President Donald Trump has announced a 20-point “Comprehensive Plan to End the Gaza Conflict.” Its provisions have major implications for West Asia and India. Key Features of the Plan Hamas Disarmament: Hamas fighters must surrender weapons; those pledging peaceful coexistence will receive amnesty or safe passage to countries such as Egypt, Qatar, or Jordan. International Stabilization Force (ISF): A US–Arab led multinational force will secure Gaza, train Palestinian police, prevent arms smuggling, and facilitate aid. The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) will withdraw gradually but maintain a limited “security perimeter.” Transitional Governance: Gaza will be run by a technocratic, apolitical Palestinian committee, supervised by an international “Board of Peace” chaired by Trump, with figures such as former UK PM Tony Blair included. Humanitarian Rehabilitation: Restrictions on aid will be lifted to restore hospitals, electricity, water, bakeries, and infrastructure, with UN and Red Crescent managing distribution. Prisoner–Hostage Swap: Israel will release 250 life-sentence prisoners and 1,700 detainees in exchange for the return of 48 hostages held by Hamas. Regional Guarantees: Eight Arab and Muslim nations — Qatar, Jordan, UAE, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Indonesia, Egypt, and Pakistan — have endorsed the plan, while China and Russia have also expressed support. Criticisms/Concerns Feasibility: Disarming Hamas, which has ruled Gaza for nearly two decades, may prove nearly impossible. Buffer Zone Clause: Israel’s continued “security perimeter” could amount to de facto occupation. Role of Tony Blair: Blair’s Iraq war legacy and commercial links fuel skepticism over impartiality. Exclusion of Iran: Leaving Tehran out may aggravate regional fault lines, given its backing of Hamas and Hezbollah. Commercial Overtones: Trump and his associates’ business interests in real estate projects risk conflating peace with profit. Implications for India Strategic Relief: Peace could stabilise West Asia, vital since the region supplies about 80% of India’s oil. It would also safeguard India’s large diaspora — 90 lakh in West Asia, including 18,000 in Israel. Economic Prospects: Stability may encourage Gulf states to enhance investments in India and accelerate projects like the India–Middle East–Europe Economic Corridor. Caution on Pakistan: Pakistan’s visible role — acknowledged and praised by Trump — signals potential revival of US–Pakistan ties, which New Delhi must watch carefully. Balancing Diplomacy: India must maintain careful equilibrium between Israel, Arab states, and Iran to avoid strategic entanglements. New Avenues: A more stable Gaza could allow India to expand as a development and reconstruction partner beyond hydrocarbons. Conclusion The Gaza Peace Plan reflects Trump’s mix of diplomacy and business pragmatism. For India, it offers clear advantages in terms of diaspora security, energy stability, and economic opportunity. Yet, Pakistan’s active role underscores the need for vigilance. New Delhi must engage constructively while safeguarding its strategic autonomy in a volatile region. Mains Question “Discuss the implications of the recent US-led Gaza Peace Plan for India’s strategic, economic, and diaspora interests. How should New Delhi navigate opportunities and challenges arising from Pakistan’s involvement in the process?” (250 words, 15 marks)

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 30th September – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Wassenaar Arrangement Category: INTERNATIONAL Context:  Wassenaar Arrangement in governing modern digital technologies and argues for reforming export control regimes to address challenges posed by cloud services, AI, and surveillance tools. Modern Internet dependence: Cloud infrastructure, dominated by few companies like Microsoft, is crucial for states but can also aid repression (e.g., in Palestine). Export control regimes: Agreements like the Wassenaar Arrangement aim to regulate export of sensitive goods and dual-use technologies to prevent misuse. Limitations of current framework: Focused mainly on physical exports (devices, chips, hardware). Struggles to regulate cloud services, APIs, and remotely accessed technologies. Leaves loopholes for “intrusion software” and surveillance misuse. India’s role: Joined in 2017, regularly updates control lists but faces challenges in ensuring compliance. Reform needs: Expand definitions to cover remote access, cloud exports, and digital surveillance. Introduce binding global treaties with clearer licensing and oversight. Create domain-specific controls for AI and high-risk digital tools. Global implications: Divergent national licensing can create loopholes. Stronger coordination needed to prevent misuse across borders. Possible measures: Tighter export scrutiny for cloud services. Binding international commitments. Technical expert committees to guide regulation. Conclusion: Existing arrangements are outdated; comprehensive reforms are essential to regulate 21st-century technologies without stifling innovation. Learning Corner: Wassenaar Arrangement (WA) Nature: A multilateral export control regime for conventional arms and dual-use goods and technologies. Established: 1996, in Wassenaar, Netherlands. Objective: To promote transparency and responsibility in transfers of arms and sensitive technologies. To prevent destabilising accumulations of weapons and technologies that could aid in proliferation or repression. Membership: 42 participating states (as of 2025), including India, the U.S., most EU states, Japan, etc. India’s membership: Joined in December 2017. Mechanism: States exchange information on transfers/denials of items listed in WA control lists. It is non-binding; decisions on licensing remain at the discretion of each state. Scope: Covers conventional arms. Covers dual-use goods and technologies (civilian use but potential military/security application). In 2013, scope expanded to include “intrusion software” and surveillance technologies. Challenges: Primarily designed for physical goods, struggles to regulate cloud services, AI, and remote-access technologies. Implementation uneven across members; often influenced by political and commercial interests. Source: THE HINDU India’s Index of Industrial Production (IIP) Category: ECONOMICS Context : India’s Index of Industrial Production (IIP) grew by 4.0% in August 2025, showing broad-based recovery in industrial activity. IIP growth accelerated from 3.5% in July 2025 to 4.0% in August. Mining output rose sharply by 6.0%, rebounding from contraction. Manufacturing grew 3.8%, led by basic metals (12.2%), motor vehicles (9.8%), and petroleum products (5.4%). Electricity generation increased by 4.1%. Use-based growth: Infrastructure/Construction Goods: +10.6% (highest). Primary Goods: +5.2%, Intermediate Goods: +5.0%, Capital Goods: +4.4%. Consumer Durables: +3.5%; Consumer Non-durables: –6.3% (weak demand). Growth driven by post-monsoon mining recovery, strong demand in metals, vehicles, and construction activity. Learning Corner: Index of Industrial Production (IIP) Definition: The IIP measures the volume of production of a basket of industrial products in the economy. It serves as a short-term indicator of industrial growth. Base Year: Current base year: 2011–12 (revised periodically to reflect structural changes). Released by: National Statistical Office (NSO), Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). Released monthly with a time lag of about six weeks. Coverage: Divided into 3 major sectors: Mining (14.4% weight) Manufacturing (77.6% weight – largest share) Electricity (8.0% weight) Further classified into Use-based categories: Primary Goods, Capital Goods, Intermediate Goods, Infrastructure/Construction Goods, Consumer Durables, and Consumer Non-durables. Significance: Acts as a proxy for industrial activity and short-term economic performance. Influences monetary policy (RBI monitors it for inflation and growth signals). Used by businesses, analysts, and policymakers for planning and forecasting. Limitations: Provisional data, often revised later. Limited coverage compared to GDP or GVA. Heavily manufacturing-driven, may not fully capture services-led growth in India’s economy. Core Industries Definition: The Core Industries are the eight key industries of India that form the backbone of the economy and have a high impact on overall industrial growth. They have a combined weight of 40.27% in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP). The Eight Core Industries (with weights in IIP): Coal – 10.33% Crude Oil – 8.98% Natural Gas – 6.88% Refinery Products – 28.04% (highest weight) Fertilizers – 2.63% Steel – 17.92% Cement – 5.37% Electricity – 19.85% Released by: Office of Economic Adviser (OEA), Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Released monthly, usually at the end of the following month. Significance: Acts as a lead indicator of industrial performance and overall GDP trends. Closely tracked by policymakers, RBI, and businesses to gauge economic health. Growth or slowdown in these industries directly affects related sectors (e.g., steel impacts construction, coal impacts power generation). Source: PIB Siphon Principle Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Context: IISc has developed a siphon-powered desalination technology that converts saltwater into clean drinking water more efficiently than conventional solar stills. Uses a fabric wick with a grooved metal surface to create a siphon, moving salty water onto a heated surface. Continuous flushing prevents salt crystallization, avoiding blockages common in older designs. Water evaporates as a thin film and condenses just 2 mm away, enhancing efficiency. Modular design allows stacking multiple units, recycling heat for higher output. Produces over six liters of potable water per sq. meter per hour, much higher than standard solar stills. Handles high salinity (up to 20% salt) without clogging. Built with low-cost materials like aluminum and fabric; powered by solar or waste heat. Suitable for off-grid villages, disaster zones, and arid coastal areas. Represents a scalable, sustainable, and affordable solution for global water security. Learning Corner: Siphon Principle Definition: A siphon is a device that allows liquid to flow from a higher level to a lower level through a tube, even if the tube rises above the surface of the liquid in the higher container. Working Principle: Relies on gravity and the difference in liquid pressure at the two ends of the tube. Once the tube is filled, the liquid continues to flow because the pressure at the lower outlet is less than at the higher source. The liquid column in the descending limb (heavier) pulls the liquid up the ascending limb. Key Conditions: Outlet must be below the liquid surface of the source container. The tube must be primed (filled with liquid) initially. Works only until the source liquid level drops below the inlet end. Applications: Emptying tanks, aquariums, and fuel tanks. Irrigation and drainage systems. Some modern technologies (like IISc’s desalination system) use siphon action for fluid movement. Source: PIB PM VIKAS Category: POLITY Context The “Convergence for Viksit Bharat 2047: Industry Conclave on Skilling & Employment” was organized by the Ministry of Minority Affairs under the PM VIKAS scheme in New Delhi to boost inclusive development. Organized with support from Delhi Sikh Gurdwara Management Committee and State Institute of Hotel Management, Tripura. Union MoS for Minority Affairs, George Kurian, attended the conclave. Industry participation from 11 sectors including healthcare, aviation, electronics, tourism, and hospitality. Two MoUs signed: Ministry of Minority Affairs + DSGMC + Wadhwani Foundation DSGMC + SIHM Tripura Focus on convergence of government schemes, industry needs, and emerging technologies in skilling. Panel discussion stressed industry-ready, globally mobile workforce, apprenticeships, and new job roles. PM VIKAS scheme: blends modern skills with traditional expertise; 41 projects in 30 States/UTs, benefiting 1.34 lakh youth and artisans. Conclave urged industry’s role in curriculum design, apprenticeships, and placements. Part of Viksit Bharat 2047 vision to achieve a developed, competitive India by centenary of independence. Learning Corner: PM VIKAS (Pradhan Mantri Virasat Ka Samvardhan) Ministry: Implemented by the Ministry of Minority Affairs. Launch: Announced in 2022–23 Union Budget as an umbrella scheme. Objective: To integrate modern skill training with India’s traditional expertise. Provide end-to-end support for education, skilling, entrepreneurship, and credit linkages to minority and marginalized communities. Key Features: Combines skill development with preservation of artisanal crafts and heritage trades. Offers credit assistance, training, market linkages, and digital empowerment. Focus on youth, women, and artisans from minority communities. Impact (till 2025): 41 projects rolled out across 30 States/UTs. Benefited 1.34 lakh youths and artisans through transparent and efficient processes. Significance: Enhances employability and self-reliance of minority youth. Supports the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047, aligning skilling with livelihoods and dignified employment. Source: PIB National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Context The National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) has sanctioned ₹82 lakh to the Andhra Pradesh Biodiversity Board for conserving the endangered Red Sanders tree under the Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) mechanism. Objective: Raise 1 lakh Red Sanders saplings for farmers under the Trees Outside Forests (ToF) program. ABS Mechanism: Funded through benefit-sharing contributions from enterprises using Red Sanders. Community Involvement: Local and tribal communities, Biodiversity Management Committees, and stakeholders engaged in nursery, plantation, and care. Geographic Focus: Native to Southern Eastern Ghats (Anantapur, Chittoor, Kadapa, Kurnool). Protection Status: Endangered, threatened by smuggling; protected under Wildlife Protection Act, 1972, and listed under CITES. Impact: Generates rural employment, skills, and sustainable livelihoods while strengthening conservation. Past Efforts: NBA has already provided ₹31.55 crore to Andhra Pradesh’s forest department for enforcement and protection. Significance: Supports India’s biodiversity targets and global commitments under the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Learning Corner: National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) Establishment: Set up in 2003 under the Biological Diversity Act, 2002. Headquarters: Located in Chennai, Tamil Nadu. Nature: A statutory autonomous body under the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEFCC). Functions: Regulates access to biological resources and associated traditional knowledge. Ensures fair and equitable benefit-sharing (ABS) arising from the use of biological resources. Issues approvals for research, commercial use, IPRs, and technology transfer involving India’s biodiversity. Advises the Central and State Governments on matters related to biodiversity conservation and sustainable use. Supports State Biodiversity Boards (SBBs) and Biodiversity Management Committees (BMCs) at local levels. Key Role in Conservation: Implements provisions of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) at the national level. Promotes People’s Biodiversity Registers (PBRs) to document local biological resources and knowledge. Facilitates community participation in conservation and livelihood generation. Red Sanders (Pterocarpus santalinus) Description: A rare and highly valued endemic tree species known for its distinctive red-colored heartwood. Belongs to the family Fabaceae. Geographic Range: Found mainly in the Southern Eastern Ghats, particularly in the districts of Chittoor, Kadapa, Anantapur, and Kurnool in Andhra Pradesh. Uses & Value: Heartwood is used in fine furniture, medicinal preparations, musical instruments, and as a dye. High international demand makes it one of the most smuggled tree species from India. Threats: Over-exploitation and smuggling due to high market value. Habitat loss and degradation. Protection Status: IUCN Red List: Endangered. CITES: Appendix II (international trade regulated). Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Listed under Schedule IV. Conservation Efforts: National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) funds conservation under the Access and Benefit Sharing (ABS) mechanism. Plantation programs and community participation promoted under Trees Outside Forests (ToF) initiatives. Enforcement measures by Andhra Pradesh Forest Department to curb illegal felling and smuggling. Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) Awareness of Food Loss and Waste (GS paper III – Economy, GS Paper III - environment) Introduction (Context) The International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste (IDAFLW), observed on September 29, highlights the silent crisis of food loss and waste that threatens both food security and climate stability.  Globally, nearly one-third of all food produced is lost or wasted every year. For India—one of the world’s largest food producers this challenge translates into massive economic losses, environmental degradation, and climate impacts. Data A study in 2022 by NABARD Consultancy Services (NABCONS) showed that such losses remain alarmingly high throughout the agricultural spectrum. India suffers ₹1.5 trillion in annual post-harvest losses  about 3.7% of agricultural GDP. Fruits and vegetables face 10–15% losses, while staples like paddy (4.8%) and wheat (4.2%) also experience significant wastage. Losses of livestock products are equally damaging because of their heavy resource footprint.  Food loss from major crops and livestock products generates 33 million tonnes of CO2-equivalent emissions annually.  Paddy alone contributes 10 million tonnes of CO2-equivalent emissions because of its methane intensity In India, most losses occur early in the supply chain (handling, processing, distribution), unlike high-income countries where consumer waste dominates. Government initiatives The Government of India has conducted three rounds of nationwide post-harvest surveys across more than 50 crops, generating valuable insights into value-chain losses at a global scale.  India has integrated SDG 12.3.1 (Global Food Loss and Waste) into its National Indicator Framework, ensuring systematic tracking of food loss and climate impact. Way Forward Strengthen cold chains from pre-cooling to refrigerated transport and modern storage for perishables like fruits, vegetables, dairy, and meat. Expand and modernise food logistics through programmes like Pradhan Mantri Kisan SAMPADA Yojana (PMKSY). Promote affordable technologies such as solar cold storage, low-cost cooling chambers, crates for perishables, and moisture-proof silos for grains. Leverage digital tools like IoT sensors and AI-driven forecasting to improve storage, transport, and distribution. Utilise apps like FAO Food Loss App (FLAPP) to track losses across the value chain. Redirect surplus food to food banks and community kitchens; convert unavoidable waste into compost, animal feed, or bioenergy. Ensure strong policy support through subsidies, credit guarantees, and low-interest loans. Encourage shared responsibility across the supply chain: government, businesses, civil society, academia, and consumers. Conclusion Food loss spans the entire supply chain, demanding shared responsibility. Governments must integrate loss reduction into climate strategies and invest in resilient infrastructure, while businesses adopt circular models and scale innovations. Civil society and academia can drive research and awareness, and consumers can cut waste through mindful choices and support for redistribution. Mains Practice Question Q Food loss is as much a climate challenge as it is a food security issue. Examine (250 words, 15 marks) Source: What an empty plate of food should symbolise – The Hindu Reimagining green economy through landscapes (GS paper III – Economy) Introduction (Context) India stands at a critical juncture where traditional growth models must evolve into a green, resilient economic pathway to address climate risks, ensure competitiveness, and sustain livelihoods. This has given rise to the new concept of bioeconomy. What is bioeconomy? Bioeconomy is an economic system that uses renewable biological resources—like plants, animals, forests, and microorganisms—to produce food, materials, chemicals, and energy, reducing dependence on fossil fuels and promoting sustainability. It combines biotechnology, biomass utilization, and circular economy principles to create eco-friendly goods and services. Examples: Biofuels, Bioplastics, etc Data on bioeconomy India’s bioeconomy expanded from $10 billion in 2014 to $165.7 billion in 2024, a 16-fold increase in 10 years. It contributes 4.25% of India’s GDP. The growth is supported by over 10,000 bio-economy start-ups. The industrial bioeconomy (biofuels and bioplastics) accounts for 47% of the sector’s value. Pharmaceuticals contribute around 35%, while research, IT, clinical trials, and bioinformatics are rapidly emerging. India has achieved 20% ethanol blending in petrol. The country is the third-largest pharmaceutical producer by volume globally. The bioeconomy is expected to create 35 million jobs by 2030. Rural per capita spending grew at 9.2% from August 2023 to July 2024, outpacing urban growth of 8.3%. The green economy is becoming inevitable and imminent for job creation, environmental returns, competitiveness, and climate resilience. Challenges and Disparities Rural region Climate disruptions impact inflation, worsening the rural bioeconomy context, especially pressures from losses in agriculture, fluctuations in energy demand, and disrupted supply chains.    Regional Inequities Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Gujarat, and Andhra Pradesh account for two-thirds of bioeconomy value, while eastern and northeastern states together contribute less than 6% despite rich agricultural and forest resources. States like Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Odisha, and Jharkhand have untapped potential in ethanol, biomass power, agri-waste, and non-timber forest products. Gender Gaps Women hold only 11% of jobs in rooftop solar. Women’s representation in key roles remains particularly low: 1% in operations and maintenance, and 3% in construction and commissioning Urban-Rural Divide Urban areas dominate green investments, EV infrastructure, and solar rooftops, while rural regions lag in clean energy access, water-saving irrigation, and sustainable livelihoods. Digital divide limits rural participation in smart grids, carbon markets, and green tech solutions. Policy & Regulatory Bottlenecks The BioE3 policy was rolled out in 2024 to promote the bioeconomy, but regulatory frameworks remain fragmented, and it remains a very urban-centric, industrial-scale economy. Green Transition and Rural Challenges A rapid green shift can disproportionately impact rural areas, coal workers, MSMEs, and small-scale manufacturers dependent on traditional energy sources. Trade offs Road transport dominates freight movement, with food miles contributing nearly 3 gigatonnes of CO₂ annually, creating a trade-off between emissions and food security. Biodiversity supports over 200 million livelihoods, but policies and markets often promote monocropping of wheat and paddy over crop diversification. India’s push for ethanol blending creates a trade-off in the maize supply chain, affecting animal feed availability. Hence a just transition requires targeted skill-building, reskilling, and local bioeconomic diversification to prevent social and environmental harm. This can be achieved using landscape approach. Landscape Approach Green growth needs a model that integrates sustainability, climate action, and social inclusion while addressing regional disparities and unlocking potential in less-developed states. Landscapes should be treated as interconnected systems of landforms, water resources, biodiversity, markets, and local institutions to assess ecological and human benefits. A shared landscape understanding enables improvement of air and water quality, climate regulation, habitat support, food and water security, and livelihoods. Transition requires participatory pathways from village (nano) to wider landscape (macro) levels for effective planning and monitoring. Way Forward Leverage 2.5 lakh PRIs, 12 million women-led institutions, and local authorities in planning, execution, and monitoring of green transitions. Promote circular economy, green energy, and bioeconomy with gender-inclusive policies for leadership and technical roles. Encourage local entrepreneurship, such as small-scale oil extraction or biomass-based enterprises, to enhance local production and consumption. Integrate ecosystem valuation into economic strategies and policies for better resource management. Adopt measures like green budgeting, targeted fiscal incentives, green government procurement, and active involvement of gram panchayats and community-based organisations. Strengthen waste management, create financing and O&M support for decentralised renewables, coordinate policies across departments, and increase R&D spending for green innovations. Conclusion A landscape-driven growth model can balance ecological regeneration, economic resilience, and social equity. Such an approach will help India achieve its climate goals, sustainable development targets, and new engines of green growth, ensuring wellbeing for both people and ecosystems. Mains Practice Question Q.1) Discuss how adopting a landscape approach can accelerate India’s transition towards a green economy. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: Reimagining green economy through landscapes – The Hindu

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 30th September 2025

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

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 29th September 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 29th September - 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) National Security Act Category: POLITY Context:  Climate activist Sonam Wangchuk was recently detained under the National Security Act (NSA), reigniting debate over its scope and misuse. About NSA (1980): Allows preventive detention to safeguard defence, foreign relations, security of India, public order, or essential supplies. Powers: Centre, states, District Magistrates, and Police Commissioners can authorize detention. Nature: Not punitive but preventive — meant to stop individuals before they act. Safeguards: Grounds of detention must be communicated within 5–15 days. Review by Advisory Board of High Court judges within 3 weeks. Detention can extend up to 12 months. No legal representation before Advisory Board; government can withhold facts citing “public interest.” Past use: Invoked against separatists, gangsters, and protesters. Controversies: Criticized for misuse against dissenters and activists. High-profile cases: Dr. Kafeel Khan (2020), Chandrashekhar Azad (2017), Amritpal Singh (2023). Used during anti-CAA protests and in states like UP and MP against cow slaughter and habitual criminals. Criticism: Civil liberties groups see it as a draconian law often misused by governments to silence opposition rather than protect security. Learning Corner: National Security Act (NSA), 1980 The NSA, 1980 is a preventive detention law that empowers the Central and State governments to detain individuals to prevent them from acting in any manner prejudicial to the defence of India, relations with foreign powers, national security, public order, or maintenance of essential supplies and services. It continues India’s long history of preventive detention laws, tracing back to the colonial era and the Maintenance of Internal Security Act (MISA). Key Provisions Authority to Detain: The Central or State government can issue detention orders. District Magistrates and Police Commissioners can also exercise this power when authorised. Grounds of Detention: Defence of India, security of the state, public order, and maintenance of essential supplies. Duration of Detention: A person can be detained up to 12 months, though orders can be revoked earlier. Communication of Grounds: Detainee must be informed of the grounds of detention within 5–15 days. Review Mechanism: An Advisory Board of High Court judges reviews the detention within 3 weeks. If the Board finds “no sufficient cause,” the detainee must be released. Safeguards and Limitations: No legal representation before the Advisory Board. Government can withhold facts citing “public interest.” Preventive, not punitive — meant to stop anticipated threats. Source:  THE INDIAN EXPRESS OPEC+ Category: INTERNATIONAL Context : OPEC+ is planning another oil output hike in November 2025 amid rising global oil prices and market pressures. Decision timeline: OPEC+ countries will meet online on October 5 to decide on November production levels. Expected hike: At least 1,37,000 barrels per day increase likely, equal to October’s hike. Background: OPEC+ had reversed April’s output cuts and already boosted production by 2.5 million bpd between April–September. Market impact: Oil prices have risen above $70 per barrel due to tight supply and geopolitical tensions, including Ukraine–Russia conflict. Group output cuts: Current reduction stands at 5.85 million bpd (voluntary 2.2m, 1.65m by 8 members, and 2m by whole group). Further scope: Additional increases under discussion to stabilize market supply. UAE approval: Separate 300,000 bpd boost approved for UAE between April–September. Long-term plan: The third group-wide layer of cuts (1.65m bpd) is scheduled to last till end of 2026. Learning Corner: OPEC+ (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries Plus) Composition: OPEC (13 member states, mostly Middle Eastern and African oil producers) + 10 major non-OPEC oil exporters, most notably Russia, Kazakhstan, Mexico, etc. Origin: Formed in 2016 when OPEC partnered with non-OPEC countries to stabilize oil markets through coordinated output decisions. Objective: To manage global oil supply, stabilize prices, and safeguard revenues for oil-producing countries. Functioning: Sets collective production quotas. Adjusts supply to balance market demand and global price fluctuations. Key influence on international energy markets and global inflation trends. Recent relevance (2025): Reversed earlier cuts (April 2025) and increased output by 2.5 million barrels/day till September. Plans another hike of 1,37,000 barrels/day in November amid rising oil prices and geopolitical tensions (Ukraine–Russia conflict, energy security concerns). Long-term strategy includes gradual easing of supply cuts lasting until end-2026. Source: THE INDIAN EXPRESS Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE-3) Category: POLITY Context: India has released draft Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE-3) rules proposing new vehicle emission norms, with relief for small cars and incentives for EVs.. What’s new: Draft CAFE-3 norms issued by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) for public consultation, covering all M1 category passenger cars (max 9 seats, 3,500 kg). Efficiency formula: Based on fleet weight with stricter targets over FY28–FY32; lighter vehicles get more relaxed targets. Relief for small cars: Special exemptions for models ≤1200cc engine, ≤4000mm length, and ≤900kg unladen weight → eligible for CO₂ reduction credits. Emissions pooling: Allows multiple carmakers to pool emissions targets, reducing compliance costs. EV incentives: Each EV sale counts three times in compliance calculations. Hybrid EVs, plug-in hybrids, and strong hybrids get multipliers. EVs under 3,500 kg get special weight-based relaxation. Carbon Neutrality Factor (CNF): Additional relaxation based on fuel types (ethanol, CNG, biogas, hybrids). Penalties: Non-compliance attracts penalties under the Energy Conservation Act, 2001. Current norms: CAFE-2 (from FY22–23) required fleet CO₂ emissions ≤113 g/km; penalties apply for exceeding limits. EV charging infra: Govt plans ~72,300 stations under PM E-Drive, with subsidy support for installation across cities. Learning Corner: Corporate Average Fuel Efficiency (CAFE) Norms Definition: CAFE norms are fuel efficiency and emission standards that automobile manufacturers must follow for their fleet, aimed at reducing fuel consumption and lowering carbon dioxide (CO₂) emissions. Origin in India: Introduced by the Bureau of Energy Efficiency (BEE) under the Energy Conservation Act, 2001.   CAFE–1: Notified in 2011, effective from 2017. CAFE–2: Implemented from 2022–23, targeting 113 g/km CO₂ fleet average. CAFE–3 (Draft, 2025): Proposes stricter norms for FY28–FY32 with new incentives for small cars and EVs. Key Features: Applies to all M1 category cars (passenger vehicles ≤9 seats, ≤3,500 kg). Uses a formula based on average fleet weight; heavier cars allowed slightly higher emissions than lighter cars. Manufacturers must ensure that their entire fleet average meets prescribed targets. Penalties: Non-compliance attracts fines under the Energy Conservation Act, 2001. Special Provisions in Draft CAFE-3: Relief for small cars (≤1200 cc engine, ≤4000 mm length, ≤900 kg weight). Pooling option: Carmakers can pool emissions with other firms. EV incentives: Each EV sale counts as 3 vehicles in compliance calculation. Hybrid & CNG cars get partial credits. Carbon Neutrality Factor (CNF): Additional credits for ethanol, CNG, and biogas fuel use. Objective: To align India with global climate commitments, reduce oil dependence, encourage electric mobility, and cut vehicular CO₂ emissions. Source: THE INDIAN EXPRESS Chhath Puja Category: CULTURE Context PM Modi, in Mann ki Baat, praised the RSS on its centenary journey and highlighted the government’s push for Chhath Puja’s inclusion in UNESCO’s intangible cultural heritage list. On RSS: Praised founder K.B. Hedgewar for fighting against “intellectual slavery.” Appreciated RSS’s century-long role in national service, sacrifice, and discipline. Emphasized “nation-first” spirit in every RSS worker’s contribution. On Chhath Puja: Govt making efforts for UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage recognition. Said recognition would help spread Chhath’s cultural and spiritual values worldwide. Other mentions: Recalled Bhupen Hazarika’s birth centenary  Expressed condolences on the passing of singer Zubeen Garg. Significance: Strengthening cultural pride, heritage recognition, and linking traditions with India’s global image. Learning Corner: Chhath Puja Nature of Festival: An ancient Hindu Vedic festival dedicated to the Sun God (Surya) and Chhathi Maiya (Usha, the wife of the Sun God). Observed in: Primarily in Bihar, Jharkhand, Eastern Uttar Pradesh, and the Mithila region of Nepal; also celebrated by diaspora communities. Timing: Held twice a year — most prominently after Diwali (October–November, Kartika month), known as Chhath Mahaparva. Rituals: Lasts four days with strict rituals including fasting, holy bathing, and offering Arghya (water and prayers) to the rising and setting Sun. Devotees observe Nirjala Vrat (fast without water) as part of the worship. Celebrated on riverbanks and water bodies, symbolizing purity. Cultural significance: Emphasizes gratitude to nature, ecological balance, and solar energy. Promotes social harmony and collective participation. Global recognition: India is making efforts to get Chhath Puja inscribed in UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage list. India & UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH) Convention: UNESCO’s Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (2003) aims to preserve cultural practices, traditions, and knowledge systems. India’s Status: India ratified in 2005; as of 2025, India has 15 elements inscribed on UNESCO’s ICH Representative List. India’s ICH Elements (as of 2025): Kutiyattam, Sanskrit theatre – Kerala – 2008 Tradition of Vedic Chanting – Across India – 2008 Ramlila, the traditional performance of the Ramayana – North India – 2008 Ramman, religious festival and ritual theatre – Uttarakhand – 2009 Chhau dance – Jharkhand, West Bengal, Odisha – 2010 Kalbelia folk songs and dances – Rajasthan – 2010 Mudiyettu, ritual theatre and dance drama – Kerala – 2010 Buddhist chanting of Ladakh – Ladakh – 2012 Sankirtana, ritual singing, drumming and dancing – Manipur – 2013 Traditional brass and copper craft of utensil making among the Thatheras of Jandiala Guru – Punjab – 2014 Nowruz – Celebrated in India by Parsi community (shared with other countries) – 2016 Yoga – Across India – 2016 Kumbh Mela – Haridwar, Prayagraj, Ujjain, Nashik – 2017 Durga Puja in Kolkata – West Bengal – 2021 Garba of Gujarat – Gujarat – 2023 Source: THE INDIAN EXPRESS AstroStat Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Context India’s first space-based observatory AstroSat has completed 10 years since its launch in 2015, continuing to provide valuable astronomical data.. Launch: AstroSat launched on September 28, 2015, by PSLV-C30 (XL) rocket from Satish Dhawan Space Centre, Sriharikota. Mission life: Originally designed for 5 years, but continues to function effectively after a decade. Significance: India’s first dedicated multi-wavelength space observatory, comparable to NASA’s Hubble. Discoveries: Observed FUV photons from galaxies 9.3 billion light years away. Enabled studies on black holes, neutron stars, and Proxima Centauri. Provided insights across the electromagnetic spectrum (UV to X-rays). Payloads (5 instruments): Ultra Violet Imaging Telescope (UVIT) Large Area X-ray Proportional Counter (LAXPC) Cadmium-Zinc-Telluride Imager (CZTI) Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT) Scanning Sky Monitor (SSM) Collaborative effort: Developed by ISRO in partnership with major Indian institutions (IUCAA, TIFR, IIA, RRI, several universities) and international partners (Canada & U.K.). Source: THE HINDU (MAINS Focus) Awareness of Food Loss and Waste (GS paper III – Economy, GS Paper III - environment) Introduction (Context) The International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste (IDAFLW), observed on September 29, highlights the silent crisis of food loss and waste that threatens both food security and climate stability.  Globally, nearly one-third of all food produced is lost or wasted every year. For India—one of the world’s largest food producers this challenge translates into massive economic losses, environmental degradation, and climate impacts. Data A study in 2022 by NABARD Consultancy Services (NABCONS) showed that such losses remain alarmingly high throughout the agricultural spectrum. India suffers ₹1.5 trillion in annual post-harvest losses  about 3.7% of agricultural GDP. Fruits and vegetables face 10–15% losses, while staples like paddy (4.8%) and wheat (4.2%) also experience significant wastage. Losses of livestock products are equally damaging because of their heavy resource footprint.  Food loss from major crops and livestock products generates 33 million tonnes of CO2-equivalent emissions annually.  Paddy alone contributes 10 million tonnes of CO2-equivalent emissions because of its methane intensity In India, most losses occur early in the supply chain (handling, processing, distribution), unlike high-income countries where consumer waste dominates. Government initiatives The Government of India has conducted three rounds of nationwide post-harvest surveys across more than 50 crops, generating valuable insights into value-chain losses at a global scale.  India has integrated SDG 12.3.1 (Global Food Loss and Waste) into its National Indicator Framework, ensuring systematic tracking of food loss and climate impact. Way Forward Strengthen cold chains from pre-cooling to refrigerated transport and modern storage for perishables like fruits, vegetables, dairy, and meat. Expand and modernise food logistics through programmes like Pradhan Mantri Kisan SAMPADA Yojana (PMKSY). Promote affordable technologies such as solar cold storage, low-cost cooling chambers, crates for perishables, and moisture-proof silos for grains. Leverage digital tools like IoT sensors and AI-driven forecasting to improve storage, transport, and distribution. Utilise apps like FAO Food Loss App (FLAPP) to track losses across the value chain. Redirect surplus food to food banks and community kitchens; convert unavoidable waste into compost, animal feed, or bioenergy. Ensure strong policy support through subsidies, credit guarantees, and low-interest loans. Encourage shared responsibility across the supply chain: government, businesses, civil society, academia, and consumers. Conclusion Food loss spans the entire supply chain, demanding shared responsibility. Governments must integrate loss reduction into climate strategies and invest in resilient infrastructure, while businesses adopt circular models and scale innovations. Civil society and academia can drive research and awareness, and consumers can cut waste through mindful choices and support for redistribution. Mains Practice Question Q Food loss is as much a climate challenge as it is a food security issue. Examine (250 words, 15 marks) Source: What an empty plate of food should symbolise – The Hindu Reimagining green economy through landscapes (GS paper III – Economy) Introduction (Context) India stands at a critical juncture where traditional growth models must evolve into a green, resilient economic pathway to address climate risks, ensure competitiveness, and sustain livelihoods. This has given rise to the new concept of bioeconomy. What is bioeconomy? Bioeconomy is an economic system that uses renewable biological resources—like plants, animals, forests, and microorganisms—to produce food, materials, chemicals, and energy, reducing dependence on fossil fuels and promoting sustainability. It combines biotechnology, biomass utilization, and circular economy principles to create eco-friendly goods and services. Examples: Biofuels, Bioplastics, etc Data on bioeconomy India’s bioeconomy expanded from $10 billion in 2014 to $165.7 billion in 2024, a 16-fold increase in 10 years. It contributes 4.25% of India’s GDP. The growth is supported by over 10,000 bio-economy start-ups. The industrial bioeconomy (biofuels and bioplastics) accounts for 47% of the sector’s value. Pharmaceuticals contribute around 35%, while research, IT, clinical trials, and bioinformatics are rapidly emerging. India has achieved 20% ethanol blending in petrol. The country is the third-largest pharmaceutical producer by volume globally. The bioeconomy is expected to create 35 million jobs by 2030. Rural per capita spending grew at 9.2% from August 2023 to July 2024, outpacing urban growth of 8.3%. The green economy is becoming inevitable and imminent for job creation, environmental returns, competitiveness, and climate resilience. Challenges and Disparities Rural region Climate disruptions impact inflation, worsening the rural bioeconomy context, especially pressures from losses in agriculture, fluctuations in energy demand, and disrupted supply chains.    Regional Inequities Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Gujarat, and Andhra Pradesh account for two-thirds of bioeconomy value, while eastern and northeastern states together contribute less than 6% despite rich agricultural and forest resources. States like Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Odisha, and Jharkhand have untapped potential in ethanol, biomass power, agri-waste, and non-timber forest products. Gender Gaps Women hold only 11% of jobs in rooftop solar. Women’s representation in key roles remains particularly low: 1% in operations and maintenance, and 3% in construction and commissioning Urban-Rural Divide Urban areas dominate green investments, EV infrastructure, and solar rooftops, while rural regions lag in clean energy access, water-saving irrigation, and sustainable livelihoods. Digital divide limits rural participation in smart grids, carbon markets, and green tech solutions. Policy & Regulatory Bottlenecks The BioE3 policy was rolled out in 2024 to promote the bioeconomy, but regulatory frameworks remain fragmented, and it remains a very urban-centric, industrial-scale economy. Green Transition and Rural Challenges A rapid green shift can disproportionately impact rural areas, coal workers, MSMEs, and small-scale manufacturers dependent on traditional energy sources. Trade offs Road transport dominates freight movement, with food miles contributing nearly 3 gigatonnes of CO₂ annually, creating a trade-off between emissions and food security. Biodiversity supports over 200 million livelihoods, but policies and markets often promote monocropping of wheat and paddy over crop diversification. India’s push for ethanol blending creates a trade-off in the maize supply chain, affecting animal feed availability. Hence a just transition requires targeted skill-building, reskilling, and local bioeconomic diversification to prevent social and environmental harm. This can be achieved using landscape approach. Landscape Approach Green growth needs a model that integrates sustainability, climate action, and social inclusion while addressing regional disparities and unlocking potential in less-developed states. Landscapes should be treated as interconnected systems of landforms, water resources, biodiversity, markets, and local institutions to assess ecological and human benefits. A shared landscape understanding enables improvement of air and water quality, climate regulation, habitat support, food and water security, and livelihoods. Transition requires participatory pathways from village (nano) to wider landscape (macro) levels for effective planning and monitoring. Way Forward Leverage 2.5 lakh PRIs, 12 million women-led institutions, and local authorities in planning, execution, and monitoring of green transitions. Promote circular economy, green energy, and bioeconomy with gender-inclusive policies for leadership and technical roles. Encourage local entrepreneurship, such as small-scale oil extraction or biomass-based enterprises, to enhance local production and consumption. Integrate ecosystem valuation into economic strategies and policies for better resource management. Adopt measures like green budgeting, targeted fiscal incentives, green government procurement, and active involvement of gram panchayats and community-based organisations. Strengthen waste management, create financing and O&M support for decentralised renewables, coordinate policies across departments, and increase R&D spending for green innovations. Conclusion A landscape-driven growth model can balance ecological regeneration, economic resilience, and social equity. Such an approach will help India achieve its climate goals, sustainable development targets, and new engines of green growth, ensuring wellbeing for both people and ecosystems. Mains Practice Question Q.1) Discuss how adopting a landscape approach can accelerate India’s transition towards a green economy. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: Reimagining green economy through landscapes – The Hindu

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 27th September 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 27th September – 2025

rchives (PRELIMS  Focus) Soilification Category: AGRICULTURE Context:  Researchers in Rajasthan successfully grew wheat in desert land using an indigenous bioformulation-based soilification technology, showing potential to stop desertification and boost agriculture in arid regions. Experiment site: Conducted by Central University of Rajasthan (CUoR) at Banseli village, Ajmer district. Technology: Used desert ‘soilification’ with indigenous bioformulation to convert desert sand into soil-like structure. Water efficiency: Wheat required only 3 irrigations (vs. 5–6 normally) due to high water retention. Key features: Bioformulation enhanced water retention, improved soil structure, stimulated microbial activity, and increased crop stress resistance. Pilot results: 13 kg wheat seeds yielded 26 kg harvest per 100 sq. metres in April 2025. Higher yield: Experimental field with bajra, guar gum, and chickpea showed 54% higher yield in bioformulation-amended sand. Support: Facilitated by Krishi Vigyan Kendra (KVK) and Rajasthan Horticulture Department. Impact: Reduced water input, higher productivity, and potential to curb desertification in Thar desert region. Future plan: Expand technology to crops like millet and green gram in Rajasthan’s dry regions. Learning Corner: Soilification Meaning: Soilification is a process of transforming loose, infertile sand (desert soil) into soil-like material that can support plant growth. How it works: Uses polymers, bioformulations, or natural binders to cross-link sand particles. Improves soil aggregation and water retention capacity. Enriches the substrate with microbial activity to provide nutrients and resilience to crops. Key Objectives: Convert arid, barren desert land into productive agricultural fields. Reduce irrigation demand by retaining more water in sandy soils. Combat desertification and land degradation. Applications: Tested in Rajasthan’s Thar Desert for wheat, bajra, guar gum, and chickpea cultivation. Used in dry and semi-arid regions globally (China, Middle East, Africa) to reclaim deserts. Significance: Provides a sustainable land restoration method. Helps ensure food security in desert-prone countries. Supports climate change adaptation by reclaiming degraded lands. Source: THE HINDU MiG-21 Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Context : India has formally decommissioned the MiG-21 jets after six decades of service, marking the end of an iconic era in the Indian Air Force. Key Statement: Defence Minister Rajnath Singh called MiG-21 a “symbol of India-Russia ties” and a lesson for future indigenous platforms. Aircraft: Last MiG-21 jets belonged to No. 23 Squadron (Panthers). Ceremony: Included symbolic switch-off of six MiG-21s and handing over of aircraft documents to Air Chief. Attendees: Senior IAF officials, veterans, pilots, engineers, and technicians who worked with MiG-21. Tribute Performances: Surya Kiran aerobatic team, Tejas, and Jaguar fighter jets performed aerial manoeuvres. Legacy: Played crucial roles in 1971 war, Kargil conflict, Balakot air strike, and Operation Sindoor. Impact: Reduced IAF’s effective fighter squadron strength to 29, the lowest since 1960s. Future Outlook: Govt emphasized success of indigenous platforms like LCA-Tejas and upcoming Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA). Learning Corner: MiG-21 Fighter Aircraft Full Name: Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-21. Origin: Developed by the Soviet Union (first flew in 1956). Induction in India: Entered Indian Air Force (IAF) service in 1963, becoming the first supersonic fighter jet of India. Service Duration: Served for over 60 years, the longest-serving combat aircraft in IAF history. Role in Wars: 1971 India-Pakistan War: Played a decisive role, including shooting down enemy aircraft. Kargil War (1999): Actively used in ground attack and support missions. Balakot Air Strike (2019): MiG-21 Bison piloted by Wing Commander Abhinandan Varthaman engaged in aerial combat. Operation Sindoor and other missions. Variants in India: MiG-21FL, MiG-21M, MiG-21MF, and upgraded MiG-21 Bison. Legacy: Known as the “backbone” of the IAF for decades. Symbol of India-Russia defence cooperation. Provided combat experience to generations of IAF pilots. Source:  THE HINDU H3N2 Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Context: Delhi and nearby cities are witnessing a surge in H3N2 influenza cases, with doctors urging precautions due to rising infections, especially among vulnerable groups. Disease: H3N2 is an Influenza A subtype virus causing respiratory illness. Current trend: Hospitals report rise in cases; August saw ~80, September ~100 cases. Symptoms: Fever, body ache, cough, sore throat, congestion; symptoms more intense this year. Spread: Transmitted through coughing, close contact, and contaminated surfaces. Vulnerable groups: Elderly, children, pregnant women, people with diabetes, asthma, heart/kidney disease, or low immunity. Illness duration: Typically lasts 5–7 days; cough and weakness may persist for weeks. Complications: Risk of secondary bacterial infection in those with comorbidities. Precaution: Avoid close contact, wear masks, maintain hygiene, get vaccinated. Challenge: Difficult to confirm if H3N2 cases are rising due to inadequate surveillance. Doctors’ advice: Urgent need for vaccination, especially for high-risk groups. Learning Corner: Avian Influenza (Avian Flu)  A zoonotic viral infection caused by Influenza A viruses that primarily affect birds but can infect humans and other animals. Classified into Low Pathogenic Avian Influenza (LPAI) and Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) depending on severity in poultry. Major Types / Strains H5N1 First detected in humans in 1997 (Hong Kong). Highly pathogenic; causes severe respiratory illness with high fatality rate. Endemic in parts of Asia and Africa. Limited human-to-human transmission. H7N9 First reported in humans in China (2013). Usually low pathogenic in birds but can cause severe illness in humans. High mortality among reported human cases. H5N6 Reported in poultry outbreaks in Asia. Sporadic human infections (mostly in China). Causes severe respiratory disease in humans. H9N2 Low pathogenic in birds. Human infections are usually mild. Important because it can mix with other influenza viruses, acting as a “gene donor” for new strains. H10N3 / H10N8 Rare human cases reported in China. H10N8 caused fatal cases in 2013. Still considered sporadic but monitored for pandemic potential. H3N2 (variant of concern for humans, not birds alone) Causes seasonal influenza in humans, but also linked with zoonotic spillover. Not classified as a classic “avian flu,” but shares cross-species transmission risks. Source: THE INDIAN EXPRESS Tejas Mk1A Category: SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY Context India has signed its largest-ever contract for indigenous fighter jets with HAL to procure 97 Tejas Mk1A aircraft for the IAF.” Deal Value: ₹62,370 crore Date Finalized: 25 September 2025 Aircraft Ordered: 68 single-seat Tejas Mk1A 29 twin-seat Tejas Mk1A Delivery Timeline: From 2027, spread over six years Indigenous Content: Over 64% Key Features: UTTAM AESA radar Advanced Electronic Warfare (EW) systems Impact: Boosts IAF squadron strength Generates employment opportunities Strengthens India’s defence manufacturing ecosystem Advances Aatmanirbhar Bharat (self-reliance in defence) Learning Corner: Tejas Mk1A  Type: Lightweight, single-engine, 4.5 generation multirole fighter aircraft. Developer: Designed by Aeronautical Development Agency (ADA) and manufactured by Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL). Category: Indigenous aircraft under India’s Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) program. Key Features Avionics & Radar: Equipped with UTTAM AESA (Active Electronically Scanned Array) radar. Electronic Warfare: Advanced EW suite with self-protection jammers and countermeasures. Weapons Capability: Can carry BVR (Beyond Visual Range) missiles, precision-guided munitions, and air-to-air/air-to-ground missiles. Airframe: Composite materials for reduced weight and radar cross-section. Refueling: In-flight refueling capability. Indigenous Content: Over 60–65% indigenous systems, contributing to Aatmanirbhar Bharat. Operational Role Designed for air-to-air combat, ground attack, and reconnaissance missions. Enhances IAF squadron strength, replacing older MiG-21 aircraft. Source: PIB Indian Rupee steadily weakening Category: ECONOMICS Context The Indian Rupee has been steadily weakening against the US Dollar in 2025, driven by external factors like exchange rate dependencies and falling foreign investments. Current exchange value: Rupee dropped to ₹88.6 per USD, an all-time low. Comparative trend: USD has weakened against most global currencies (Euro, Yuan, Real). INR, however, lost ~13% of value since Jan 2025, making it weaker than Euro and Pound. Reason for slide: Exchange rate fluctuations tied to global demand for USD. India’s weaker appeal for foreign investors → fall in FPI (Foreign Portfolio Investment) and FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) inflows. Impact: Makes imports costlier (oil, goods priced in USD). But provides a silver lining by making Indian exports more competitive globally. Weak rupee could offset US tariff barriers. Underlying issue: Reflects India’s sluggish GDP growth, stagnant exports, and lower foreign capital inflows, leading to pressure on the rupee. Learning Corner: Impact of Rupee Sliding on Indian Economy On Trade Balance Imports: Costlier imports as payments are in USD. For example, India imports crude oil (~85% of its requirement). If rupee slides from ₹83/$ to ₹88/$, the oil bill rises sharply, worsening Current Account Deficit (CAD). Exports: Becomes more competitive globally since Indian goods priced in USD become cheaper for foreign buyers. For instance, Indian IT services or pharmaceutical exports may gain demand. Net Effect: If exports don’t rise enough to offset higher import bill, trade deficit widens. On Inflation Imported inflation rises as global commodities (oil, fertilizers, edible oils, electronics) get costlier in rupee terms. Higher fuel cost → raises transport and logistics cost, feeding into retail inflation (CPI). Example: If crude rises to $80/barrel, a weaker rupee amplifies the domestic petrol/diesel price hike. On Other Macro Variables Foreign Capital Flows: Investors pull out due to currency instability → FPI outflows increase. Corporate Sector: Companies with foreign currency borrowings (ECBs) face higher repayment burden. Growth: Rising input costs and investment slowdown → dampens GDP growth. External Debt: India’s external debt servicing cost rises in rupee terms. Exchange Reserves: RBI may need to intervene, depleting forex reserves. RBI Tools to Handle Impact Direct Intervention Spot and Forward Market Operations: RBI sells USD from its forex reserves to reduce volatility and stabilize rupee. Example: In 2013 “Taper Tantrum,” RBI sold dollars heavily to contain rupee fall. Monetary Policy Tools Repo Rate Hike: To control inflationary pressure and make rupee assets attractive for foreign investors. CRR/SLR Adjustments: Manage liquidity in banking system. Market Measures Open Market Operations (OMO): Buying/selling government securities to manage rupee liquidity. Special Swap Windows: Offered to oil companies or banks to ease USD demand. Macroprudential / Administrative Measures Easing FPI/FDI norms: To attract foreign inflows. External Borrowing Norms: Adjusting limits for corporates to borrow abroad. Import Controls: Temporary measures to curb non-essential imports (e.g., gold curbs in 2013). Source: THE INDIAN EXPRESS (MAINS Focus) National Skill Development Corporation: Critical analysis (GS Paper II - Governance) Introduction (Context)  The Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MSDE) has recently filed a complaint with the Delhi Police alleging misappropriation of funds at the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC).  This comes only months after the NSDC board removed its CEO, highlighting deep-rooted governance issues in an institution once envisioned as the principal architect of India’s skill development ecosystem. Rising Unemployment: The Urgency of Skilling India’s unemployment rate stood at 5.6% in June 2025, up from 5.1% in May (PLFS). Postgraduates face 17.2% unemployment, higher than 10.8% among those with only secondary education (CMIE, 2024). Over 5 crore youth are enrolled in higher education institutions, yet less than 15% are employable by industry standards (India Skills Report 2024). Only 27% of arts and 33% of science graduates are considered job-ready (CII, 2023). Despite a Gross Enrolment Ratio of 28.4% in higher education (AISHE, 2023), graduate unemployment remains persistently high. This mismatch between education and employability underscores the urgency of large-scale skilling and reskilling initiatives. About National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) Established in 2008 as a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) under Section 25 of the Companies Act (now Section 8). Equity structure: 49% Government of India (via NSDF) and 51% private sector entities. Objective: To skill/upskill 150 million people by 2022 (now aligned with India@2047). Key roles: Implementing agency for Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY). Partnerships with 600+ private training partners and 37 Sector Skill Councils. Support through funding, programme design, and industry partnerships. Issues and Concerns in NSDC Operations Financial irregularities: FIRs against training partners for tampering with attendance to claim funds. Weak governance: Allegations of fund misappropriation and lack of internal checks. Audit observations: The CAG (2015) flagged serious gaps in governance, accountability, and role implementation in NSDF and NSDC. Quality concerns: Questionable training standards and poor employment prospects. Placement gap: Under PMKVY and STAR (till March 2024), 1.13 crore candidates certified but only 24.4 lakh placed. Low employability: Certified candidates remain poorly prepared for industry requirements. Way Forward Strengthen governance and audits – introduce stricter financial oversight, internal audits, and independent monitoring. Outcome-based evaluation – focus on placements, wage gains, and long-term employability, not enrolment numbers. Industry integration – deepen collaboration with industry to ensure market-relevant curricula, apprenticeships, and skill mapping. Curriculum innovation – update training with digital tools, AI-based assessments, and lifelong learning modules. Inclusivity focus – target vulnerable groups, rural youth, women, and marginalized communities for equitable skilling access. Conclusion Skill development is a critical pillar to harness India’s demographic dividend and achieve the vision of a developed India by 2047. However, persistent issues of governance failures, poor accountability, and low-quality outcomes at NSDC threaten this mission. Urgent reforms in governance, quality control, and industry alignment are essential to restore credibility and make skilling a true driver of employment and inclusive growth. Mains Practice Question Skill development is key to harnessing India’s demographic dividend, yet governance failures at NSDC threaten this mission. Analyse. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/editorials/irregularities-national-skill-development-corporation-addressed-urgently-10271581/?ref=opinion_pg Supreme Court’s Ruling on Death Penalty (GS Paper II - Polity) Introduction The Supreme Court’s judgment in Vasanta Sampat Dupare v. Union of India (August 2025) marks a watershed moment in India’s death penalty jurisprudence. For the first time, the Court has held that failure to follow death penalty sentencing procedures is not merely an irregularity but a violation of fundamental rights, particularly the right to life under Article 21 of the Constitution. Embodying Justice S B Sinha’s vision in Santosh Bariyar v. State of Maharashtra (May 2009), this judgment anchors the death penalty sentencing process firmly within the constitutional guarantees of equality, fairness, and due process.  Provisions of death penalty in India The death penalty (capital punishment) is the state-sanctioned execution of a person after conviction for a grave offence.  India retains the death penalty for the “rarest of rare” cases as laid down in Bachan Singh v. State of Punjab (1980).  Provisions include: Article 21: Right to life and personal liberty, permitting deprivation only by procedure established by law. Articles 72 & 161: Power of the President and Governors to grant pardon, reprieve, or commute death sentences. Section 354(3), CrPC 1973: Mandates “special reasons” for awarding the death sentence. IPC Sections: Capital punishment is prescribed for offences such as murder (Sec. 302), waging war against the State, terrorism-related crimes, and certain cases of rape (POCSO amendments). Evolution of Jurisprudence Bachan Singh (1980) upheld the constitutional validity of the death penalty but required a careful balancing of aggravating and mitigating circumstances, considering both the crime and the accused Santosh Bariyar (2009), led by Justice S B Sinha, framed non-compliance with sentencing safeguards as a constitutional breach but stopped short of declaring mandatory reversal of death sentences. Manoj v. State of MP (2022) mandated the state to submit reports on personal circumstances of the accused by a probation officer, a psychological and psychiatric assessment, and conduct in prison. However, trial courts widely ignored these directives; research shows 94% of death sentences after Manoj violated these safeguards. Dupare judgment The Dupare judgment builds upon these precedents by: Declaring that breach of Manoj guidelines is a violation of fundamental rights, not a mere procedural lapse. Mandating that death sentences imposed in violation of sentencing safeguards must be set aside. Significance The judgment firmly anchors the death penalty within constitutional demands of equality, fairness, and due process. Nearly 600 prisoners currently on death row in India could potentially benefit from this ruling, given the routine disregard of sentencing procedure.  By making procedural safeguards non-negotiable, the Court has significantly limited the constitutional legitimacy of capital punishment. Conclusion The Dupare ruling is more than a procedural correction—it is a constitutional turning point. By recognising that death penalty sentencing must fully comply with fundamental rights, the Supreme Court has tightened the constitutional noose around capital punishment. Mains Practice Question Q The Supreme Court’s Dupare judgment has elevated death penalty sentencing safeguards to the level of fundamental rights. Critically examine (250 words, 15 marks) Source: https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/death-penalty-has-been-widely-unfairly-imposed-supreme-court-dupare-10272792/

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 26th September 2025

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