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Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 4th December 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 – 4th December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Chaolung Sukapha Category: History and Culture Context: Union Minister of Ports, Shipping & Waterways (MoPSW) led a vibrant celebration of Assam Day at his official residence, paying rich tributes to Chaolung Sukapha. About Chaolung Sukapha: Founder of Ahom kingdom: He was a visionary 13th-century ruler who founded the Ahom kingdom that ruled Assam for six centuries. Other names: He is widely referred to as the architect of “Bor Asom” or “greater Assam”. Establishment of first principality: It was in Charaideo that Sukapha established his first small principality, sowing the seeds of further expansion of the Ahom kingdom. Administration: He divided the kingdom into territorial units called khels or phoids, each under an officer responsible for supplying a fixed number of paiks.  Military system: Paiks are the able-bodied male population who owed labour and military service to the state. Every adult male between sixteen and fifty was registered as a paik and served the king for part of the year in agriculture, construction, or war. In return, he was allotted land for personal cultivation. Emphasis on guerrilla tactics: He emphasized guerrilla tactics suited to the terrain of rivers, jungles, and hills.  Association with tribal communities: Sukapha developed very amiable relationships with the tribal communities living in Assam — especially the Sutias, the Morans and the Kacharis. Relevance: Sukapha’s significance, especially in today’s Assam lies in his successful efforts towards assimilation of different communities and tribes. He adopted a policy of conciliation and assimilation rather than annihilation. Source: PIB Chaprala Wildlife Sanctuary Category: Environment and Ecology Context: A rare striated grassbird was recorded in Chaprala Wildlife Sanctuary in Gadchiroli district, marking a major range extension for the species in Maharashtra. About Chaprala Wildlife Sanctuary: Location: It is located in the Gadchiroli district of Maharashtra. Establishment: Chaprala Wildlife Sanctuary was officially notified as a wildlife sanctuary in February 1986.  Area: It covers an area of approximately 134.78 sq.km (52.05 square miles). Boundaries: The Markhanda and Pedigundam hills flank the sanctuary from northeast and south, and the Pranhita River flows along its western boundary. Rivers: It is located on the bank of the confluence of the Wardha and Wainganga rivers. During the monsoons, river water swells and enters the sanctuary. Tanks: Additionally, several water bodies, including the Murgikunta, Raikonta, and Komatkunta tanks, further contribute to the sanctuary’s biodiversity.  Vegetation: It is dominated by southern tropical dry deciduous forests interspersed with grasslands. Flora: The dominant tree species include teak, Arjun, salai, mahua, bel, dhawada, tendu, sissoo, and semal. Fauna: It is inhabited by Tiger, Leopard, Wild boar, Sloth bear, Wild dogs, Langurs, Blackbuck, Spotted Deer, Sambar, Jackal, Mongoose, etc. The sanctuary also supports a diverse aquatic fauna, including fish, prawns, and turtles. Source: The Times of India INS Aridhaman Category: Defence and Security Context: INS Aridhaman, India’s third indigenously built nuclear-powered submarine, is set to be commissioned soon and it is in the final stages of its trial. About INS Aridhaman: Nature: It is the second Arihant-class submarine.  Construction: It is being built under the Advanced Technology Vessel (ATV) project to build nuclear submarines at the Ship Building Centre in Visakhapatnam. Significance: It is the second nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) being built by India and it reinforces the commitment to the no-first-use (NFU) policy and credible minimum deterrence. Structure: It has a length of 112 m (367 ft) overall, a beam of 15 m (49 ft), and a draft of 10 m (33 ft). It also features an underwater communications system.  Payload: With a displacement of 7,000 tonnes and a length of 125 metres, it has the capacity to carry a larger number of K-4 missiles. The hull features twin flank-array sonars and Rafael broadband expendable anti-torpedo countermeasures. Crew: It can accommodate about 95 crew members, including officers and sailors. State of the art systems: It will be fitted with a combination of two sonar systems – USHUS and Panchendriya. USHUS is a state-of-the-art sonar meant for Kilo-class submarines. Panchendriya is a unified submarine sonar and tactical control system, which includes all types of sonar (passive, surveillance, ranging, intercept and active).  Strategic capability: The submarine enhances India’s strike capability and extends its patrolling range into deeper oceans, which is crucial for protecting trade routes and projecting influence in the Indian Ocean Region. Source: India Today PM-JANMAN Scheme Category: Government Schemes Context: Members of the Bonda community in Odisha’s Malkangiri are set to transition from fragile thatched huts to permanent pucca houses under the PM-JANMAN Scheme. About PM-JANMAN Scheme: Nomenclature: PM-JANMAN stands for Pradhan Mantri Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan. Launch: PM JANMAN was launched on 15th November 2023, a day also celebrated as Janjatiya Gaurav Divas. Objective: It aims to enhance the socio-economic conditions of Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) by providing comprehensive development interventions and by recognizing their unique contribution to national and global development. Beneficiaries: The scheme targets 75 PVTG communities across 18 states and 1 Union Territory (Andaman & Nicobar Islands) as its beneficiaries. Budgetary Outlay: The total budgetary outlay for the scheme is Rs 24,104 crore, with the central share being Rs 15,336 crore and the state share being Rs 8,768 crore.  Coverage Period: The scheme extends from 2023-24 to 2025-26. Focus areas: The scheme is aimed at providing PVTG households and habitations with: basic facilities such as safe housing, clean drinking water and sanitation, improved access to education, health and nutrition, road and telecom connectivity, and sustainable livelihood opportunities. In addition, saturation will also be ensured for schemes like Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PMJAY), Sickle Cell Disease Elimination, TB Elimination, 100% immunisation, PM Poshan, PM Jan Dhan Yojana, etc Implementation: The scheme (comprising Central Sector and Centrally Sponsored Schemes) will be implemented by the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, in collaboration with the State governments and the PVTG communities. Other provisions: The plan also includes the establishment of Van Dhan Vikas Kendras for trading in forest produce, off-grid solar power systems for 1 lakh households, and solar street lights. Source: Deccan Chronicle National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research (NCPOR) Category: Science and Technology Context: NCPOR has become the anchor of India’s polar and oceanic exploration, said Hon’ble Governor of Goa, while speaking at the Antarctica Day celebrations at Goa. About National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research (NCPOR): Nature: It is India’s premier R&D institute for polar and ocean sciences, spearheading the Indian Antarctic, Arctic, and Southern Ocean research programs. Establishment: It was founded on 25 May 1998 as the National Centre for Antarctic and Ocean Research (NCAOR), and it was renamed NCPOR later. Nodal Ministry: It works under the Ministry of Earth Sciences, Government of India Headquarters: Its headquarters is located in Vasco da Gama, Goa. Composition: The governing Body comprises of 13 members and the Chairman (ex-officio) of governing body is Secretary, Ministry of Earth Sciences. Mandate: It facilitates scientific research activities in Antarctica, Arctic and in Indian Ocean sector of Southern Ocean. It also helps in management of Indian Antarctic Research Bases “Maitri” and “Bharati”, and Indian Arctic base “Himadri”. Associated with strategic projects: It also works on strategically vital projects like Mapping of Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), Continental shelf surveys, and the Deep Ocean Mission. Data Management and global collaboration: It conducts climate modelling, and is setting up the first Polar and Ocean Museum. It also participates in international polar science networks, Arctic policy dialogues, and climate monitoring programs. Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) A Dismantling of the Base of Environmental Regulation (UPSC GS Paper III – “Environment, Conservation, EIA, Pollution & Environmental Governance”; GS Paper II – “Judiciary, Separation of Powers, Rule of Law”)   Context (Introduction) The Supreme Court’s review in CREDAI vs Vanashakti overturning its earlier ruling that outlawed ex post facto environmental clearances has raised deep concerns about weakening environmental safeguards, diluting the EIA framework, and eroding decades of jurisprudence rooted in precaution and accountability.   Main Arguments Judicial Reversal: The majority held that retrospective clearances may serve “public welfare,” effectively reopening the door for projects begun illegally to obtain post-facto approvals. Circular Logic: Violations such as starting construction without an EC become the justification for granting a clearance—turning illegality into a ground for validation. Departure from Precedent: Long-standing rulings—from Common Cause to M.C. Mehta—had held that prior EC is mandatory and retrospective approval causes irreparable environmental harm. Undermining Precautionary Principle: The shift dilutes a bedrock principle of environmental law that requires preventive action even when risks are uncertain. Contradicting State Assurances: Despite the Union government earlier claiming before the Madras High Court that the 2017 post-facto window was a “one-time” measure, the 2021 SOP reopened it, enabling continued regularisation.   Challenges / Criticisms  EIA Framework Hollowed Out: Prior EC, meant to ensure scientific appraisal, public hearings, and environmental limits, is reduced to a procedural afterthought. Incentivisation of Illegality: Developers may deliberately bypass environmental scrutiny, confident that violations can later be cured with fines. Weakening Regulatory Deterrence: Voluntary compliance replaces enforceable discipline, diminishing the authority of environmental regulators. Threat to Rule of Law: Bending rules to validate mass violations creates a governance culture where the scale of wrongdoing becomes a reason for leniency. Climate Vulnerability Ignored: In a period of intensifying climate risks, the judgment signals judicial retreat from environmental protection.   Way Forward Reaffirm Prior Scrutiny: Courts should restore the principle that no project may commence without an EC, preserving the preventive nature of the EIA regime. Tighten Post-Facto Exceptions: If allowed at all, retrospective ECs must be strictly limited to unforeseeable emergencies and not routine violations. Strengthen Regulatory Capacity: Empower MoEFCC, State PCBs, and expert appraisal bodies with resources for real-time monitoring and enforcement. Ensure Public Participation: Public hearings and transparent scientific assessments must remain central to the EC process. Judicial Consistency: The Court must align future rulings with its rich jurisprudence on Article 21, precautionary principle, and intergenerational equity.   Conclusion The review judgment marks a worrying dilution of India’s environmental governance architecture. By legitimising violations, it erodes the EIA’s preventive foundation and weakens regulatory deterrence at a time when ecological fragility demands stronger, not weaker, accountability. Upholding environmental rule of law is essential for the credibility of both institutions and constitutional protections.   Mains Question  “The Supreme Court’s reversal on ex post facto environmental clearances risks dismantling the preventive foundation of India’s environmental regulation.” Discuss. (250 words, GS-III / GS-II) A Seven-Point Blueprint for Scaling India’s Climate Ambition (UPSC GS Paper III – “Environment, Climate Change, Conservation, Mitigation, Energy Transition, NDCs”; GS Paper II – “Policy, Governance, International Commitments”)   Context (Introduction) India is preparing its new Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) under the Paris Agreement for the 2035 horizon. The article proposes a seven-point energy transition strategy to peak emissions by 2035 and strengthen India’s decarbonisation credibility.   Main Arguments Higher Emissions Intensity Reduction: India should target a 65% reduction in emissions intensity by 2035, signalling a credible path to peaking emissions around 2035 and reinforcing global trust in India’s decarbonisation pathway. Expanded Non-Fossil Capacity: Raise the non-fossil capacity share to 80% by 2035, lifting total generation capacity to 1,600 GW, with solar and wind contributing 1,200 GW and storage scaling to ~170 GW. Phasing Down Unabated Coal: No new unabated coal plants should be commissioned after 2030; coal capacity should peak at 293 GW before declining, with eventual retention dependent on affordable carbon capture and storage (CCS). Accelerated Electrification: Deepen electrification across transport, targeting 100% electric traction in railways, 50% electric city buses, and full transition of electric three-wheelers within a few years. Operationalising Carbon Markets: The Carbon Credit Trading Scheme (CCTS) starting 2026 must expand coverage to power and medium-scale industries, tightening emission intensity norms in line with net-zero goals. Electricity Pricing Reforms: High renewable penetration needs dynamic pricing, exchange-based power procurement, and time-of-day tariffs to manage variability and enhance grid efficiency. Mobilising Finance: India must attract $62 billion annually until 2035 for renewables and grid expansion, with 80% domestic mobilisation and 20% foreign capital, supported by stronger MDB financing.   Challenges / Criticisms Financing Constraints: Large upfront investment needs may strain domestic savings and private capital flows without predictable policy stability. Technological Uncertainty: Cost-effective CCS, battery storage and large-scale grid integration remain uncertain and require accelerated innovation. Coal-Dependent States: Jharkhand, Odisha and Chhattisgarh face employment risks, requiring transition planning, retraining and diversification. Behavioural Resistance: Electricity pricing reforms, especially time-of-day tariffs, may face public pushback due to lack of awareness. Institutional Fragmentation: Climate governance remains dispersed, with the need for stronger inter-ministerial coordination.   Way Forward Revive PM’s Council on Climate Change: Act as the apex body to approve national plans, coordinate inter-governmental action and conduct periodic review. State-Level Transition Plans: Prepare just transition frameworks for coal-producing states, linking reskilling, MSME diversification and green industries. Green Industrial Policy: Promote domestic manufacturing of solar modules, wind turbines, batteries and electrolyzers to reduce import dependence. Grid Modernisation: Invest in smart grids, battery storage, pumped hydro, and inter-state transmission corridors to handle 50% variable renewables. Global Climate Diplomacy: Link India’s enhanced NDCs with finance guarantees, concessional capital pools, and MDB reforms to de-risk private investment.   Conclusion India’s next decade will determine its long-term climate trajectory. A credible, finance-backed seven-point strategy—anchored in higher ambition, technological shifts, coal phase-down, and institutional cohesion—can place India firmly on the path toward a resilient, low-carbon, Viksit Bharat by 2070.   Mains Question  “India’s upcoming NDCs provide an opportunity to embed a long-term energy transition strategy. Discuss the key elements required to scale up India’s climate ambition while ensuring economic growth and energy security.” (250 words, GS-III)  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 3rd December 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 December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Exercise Ekuverin Category: Defence and Security Context: Recently, the 14th edition of the annual India-Maldives bilateral Exercise Ekuverin started in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. About Exercise Ekuverin: Nomenclature: The Exercise ‘Ekuverin’ meaning ‘Friends’ in Dhivehi language started in the year 2009. Countries involved: Ekuverin is one of the three major joint exercises between India and the Maldives. Launch year: It is a bilateral military annual exercise conducted alternatively in India and Maldives since 2009. Objective: The Exercise aims to enhance interoperability while carrying out counterinsurgency and Counter Terrorism operations in semi-urban, jungle and coastal terrain. Significance: Exercise Ekuverin continues to be a shining example of India’s Neighbourhood First Policy and its commitment to building enduring defence partnerships with friendly nations. Focus areas: It focuses on integration of niche technology to enhance interoperability, the countries will share best practices, reflecting the shared commitment of India and the Maldives towards peace and security in the region. Important for Indian Ocean region: The exercise reflects the growing defence cooperation and mutual commitment of India and the Maldives towards regional peace and stability in the Indian Ocean Region. Other Exercises between India and Maldives: The two bilateral exercises are “Ekuverin” and “Ekatha” and trilateral- “Dosti”, which includes Sri Lanka. About Exercise Ekuverin 2025: The Indian Army contingent of 45 personnel, represented by a battalion of the Garhwal Rifles, is participating alongside an equal-strength Maldivian contingent represented by the MNDF. The two-week-long exercise aims to enhance interoperability and operational synergy in Counter-Insurgency and Counter-Terrorism operations across jungle, semi-urban and coastal terrain. It will witness participation of troops from both sides sharing best practices, tactical drills and joint operational planning to strengthen their capability to respond to common security challenges in the region. Source: News on AIR Hornbill Festival Category: History and Culture Context: Nagaland’s Hornbill Festival, began recently amid renewed pushback by the state government against the Centre’s re-imposition of the Protected Area Regime. About Hornbill Festival: Nomenclature: It was named after the Hornbill bird is named after the hornbill bird, a symbol of fidelity, beauty, and grace in Naga folklore.  Location: It is celebrated at Naga Heritage Village, Kisama which is about 12 km from Kohima in Nagaland. Launch year: It was first organized in the year 2000 and it showcases the heritage of its 17 Naga tribes. Objective: It aims to promote inter-tribal interaction and preserve Nagaland’s heritage, blending the traditional with the contemporary in a harmonious display of unity. Significance: It is also called the festival of festivals and is held every year. Organising authority: It is organized by the State Tourism and Art & Culture Departments of the Government of Nagaland. Evolution: It has evolved into a celebration showcasing the diverse and vibrant cultural and traditional heritage of the tribes of Nagaland. It serves as a platform for the Naga tribes to display their rich traditions through performances, dances, and exhibitions. Distinctive attire: Warriors, dressed in full ceremonial attire, perform traditional dances and war cries that narrate stories of victories, harvests, love, and tribal legends. Their distinctive attire features hornbill feathers, boar tusks, and colourful woven sashes, creating a striking display of Naga heritage and pride. About Hornbill Festival 2025: Theme of 2025 festival:  Cultural Connect This year Nagaland has officially named Switzerland and Ireland as country partners for the Hornbill Festival 2025. Source: The Indian Express International Maritime Organization (IMO) Category: International Organisations Context: India has been re-elected to the Council of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) in Category B, which includes 10 countries. About International Maritime Organization (IMO): Nature: IMO is the global standard-setting authority for the safety, security, and environmental performance of international shipping.  Objective: Its main role is to create a regulatory framework for the shipping industry that is fair and effective, universally adopted, and universally implemented.  Headquarters: Its headquarters is located in London. Membership: It has 176 Member States and three Associate Members. Once a member state adopts a regulation, it becomes part of that country’s domestic law. Funding mechanism: Funding is sourced through mandatory contributions by member states and also from voluntary donations and commercial revenue. Association with UN: It is the United Nations’ specialised agency responsible for the safety and security of shipping and the prevention of marine pollution by ships. Lacks enforceability of laws: The IMO formulates regulations on shipping safety, maritime security, and environmental protection but does not enforce them.  Promotes SDG 14: It contributes directly to UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 14, which focuses on the conservation and sustainable use of oceans and marine resources. Deals with legal issues: The organisation also deals with legal matters such as liability, compensation, and facilitation of maritime traffic. Organisational Structure: The Assembly is the supreme governing body, comprising all member states. It meets every two years to approve the work programme, budget, and elect members to the Council. The Council acts as the Executive Organ, overseeing IMO’s work in between Assembly sessions. Major Committees: The IMO has five major committees, which are responsible for policy development and regulation formulation, including the Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC). Source: PIB Norovirus Disease Category: Science and Technology Context: Cases of norovirus, commonly known as the “winter vomiting disease,” have been rising in the United States in recent weeks. About Norovirus Disease: Nature: It is a common and highly contagious virus that causes inflammation in the stomach and intestines, a condition known as gastroenteritis. Other names: It is also sometimes referred to as the ‘stomach flu’ or the ‘winter vomiting bug’ as norovirus outbreaks usually happen seasonally in colder months.  Vulnerable people: People of all ages can get infected and sick with norovirus, which spreads very easily and quickly. Frequency: One can get norovirus illness many times in your life because there are many different types of noroviruses. These viruses are responsible for about 90% of viral gastroenteritis outbreaks and close to 50% of cases across the world. Transmission: One can get norovirus from an infected person, contaminated food or water, or by touching contaminated surfaces. Norovirus infection occurs most frequently in closed and crowded environments.  Symptoms: These include vomiting, diarrhoea, stomach cramps, nausea, fever, and tiredness. In extreme cases, loss of fluids could lead to dehydration. Treatment: Most people recover completely without treatment.  No vaccines are currently available to prevent norovirus. Treatment for the infection focuses on relieving the symptoms. Prevention: Hands should be washed frequently with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. Further, contaminated surfaces should be disinfected with a bleach-based solution, especially in outbreak situations. Source: NDTV Sanchar Saathi Category: Government Initiatives Context: The Department of Telecommunications has ordered phone makers to pre-install the Sanchar Saathi app on smartphones by March 2026. About Sanchar Saathi: Development: Sanchar Saathi is a is a security and awareness platform developed by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT). Availability: It is available both as an app and a web portal. Objective: It primarily aims to help mobile users manage their digital identity, report suspicious activity, and safeguard their devices.  Focus on awareness: The platform also provides educational material on telecom safety and cyber risks, making it a combined service-and-awareness system. Chakshu Feature: It lets users report suspicious calls, SMS, and WhatsApp messages, such as fake KYC alerts, impersonation scams, or phishing links.  It helps authorities spot fraud patterns. Addresses spam calls and links: Users can report spam calls and messages that break TRAI rules. Complaints made within seven days can lead to action against the sender. It also allows reporting of phishing links, unsafe APKs, and fraudulent websites.  Checks linked mobile connections: It shows how many mobile numbers are registered using one’s identity. It also helps identify SIM cards taken without one’s knowledge. Blocks lost or stolen phones: It allows users to block the IMEI of a lost or stolen device so it can’t be used. Phones can be unblocked if recovered. Verifies authenticity of a device: It allows users to check if a phone is genuine by validating its IMEI. It is useful when buying second-hand phones. Reports fraud international calls: Some scammers use illegal telecom setups to make international calls appear as regular +91 calls. Sanchar Saathi enables users to report such cases. Verifies trusted contacts: It provides a directory to confirm genuine customer-care numbers, emails, and websites of banks and other major institutions. Source: The Hindu (MAINS Focus) Colombo Security Conclave: A Template for Indian Ocean Security Cooperation (UPSC GS Paper II – “International Relations: India and its Neighbourhood, Regional Groupings, Security Architectures”) & GS Paper III – “Maritime Security, Internal Security Challenges”)   Context (Introduction) The 7th NSA-level Colombo Security Conclave (CSC) summit in 2025 reflects India’s efforts to build a cooperative security framework in the Indian Ocean, as regional geopolitics, China’s growing footprint, and non-traditional maritime threats reshape strategic priorities.   Main Arguments Regional Security Platform: CSC provides a dedicated Indian Ocean security forum, unique in a region lacking a unified architecture despite high maritime vulnerabilities. Evolution of the Group: Originally a trilateral (India–Sri Lanka–Maldives), CSC expanded to include Mauritius (2022), Bangladesh (2024), and Seychelles (2025), signalling widening trust and strategic convergence. Addressing Non-Traditional Threats: The platform prioritises maritime security, counter-terrorism, trafficking, organised crime, and cyber threats, central to the economic and livelihood needs of littoral states. Development–Security Link: For CSC members, maritime security is inseparable from blue economy prospects, fisheries protection, disaster resilience, and sea-borne trade. India’s Strategic Moment: The summit strengthens India’s leadership at a time when the Indo-Pacific security environment is shifting due to China’s expanding influence and geopolitical volatility.   Challenges / Criticisms  China Divergence: India views China’s presence in the Indian Ocean as a strategic risk, but many CSC members depend on China economically and do not share New Delhi’s threat assessment. Institutional Weakness: CSC still functions primarily through NSA-level meetings, lacking a deeper, standing institutional mechanism for sustained cooperation. Domestic Uncertainties: Political instability in key states, especially Bangladesh, may affect continuity of engagement and weaken long-term group cohesion. Fragmented Regional Architecture: The Indian Ocean remains divided among multiple, overlapping but weak security groupings, diluting collective action. Uneven Capacity: Smaller island states lack resources for maritime domain awareness, search-and-rescue, and cyber defence, limiting CSC’s effectiveness.   Way Forward Institutionalisation: Create permanent secretariat, working groups, and annual joint exercises, similar to ASEAN-led mechanisms, ensuring policy continuity. Capacity Building: India can expand IT, maritime domain awareness (MDA), and coast guard training through IORA, SAGAR, and I4F initiatives. Balanced China Strategy: CSC should frame cooperation around non-traditional security, avoiding overt anti-China signalling to maintain consensus among smaller states. Economic-Security Integration: Promote blue economy partnerships, port security, anti-piracy collaboration, and disaster preparedness, reflecting member priorities. Incremental Expansion: Gradually include Malaysia (guest in 2025) and other Indian Ocean states, ensuring the group grows without overstretching.   Conclusion The CSC has emerged as a promising mini-lateral model for Indian Ocean security governance, overcoming historical fragmentation. Its future strength will depend on institutional resilience, balanced strategic messaging, and sustained cooperation that aligns security priorities with the developmental needs of littoral states.   Mains Question  “The Colombo Security Conclave is becoming a crucial pillar of India’s maritime diplomacy but faces structural and geopolitical challenges.” Discuss. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu Mandating Sanchar Saathi: Cybersecurity vs Privacy Trade-offs (UPSC GS Paper II – “Fundamental Rights; Government Policies; Right to Privacy”; GS Paper III – “Cybersecurity; Internal Security; Technology & Threats”)   Context (Introduction) To curb cybercrime—from digital arrests to spoofed IMEI frauds—the government has mandated SIM binding and compulsory pre-installation of the Sanchar Saathi app on all new smartphones. The move has raised concerns over privacy, proportionality, and potential surveillance misuse.   Main Arguments:  Cybercrime Escalation: Scams involving government impersonation, digital arrests, and cross-border networks have intensified, exploiting gaps in SIM-based verification systems. Account Exploitation: User accounts remain active even after SIM removal, enabling criminals to operate anonymously on encrypted messaging platforms. IMEI Spoofing: Counterfeit devices and tampered IMEI numbers have made tracking cybercriminals extremely difficult for law enforcement. Security Patch Intent: SIM binding aims to disable messaging app access when the associated SIM is removed, reducing impersonation risk. Device Verification Goal: Sanchar Saathi is intended to authenticate devices and weed out cloned or illegal handsets, strengthening the digital identification ecosystem.   Challenges / Criticisms  Privacy Intrusion: The directive mandates that the app be pre-installed, visible, and undeletable, requiring higher security privileges, risking intrusive access. Surveillance Concerns: Elevated permissions could create a Panopticon-like tool, enabling continuous monitoring or exploitation—especially worrying given past use of Pegasus. Legality & Proportionality Issues: Under K.S. Puttaswamy (2017), state actions must satisfy legality, necessity, and proportionality. Existing alternatives make the measure disproportionate. Security Vulnerability: A privileged government app could become a high-value target for hackers, exposing millions of users to systemic risks. Industry Pushback: Privacy-focused companies like Apple have resisted compliance, signalling global discomfort with mandatory surveillance-linked applications.   Way Forward Privacy-by-Design Tools: Strengthen USSD codes, SMS checks, and web-based verification instead of forcing device-level intrusive apps. Targeted IMEI Regulation: Improve CEIR (Central Equipment Identity Register) functioning, coupled with telecom audits and stricter KYC enforcement. Risk-Graded Measures: Apply intrusive tools only for high-risk cases after judicial authorisation, not for every smartphone buyer. Independent Oversight: Create a privacy and cybersecurity review board, ensuring safeguards before deploying government apps on private devices. Transparent Standards: Publish data handling policies, permissions, and audit logs, ensuring that no invisible surveillance architecture is embedded into devices.   Conclusion Cybercrime demands strong action, but compulsory government apps with privileged access raise grave concerns for privacy and constitutionalism. A sustainable cybersecurity strategy must rely on least-intrusive tools, transparent safeguards, and adherence to the proportionality doctrine laid down in Puttaswamy.   Mains Question  “The compulsory installation of the Sanchar Saathi app aims to curb cybercrime but raises serious concerns under the privacy framework.” Examine. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 2nd December 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 – 2nd December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Bioremediation Category: Science and Technology Context: India’s rapid industrialisation has come at a heavy environmental cost and to address this, India needs to focus on bioremediation. About Bioremediation: Definition: Bioremediation is the use of living microorganisms to degrade environmental contaminants into less toxic forms. Significance: Bioremediation has gained significant attention in recent years due to its potential to address various environmental challenges, from oil spills to contaminated soil and groundwater. Working Mechanism: Bioremediation involves introducing specific microorganisms or creating conditions that favour the growth of naturally occurring microbes capable of degrading pollutants. This technique leverages the natural capabilities of bacteria, fungi, and other organisms to break down contaminants into less harmful or harmless substances. Common micro-organisms used: Some bacteria commonly used in bioremediation include Pseudomonas, Alcanivorax, Bacillus, and Deinococcus, as they can break down various toxic substances. Monitoring: Bioremediation can be monitored indirectly by measuring the oxidation-reduction potential or redox in soil and groundwater, along with pH, temperature, oxygen content, electron acceptor/donor concentrations and concentration of breakdown products (e.g. CO2). Types of Bioremediation: In Situ Bioremediation: It involves treatment of the contaminated material at the site. Prominent types of In Situ Bioremediation techniques include Bio-Venting, Bio-Sparging, Bio-Augmentation, etc. Ex Situ Bioremediation: It involves the removal of the contaminated material to be treated elsewhere. Prominent types of Ex Situ Bioremediation techniques include Land Farming, Composting, Bio-Piles, Bio-Reactors, etc. Applications of Bioremediation: Heavy Metal Bioremediation: It removes toxic heavy metals (lead, cadmium, chromium, copper) through degradation, absorption, and detoxification. Soil Bioremediation: It degrades hydrocarbons in soils contaminated with oil and petroleum products, maintaining soil health and promoting natural recovery. Marine Oil Spill Bioremediation: It involves use of indigenous oil-degrading microorganisms (Halomonas aquamarina, Alcanivorax) to break down oil, offering an eco-friendly alternative to chemical cleaners. Rubber Waste Bioremediation: Bioremediation of rubber waste includes microbial treatments which reduce pollutants such as BOD, COD, and solids, alongside sulfur removal and rubber degradation for recycling. Source: The Hindu Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) Category: International Conventions Context: At the conference on 50 years of Biological Weapons Convention (BWC), Mr. Jaishankar said that Global South should be at centre of preparations to deal with bioweapons. About Biological Weapons Convention (BWC): Nomenclature: It is formally known as “The Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their Destruction”. Origin: It was negotiated in Geneva, Switzerland within the Eighteen Nation Committee on Disarmament (ENDC) and Conference of the Committee on Disarmament (CCD) from 1969 until 1971. It was opened for signature in 1972 and entered into force in 1975. Objective: It aims to effectively prohibits the development, production, acquisition, transfer, stockpiling and use of biological and toxin weapons. It supplements the 1925 Geneva Protocol, which had prohibited only the use of biological weapons. Membership: It has almost universal membership with 188 States Parties (India signed and ratified in 1974) and 4 Signatory States (Egypt, Haiti, Somalia, Syrian Arab Republic). Uniqueness: It is the first multilateral disarmament treaty which bans an entire category of weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Meeting: States Parties meet approximately every 5 years to review its operation. States Parties to BWC have strived to ensure that Convention remains relevant and effective, despite the changes in science and technology, politics and security since it entered into force. Measures taken by India to implement Biological Weapons Convention (BWC): Manufacture, Use, Import, Export and Storage of Hazardous Micro organisms, Genetically/Engineered Organisms or Cells Rules, 1989: It protects the environment, nature and health, in connection with the application of gene technology and micro-organisms. Weapons of Mass Destruction and their Delivery Systems (Prohibition of Unlawful Activities) Act, 2005: It Prohibits unlawful activities (such as manufacturing, transport, or transfer) related to weapons of mass destruction, and their means of delivery. Special Chemicals, Organisms, Materials, Equipment and Technologies (SCOMET): SCOMET list is India’s National Export Control List of dual use items, munitions and nuclear related items, including software and technology. Source: The Hindu Darjeeling Mandarin Orange Category: Miscellaneous Context: Recently, the ‘Darjeeling Mandarin Orange’ has officially been granted the Geographical Indication (GI) tag. About Darjeeling Mandarin Orange: Scientific name: It is botanically known as Citrus reticulata Blanco Nature: The Mandarin Orange is a major cash crop of the Darjeeling Hills and it is widely recognised for its rich aroma and flavour. Growing areas: It is grown in the hills of Darjeeling in West Bengal. Other names: It is commonly known as “suntala” is the pride of Darjeeling hills due to its delightful aroma and flavour. Significance: It is the third product from the region, after Darjeeling Tea and Dalley Khursani chilli, to get the tag. Required Climatic Conditions for its growth: It is cultivated at elevations ranging from 600 to 1500 meters above sea level, They grow successfully in all frost free tropical and sub-tropical regions upto 1,500 m. above mean sea level. Annual rainfall should be 100-120 cm. Temperature should range from 10–35°C is suitable for cultivation of the crop. The preferred soil is medium or light loamy soils. Source: Deccan Herald INS Taragiri Category: Defence and Security Context: INS Taragiri was delivered to the Indian Navy recently at MDL, Mumbai, marking a major milestone in achieving self-reliance in warship design and construction. About INS Taragiri: Nature: It is a reincarnation of the erstwhile INS Taragiri, a Leander-class frigate that was part of the Indian Naval fleet from 1980 to 2013. Construction: It is the fourth ship of Nilgiri Class (Project 17A) built by Mazagon Dock Shipbuilding Ltd (MDL). Design: Designed by the Warship Design Bureau (WDB) and overseen by the Warship Overseeing Team (Mumbai), P17A frigates reflect a generational leap in indigenous ship design, stealth, survivability, and combat capability.  Significance: Taragiri is the fourth P17A ship to be delivered to Indian Navy in the last 11 months. The experience gained from construction of first two P17A ships have enabled the build period of Taragiri to be compressed to 81 months, in comparison to 93 months taken for First of the Class (Nilgiri). Step towards Aatamanirbhar Bharat: With an indigenisation content of 75%, the project has involved over 200 MSMEs and has enabled employment generation of approximately 4,000 personnel directly and more than 10,000 personnel indirectly. Propulsion: It is configured with Combined Diesel or Gas (CODOG) propulsion plants, comprising a diesel engine and a gas turbine that drive a Controllable Pitch Propeller (CPP) on each shaft, and state-of-the-art Integrated Platform Management System. Weapon suit: The potent weapon and sensors suite comprises BrahMos SSM, MFSTAR and MRSAM complex, 76mm SRGM, and a combination of 30 mm and 12.7 mm close-in weapon systems, along with rockets and torpedoes for anti-submarine warfare. Source: PIB Operation Sagar Bandhu Category: International Relations Context: Prime Minister Narendra Modi held conversation with Sri Lankan President and assured India’s continued support under Operation Sagar Bandhu. About Operation Sagar Bandhu: Nature: Operation Sagar Bandhu is India’s rapid Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HADR) mission launched to support Sri Lanka during the devastating floods triggered by Cyclone Ditwah. Coordination: It is coordinated by the Ministry of External Affairs, Indian Navy, and Indian Air Force. Objective: It aims to provide immediate relief and essential supplies to Sri Lanka, ensuring rapid support under India’s Neighbourhood First and Vision MAHASAGAR maritime cooperation frameworks. Key features: It included immediate deployment of INS Vikrant, INS Udaigiri, and IAF C-130J aircraft with relief cargo. The supplies included tents, tarpaulins, blankets, hygiene kits, ready-to-eat meals, and HADR equipment. It ensured sea–air integrated relief for fast delivery across affected regions. It involved continuous monitoring with readiness for additional assistance as the disaster evolves. About Cyclone Ditwah: Nature: It is a tropical cyclone that brought heavy rains to Sri Lanka and Southern India. Nomenclature: “Ditwah” is a name given by Yemen, as per the WMO-ESCAP (World Meteorological Organization & UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia-Pacific) cyclone naming list. Significance of name: The name refers to Detwah Lagoon, an ecologically significant coastal waterbody located in the Socotra Archipelago. Assigning of names to cyclones: Names of tropical cyclones are assigned sequentially from a pre-approved list contributed by 13 member countries, which includes Bangladesh, India, Iran, Maldives, Myanmar, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, United Arab Emirates, and Yemen. Source: The Hindu (MAINS Focus) SC Orders CBI Probe into Digital Arrests (GS Paper II – “Role of Judiciary; Centre–State Relations; Federalism; Coordination Mechanisms” & GS Paper III – “Cybersecurity; Internal Security; Technology Challenges”)   Context (Introduction) The Supreme Court has directed the CBI to lead a nationwide probe into “digital arrest” scams—cybercrimes costing Indians over ₹3,000 crore—overriding State consent and highlighting the growing threat of behavioural exploitation, weak cyber policing, and transnational criminal networks.   Main Arguments Pan-India Crime Architecture: Digital arrest scams involve interstate mule accounts, SIM misuse, and foreign cybercrime hubs (notably Southeast Asia), necessitating a national agency with jurisdiction beyond State boundaries. Exceptional Circumstances: The SC invoked extraordinary powers to bypass State consent under the DSPE Act, noting the magnitude of losses (₹3,000 crore), vulnerable victims (mainly elderly), and deep institutional coordination gaps. Behavioural & Cognitive Exploitation: Scamsters weaponise India’s high authority bias (79% trust government), fear of law enforcement, and availability heuristics using familiar names (e.g., CJI Chandrachud) to coerce victims into compliance. State-Level Inadequacies: Telecom negligence in SIM issuance, poor cyber forensics, and fragmented State cybercrime cells created an enforcement vacuum that only the CBI can fill. National Security Angle: The Supreme Court recognised that digital arrests may be exploited in cognitive warfare—where adversaries use psychological manipulation to undermine citizen trust and destabilise society.   Challenges / Criticisms  Federal Tensions: Centralising the probe raises concerns about cooperative federalism but was justified due to States’ uneven consent and capacities. Cross-Border Crime: Many scams originate from Southeast Asian cybercrime hubs; cooperation through Interpol and international MLATs remains slow and inconsistent. Institutional Bottlenecks: State cyber cells lack trained personnel, behavioural analysts, and cyber-forensic tools necessary to counter advanced scam networks. Technological Gaps: Inadequate AI/ML deployment by banks and telecom firms allows “layering” of funds through multiple mule accounts. Cognitive Vulnerabilities: Cultural predispositions—paternalism, fear of police, acquiescence bias (highest among 51 studied cultures)—make Indian citizens uniquely susceptible to authority-driven fraud.   Way Forward Centralised Cyber Command (Estonia Model): Build a unified national cyber command integrating CBI, I4C, CERT-In, RBI, and telecom regulators to respond to real-time scams. AI-Driven Fraud Detection (UK/US Banks): Implement machine-learning systems to flag unusual transfers, mule accounts, and rapid fund movement (layering). Mandatory E-KYC and SIM Regulation (South Korea Model): Enforce stricter telecom KYC, biometric validation, and real-time SIM audit to prevent identity-based fraud. Behavioural Risk Education (Singapore Model): Launch national behavioural-science campaigns explaining salience bias, authority bias, and coercion tactics used in digital arrests. Cross-Border Cyber Cooperation: Expand Interpol coordination, sign targeted cybercrime treaties with Southeast Asian nations, and set up joint investigation teams. Legal Modernisation: Update the IT Act to explicitly recognise digital coercion, impersonation of authorities, and online psychological manipulation as aggravated offences.   Conclusion The Supreme Court’s intervention reflects a shift from viewing cybercrime as a technical violation to understanding its deeper cognitive, behavioural, and transnational dimensions. Protecting citizens demands not only law enforcement coordination but a whole-of-society response combining technology, regulation, behavioural science, and international cooperation.   Mains Question  What do you understand by the terms digital slavery and digital arrest? What measures have government taken to tackle it ? Suggest reforms  (250 words) Source: The Hindu Bioremediation in India: Need, Types, Government Efforts & Challenges (UPSC GS Paper III – “Environment; Pollution Control; Biotechnology; Government Policies & Interventions”)   Context (Introduction) India’s rapid industrialisation has intensified soil, water, and air contamination. With traditional remediation methods proving costly and unsustainable, bioremediation offers a low-cost, scalable, and eco-friendly alternative, especially vital for cleaning polluted rivers, land, and industrial sites.   Main Arguments Industrial Pollution Crisis: Rivers like Ganga and Yamuna receive untreated sewage and industrial effluents daily, making low-cost biological clean-up essential. Sustainable Alternative: Traditional remediation methods are energy-intensive, expensive, and sometimes generate secondary pollution; bioremediation is nature-driven and less resource-heavy. Ecological Restoration: Bioremediation can address oil leaks, pesticide residues, and heavy metal contamination affecting ecosystems and public health. Biodiversity Advantage: India’s diverse indigenous microbial strains, adapted to local climates, offer higher efficiency than imported species. Economic Feasibility: Bioremediation suits resource-constrained local bodies and supports concurrent goals under Swachh Bharat, Namami Gange, and green technology missions.   Types of Bioremediation In situ Bioremediation: Treatment at the contamination site—e.g., spraying oil-eating bacteria directly on spills. Ex situ Bioremediation: Contaminated soil or water is removed, treated in controlled facilities, and returned after detoxification.   How Traditional Microbiology Combines with Cutting-edge Biotechnology Enhanced Microbial Identification: Modern genomics helps identify microorganisms with pollutant-degrading traits. Genetically Modified Microbes: GM bacteria can degrade plastics, oil residues, or persistent chemicals that natural species cannot. Replicating Biomolecules: Biotechnological tools enable replication of useful microbial enzymes for use in sewage treatment and agriculture. Nanobiotechnology: IIT researchers have developed cotton-based nanocomposites to mop up oil spills. Targeted Applications: Engineered enzymes and microbial consortia are tailored to degrade site-specific toxins.   Government Initiatives Supporting Bioremediation DBT Clean Technology Programme: Funds projects linking academia, research labs, and industry on bioremediation solutions. CSIR-NEERI Mandate: Develops and deploys bioremediation frameworks for polluted sites across India. Start-up Ecosystem Support: Organisations like BCIL and Econirmal Biotech offer microbial solutions for soil and wastewater. Integration with National Missions: Potential linkage with Swachh Bharat Mission, Namami Gange, Urban wastewater management reforms, and upcoming Green Technology initiatives.   Challenges to Adoption in India Lack of Site-Specific Knowledge: Different pollutants and soil/water conditions demand customised microbial solutions, which are often unavailable. Complex Pollutants: Industrial pollutants like mixed chemicals, microplastics, and heavy metals require multi-strain or advanced biotech solutions. Weak Standards: India lacks unified national standards for microbial applications and bioremediation protocols. Biosafety Risks: GM microbes need strict monitoring to prevent ecological imbalance or unintended spread. Capacity Gaps: Limited trained personnel, weak awareness, and insufficient local infrastructure hinder scaling.   Conclusion Bioremediation offers India a powerful pathway to restore polluted ecosystems using indigenous biological resources. However, responsible scaling requires national standards, biosafety frameworks, localised research hubs, and public engagement to ensure that biotechnology strengthens — rather than jeopardises — ecological recovery.   Mains Question  What is bioremediation? Explain the mechanisms involved with suitable examples. Examine its role in India’s waste management strategy and outline key government initiatives promoting its adoption. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu Rupee Depreciation: Why It May Help — and Why Caution Is Needed (UPSC GS Paper III – “Indian Economy: Growth, Development, Employment; External Sector; Foreign Exchange Management”)   Context (Introduction) The rupee has depreciated by 5.6% against the USD over the past year, with the REER falling from 108.1 (Nov 2024) to 97.5 (Oct 2025). This shift from overvaluation to undervaluation has revived debate about the economic implications of a weaker rupee.   Main Arguments Export Competitiveness: An undervalued rupee boosts India’s export prices, crucial when the merchandise trade deficit hit $41.7 billion in October 2025. Shock Absorption: Flexible depreciation helps India absorb external shocks such as Trump’s tariff actions and the risk of a China Shock 2.0. Reduced Import Pressure: A weaker rupee discourages non-essential imports and helps prevent cheap Chinese goods from overwhelming domestic markets. Correcting Past Overvaluation: Earlier RBI interventions kept the rupee artificially strong, hurting exports; the current policy corrects that imbalance. Better Policy Mix: Exchange rate adjustments are more effective for correcting imbalances than tariff hikes, export bans, or protectionist measures.   Challenges / Risks Associated  Imported Inflation Risk: India’s heavy dependence on oil, gas, and fertilisers means depreciation can increase import bills if inflation rises again. External Debt Burden: Dollar-denominated corporate borrowings and sovereign liabilities become costlier with a weaker rupee. Capital Outflow Concerns: Excessive rupee weakness may trigger FPI exits, tightening liquidity and raising bond yields. Weak Export Elasticity: Empirical studies (RBI, ICRIER) show Indian exports respond modestly to currency depreciation due to structural bottlenecks. CAD Vulnerability: A widening current account deficit requires the rupee to weaken carefully, not precipitously.   Way forward Controlled Depreciation: RBI must allow gradual movement aligned with fundamentals, while preventing disruptive volatility. Structural Reforms: Exchange rate policy must complement deeper reforms in logistics, ports, FTAs, and quality standards for durable export gains. Reduce Import Dependence: Faster electrification of transport, diversified energy sourcing, and domestic manufacturing can cushion future depreciation risks. Enhance Competitiveness: Improving productivity, labour reforms, and trade facilitation remain essential for leveraging currency changes. Stronger Financial Buffers: Maintaining robust forex reserves and prudent external borrowing norms supports confidence during rupee adjustment phases.   Conclusion Rupee depreciation today reflects global headwinds rather than domestic weakness. A mildly undervalued rupee is economically rational given India’s trade deficit and geopolitical shocks. Yet depreciation alone cannot substitute for structural reforms; stability, competitiveness, and import diversification must accompany a flexible exchange-rate regime.   Mains Question  The Indian rupee witnessed significant depreciation in 2025. Critically analyse its potential benefits and risks for India’s external sector and overall macroeconomic stability.  (250 words, 15 marks) Source: Indian Express

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 1st December 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 – 1st December

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) MH-60R Seahawk Helicopter Category: Defence and Security Context: Recently, India sealed a ₹7,995-crore deal with the U.S. as part of “follow on support” package for Indian Navy’s fleet of 24 MH-60R Seahawk helicopters for five years. About MH-60R Seahawk Helicopter: Construction: It is manufactured by US defence major Lockheed Martin. Other names: It is often called the “Romeo” is a state-of-the-art naval helicopter. Nature: It is an all-weather helicopter designed with state-of-the-art avionics and sensors. Capability: It is designed for anti-submarine warfare (ASW), anti-surface warfare (ASuW), maritime surveillance, search and rescue, medical evacuation, and ship-borne operations. Uniqueness: It is one of the world’s best submarine-hunting helicopters, equipped with advanced sensors like the AN/AQS-22 ALFS dipping sonar and sonobuoys. Multi-purpose operations: The helicopter can operate from frigates, destroyers, cruisers, amphibious ships, and aircraft carriers. Suitable for littoral warfare: It is suitable for intense littoral warfare operations for handling numerous contacts in confined spaces, and for open-water operations. Radar system: It is combined with electro-optical sensors and radar systems that can identify hostile ships, fast attack craft, or suspicious vessels and neutralise them with precision. Advanced features: It also carries the powerful Mk-54 torpedo, allowing it to detect, track, and engage underwater threats. For surface warfare missions, the MH-60R can carry AGM-114 Hellfire missiles, lightweight torpedoes, and machine guns. Source: The Hindu National Mission for Mentoring (NMM) Category: Government Schemes Context: UGC has instructed the Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) to select college professors to train school teachers under National Mission for Mentoring (NMM). About National Mission for Mentoring (NMM): Launch: It was launched on 29th July 2022 in selected 30 Central Schools (15 KVs, 10 JNVs, 5 CBSE) across the country. Objective: It aims to create a supportive environment, enhance mentorship experiences and contribute to individual and collective growth. Nodal ministry: It is the flagship initiative of the Department of School Education and Literacy, Ministry of Education. Functions: It provides platforms for professionals and experts where they can share knowledge, skills and expertise as a Mentor with Mentee teachers and help them in their journey to become effective teachers.  In sync with NEP 2020: It is in line with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020. Implementing authority: National Council for Teacher Education (NCTE) has been assigned to develop and design the modalities for the mission. NCTE released a comprehensive document on the mission (NMM – The Blue Book) with a detailed roadmap of its framework and implementation strategy. Phases of implementation: Pilot phase: It was first tested in 30 Central Schools (15 Kendriya Vidyalayas, 10 Jawahar Navodaya schools, and 5 CBSE schools) with 60 mentors, some even Padma Awardees. Building capacity: Seminars and workshops are conducted to teach “Master Mentors” who can subsequently teach others. Incentivisation: Although participation is voluntary, the NMM manual encourages participants to do so with certificates, performance credits and other incentives. Source: The Hindu Golden Jackal Category: Environment and ecology Context: The Tenkasi district forest division is set to launch ‘Golden Jackal Ambassadors’ scheme in the schools and colleges to address dwindling population of Golden Jackals. About Golden Jackal: Nature: It is strictly nocturnal in areas inhabited by humans, but may be partly diurnal elsewhere. Other names: It is also known as the common jackal or reed wolf is a medium-sized wolf-like canid. Difference with wolves: Compared to a wolf, these canids are physically thinner and have a slender muzzle. It has a short, yet bushy tail that ends with a tan or black tip. Habitat: They dig caverns for shelter, or use crevices in rocks, or caverns that were dug by other animals. These animals are abundant in valleys and along rivers and their tributaries, canals, lakes, and seashores, but are rare in foothills and low mountains. Mating behaviour: They live in mated pairs and are strictly monogamous.  Uniqueness: They live in a group of 4 to 5 individuals. They hunt together, share their food, groom each other, and jointly defend their territory, which they mark with the scent of their excretion.  Distribution: They are found in North and East Africa, Southeastern Europe and South Asia to Burma. They are quite widespread across India. Right from the Himalayan foothills, down to the Western Ghats, the Golden Jackal has a wide distribution. Food pattern: They are omnivores in terms of eating habits. These opportunistic foragers have a rather diverse diet. Conservation Status: IUCN: Least Concern CITES: Appendix III Wildlife Protection Act, 1972: Schedule I. Source: The Hindu Asia Power Index Category: Miscellaneous Context: India has secured third ranking in the Asia Power Index 2025, while the U.S. and China occupy the first and second spots. About Asia Power Index: Publishing agency: It is published annually by the Australia-based think tank, Lowy Institute. Launch: It was launched in 2018, and it assesses the power dynamics across 27 Asia-Pacific countries. Objective: It assesses the ability of nations, particularly of those in the Asian continent, to influence their external environment. Criteria: It is based on 131 indicators across eight thematic measures, including Military Capability and Defence Networks, Economic Capability and Relationships, Diplomatic and Cultural Influence and  Resilience and Future Resources. Key highlights of Asia Power Index 2025: India has secured third ranking in the Asia Power Index 2025, while the U.S. and China occupy the first and second spots. India ranks third for two measures: economic capability and future resources. India’s economic and military capability have both increased in the 2025 edition of the Asia Power Index.  India’s economy has continued to grow strongly and made small gains in terms of its geopolitical relevance – defined in terms of international leverage, connectivity, and technology. Source: News on AIR Perseverance Rover Category: Science and Technology Context: In a significant breakthrough, NASA’s Perseverance rover recently detected electrical activity in Mars’ atmosphere for the first time. About Perseverance Rover: Nature: Perseverance, nicknamed “Percy“, is a semi-autonomous rover the size of a small car designed to explore the surface of Mars. It is part of NASA’s ongoing Mars 2020 Mission. Launch: It was launched on July 30, 2020, from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Landing site: It successfully landed on the surface of Mar’s Jezero Crater on February 18, 2021. Uniqueness: It is the first rover to actually land in an ancient Martian river delta, located inside the Jezero crater. It is also the first rover to record sounds on Mars and broadcast them back to Earth. Objective: It aims to seek signs of ancient life and collect samples of rock and regolith (broken rock and soil) for possible return to Earth. It will collect samples of rock and soil, encase them in tubes, and leave them on the planet’s surface to be returned to Earth at a future date. Design: It is built from the same basic design as Curiosity, which landed on Mars about a decade before Perseverance. Structure: It is about 3 metres long, 2.7 metres wide and 2.2 metres tall and its robotic arm is about 2.1 metres long. It weighs only about 1,025 kilograms with all instruments on board. Power Source: It has a Multi-Mission Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generator (MMRTG) which converts heat from the natural radioactive decay of plutonium (Plutonium Dioxide) into electricity. Instruments: It carries seven instruments, two microphones and 23 cameras in total in order to conduct unprecedented science and test new technology on Mars. Creation of oxygen on Mars: It is the first rover to create oxygen on Mars.  Perseverance carries an instrument called MOXIE, which can generate oxygen from Mars’ carbon dioxide atmosphere. Source: The New Indian Express (MAINS Focus) Institutionalising Animal Representation: A Democratic and Ethical Imperative (UPSC GS Paper IV – “Ethics in Governance; Compassion, Empathy and Public Accountability; Moral Philosophy; Probity in Public Life”)   Context (Introduction) The proposal to formally represent animal interests within democratic institutions challenges deeply embedded anthropocentric assumptions and highlights the ethical need to protect vulnerable beings who cannot articulate their interests in political or administrative processes.   Main Arguments Moral Considerability: Animals possess sentience and vulnerability, giving rise to ethical obligations that go beyond charity and require institutional protection grounded in justice. Anthropocentric Bias: Modern democracies treat animals as property rather than moral subjects, creating a structural gap wherein their interests are consistently overridden by human economic and political power. Duty of Stewardship: Ethical governance demands that humans act as trustees of the voiceless, ensuring decisions on land use, food systems, environment, and security account for animal welfare impacts. Equality of Moral Concern: Judging animals by human-centric standards like rationality or cognitive similarity is ethically flawed and excludes most species from protections they morally deserve. Preventive Ethics: Existing welfare systems are reactive; ethical institutions must offer ex ante protection to prevent harm before it occurs.   Challenges / Criticisms  Institutional Vacuum: Democracies lack dedicated structures to represent non-human interests, leading to systemic neglect and normalisation of cruelty. Majoritarian Limitations: Animals have no electoral power, lobbying influence, or economic leverage, making them structurally invisible in democratic decision-making. Conflict of Interest: Governments benefit from industries that exploit animals, creating an ethical conflict that undermines impartial protection. Weak Fiduciary Bodies: Existing committees often become symbolic, bureaucratic, or captured by vested interests — as seen in the dysfunctional elephant welfare committee. Epistemic Constraints: Determining animal interests requires scientific expertise in behaviour and welfare — an area where political institutions are underprepared.   Way Forward Fiduciary Guardians: Establish independent bodies with the sole mandate of representing animal interests, similar to institutions that protect children, environment, or data rights. Rule-Based Functioning: Create legally mandated procedures requiring animal-impact assessments for policies, urban planning, agriculture, and environmental decisions. Independent Oversight: Ensure operational independence through fixed terms, expert appointments, non-political selection processes, and dedicated budgets. Transparency & Accountability: Publish all decisions, welfare metrics, and audits to build public trust and enable scrutiny of ethical performance. Pilot & Scale Approach: Start with pilot projects — e.g., animal impact reviews in city planning — and gradually institutionalise across ministries and legislatures.   Conclusion Institutionalising animal representation is an ethical evolution of democracy — moving from compassion-based voluntarism to rights-based stewardship. It expands the moral horizon of public institutions by ensuring that even beings without voice are protected through independence, accountability, and scientifically informed decision-making.   Mains Question  What moral obligations do democracies have toward those who lack political voice or agency? Which ethical principles should guide our view in this regard? (10 marks, 150 words)   Source: The Hindu Retreat of the Legislature: Ethical-Constitutional Concerns in India’s Parliamentary Decline (UPSC GS Paper II – “Parliament and State Legislatures”; GS Paper IV – “Ethics in Public Life, Accountability & Integrity”)   Context (Introduction) As Parliament reconvenes, concerns deepen about its shrinking sittings, weakened oversight, rigid party whips, and executive dominance — raising fundamental questions about legislative independence, democratic deliberation, and constitutional morality.   Main Arguments Declining Parliamentary Sittings: Lok Sabha sittings have fallen from 135 days (1952–57) to just 55 daysrecently, indicating a shrinking space for deliberation and accountability. Anti-Defection Distortion: The Tenth Schedule, meant to prevent opportunistic floor-crossing, now curtails conscience and constituency-based voting, reducing MPs to numbers bound by party diktat. Eroded Oversight Functions: When members cannot vote independently, core constitutional duties — financial scrutiny, impeachment, legislative review — lose credibility and meaning. Executive Dominance: Systematic dismissal of Opposition notices, rushed legislation, and disregard for committee processes tilt the balance heavily in favour of the executive. Weakening of Neutral Offices: Constitutional authorities meant to be impartial guardians of parliamentary privilege have increasingly acted as instruments of discipline rather than neutrality.   Challenges / Criticisms  Majoritarian Monologue: Parliament risks becoming an approval chamber where debate is stifled and accountability sidelined. Committee System Dilution: Parliamentary committees, crucial for cross-party, evidence-based legislative scrutiny, are bypassed or weakened. Opposition Marginalisation: When discussions are blocked, disruption becomes the only tool left — a symptom, not the cause, of parliamentary dysfunction. Loss of Westminster Spirit: India’s model is diverging from mature democracies like the UK, Canada, and Australia, where executive accountability mechanisms remain robust. Democratic Erosion: Reduced legislative independence undermines constitutional morality, weakening checks on concentrated power.   Way Forward   Limit the Anti-Defection Law (UK/Canada Model): In the UK and Canada, party discipline is applied only to budget and confidence motions, allowing MPs to vote independently on policy matters; India should similarly confine whips to core confidence issues to restore legislators’ autonomy. Mandated Parliamentary Sitting Days (UK/Australia Model): The UK Parliament meets 120–150 days annually, and the Australian Parliament follows a pre-announced, mandatory session calendar; India needs a statutory minimum sitting requirement to prevent executive control over when Parliament meets. Strengthened Committee System (U.S./UK Model): U.S. Congressional committees have the power to summon senior officials, demand documents, and hold public hearings, while UK Select Committees routinely question ministers; India must empower its committees with compulsory referrals and ministerial accountability. Prime Ministerial Question Time (UK Model): The British PM must answer questions directly every Wednesday in a televised session; India should institutionalise a weekly Prime Minister’s Questions segment to enhance direct executive accountability. Neutral Presiding Officers (New Zealand/Australia Model): The Speakers of New Zealand and Australia resign from their party positions upon election and operate under strict neutrality norms; India should adopt similar safeguards to ensure impartial handling of parliamentary business. Independent Parliamentary Budget Office (U.S./Canada Model): The U.S. Congressional Budget Office and Canada’s Parliamentary Budget Officer scrutinise government finances independently; India should create an autonomous fiscal watchdog reporting directly to Parliament. Stronger Opposition Rights (Germany Model): Germany reserves committee chairs and agenda-setting rights for the opposition, ensuring checks on majority power; India must secure guaranteed discussion time and procedural tools for the Opposition. Mandatory Public Consultation for Bills (Nordic Model): Sweden, Norway, and Finland require open public consultations before major laws are passed; India should adopt compulsory pre-legislative scrutiny for all significant bills.   Conclusion Legislatures decline when dissent is penalised, debate is curtailed, and executive power overwhelms constitutional checks. Reviving Parliament’s role requires structural reforms, political restraint, and a renewed commitment to the original spirit of India’s democratic architecture.   Mains Question  Why is the Indian legislature increasingly losing its deliberative and oversight functions? Discuss the constitutional and ethical concerns arising from the dominance of the executive. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: Indian Express  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

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

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance Category: Polity and Governance Context: CEC of India is set to assume the role of the Chairperson of International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA) for the year 2026. About International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA): Establishment: It is an inter-governmental organisation established in 1995 to strengthen democratic institutions and electoral processes worldwide. Objective: The objectives of the Institute are to support stronger democratic institutions and processes, and more sustainable, effective and legitimate democracy. Secretariat: Its secretariat is located in Stockholm, Sweden. Association with UN: International IDEA has been granted UN observer status. Member countries: It currently has 35 member countries, with the United States and Japan as observers. India is a founding member of International IDEA Governance: The Institute’s governance consists of a Council of Member States, a Steering Committee, a Finance and Audit Committee, a Board of Advisers and a Secretariat, led by the Secretary-General. Major functions: Its working modalities include four elements: knowledge production, capacity development, advocacy as well as convening of dialogues. Focus areas: It focuses on six workstreams namely: Electoral Processes Constitution-Building  Democracy Assessment Political Participation and Representation Climate Change and Democracy Digitalization and Democracy Source: The Hindu Sirpur Archaeological Site Category: History and Culture Context: Sirpur is set for a facelift as Chhattisgarh pushes for a UNESCO World Heritage tag for the 5th Century archaeological site. About Sirpur Archaeological Site: Location: It is located in Mahasamund district of Chhattisgarh. It is a 5th–12th Century archaeological site located on the banks of the Mahanadi. Other names: It is also known as Shripur and Sripura. Discovery: It was first discovered in 1882 by Alexander Cunningham, a British army engineer who became the first Director-General of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) in 1871. Later excavations: Excavations stalled in subsequent years, resuming only in the early 1950s, and later in the 1990s and 2003. Historical significance: It was the flourishing capital of Dakshina Kosala under the Panduvanshi and later Somavamshi kings. Its rulers patronised art, architecture, and religious scholarship, making it a flourishing urban centre of its time. Major Buddhist centre: It was a major Buddhist centre with large viharas, meditation halls and excavated stupas. Visted by Chinese travellers: Excavations have revealed significant Buddhist remains, including the Anand Prabhu Kuti Vihara, visited by Chinese traveller Xuanzang in the 7th century CE. Religious and commercial hub: It also has a 6th Century market complex, showing Sirpur was both a religious and commercial hub. Notable Structures at the site: Lakshmana Temple (dedicated to Vishnu): It is one of India’s finest brick temples which was built around the 7th Century. Surang Tila complex: It is built on a high terrace and has multiple shrines in the panchayatana style (one main shrine surrounded by four subsidiary ones). Tivaradeva Mahavihara: It houses a significant Buddha statue. Suitability for UNESCO’s tag: Sirpur’s location along the Mahanadi creates a sacred riverine cultural landscape with ghats and temple clusters, aligning with UNESCO’s concept of a combined work of nature and humankind, enhancing the site’s value. Source: The Indian Express Etalin Hydroelectric Project (EHEP) Category: Environment and Ecology Context: The Project Affected Peoples Forum (PAPF) of Arunachal Pradesh has urged NHPC Ltd to reinstate every local worker previously engaged in the Etalin Hydroelectric Project. About Etalin Hydroelectric Project (EHEP): Location: It is a 3,097 MW hydropower project planned in Arunachal Pradesh’s Dibang Valley. Rivers associated: The project involves two gravity dams, one on the Dri River and another on the Talo (Tangon) River, both tributaries of the Dibang River, with an underground powerhouse near their confluence close to Etalin village. Construction: The project is being executed by NHPC Limited (formerly known as the National Hydroelectric Power Corporation). Nature: It is a type of hydroelectric power generation project that utilizes the natural flow and elevation drop of a river to produce electricity. Uniqueness: It is one of the largest hydropower projects proposed in the country in terms of installed capacity. EHEP is proposed to be developed as a combination of two run-of-the-river schemes. Environmental impact: The project will require the felling of over 270,000 trees and the diversion of over 1,100 hectares of unclassified forest land. Concern: The project area falls under the “richest bio-geographical province of the Himalayan zone” and “one of the mega biodiversity hotspots of the world”. Indigenous tribes: The project area is dominated by indigenous populations belonging to Idu-Mishmi tribes. Source: Northeast Now Vikram-I Rocket Category: Science and Technology Context: PM Modi inaugurated Skyroot-built India’s first private rocket Vikram-I in Hyderabad. About Vikram-I Rocket: Development: It is developed by Skyroot Aerospace, a Hyderabad-based private space start-up. Nomenclature: It is India’s new private orbital-class launch vehicle named after Dr. Vikram Sarabhai, the father of India’s space programme. Uniqueness: It is India’s first privately-built orbital-class rocket capable of launching satellites into Earth orbit. Thrust: It produces 1,200 kN of thrust using an all-carbon composite structure for enhanced lightweight strength and efficiency. Design: The design emphasises simplicity, reliability, and the ability to launch within 24 hours from any location. Stages: It has four stages and the first three stages are solid-fuelled, providing robust initial thrust, topped by a hypergolic liquid upper stage for precise orbital adjustments. Stage 4 uses a cluster of four Raman engines. Targets small satellite segment: It is built to target the small-satellite segment and is capable of placing multiple satellites into orbit in a single mission. Payload Capacity: It can deploy up to 350 kg into low Earth orbit (LEO) and 260 kg into a sun-synchronous orbit (SSO). Source: India Today Tex-RAMPS Scheme Category: Government Schemes Context: The Government of India has approved the Tex-RAMPS Scheme, to strengthen research, innovation and competitiveness in textiles sector. About Tex-RAMPS Scheme: Nature: It is a Central Sector Scheme focused on research, assessment, monitoring, planning, and start-up support for the textiles sector. Nodal ministry: It is implemented by the Ministry of Textiles, Government of India. Objective: It aims to future-proof India’s textiles and apparel ecosystem through innovation, data systems, capacity building and start-up support. Time-period: The scheme, with a total outlay of ₹305 crore for the period FY 2025-26 to FY 2030-31, is co-terminus with the upcoming Finance Commission cycle. Key components of Tex-RAMPS: Research & Innovation: Promotion of advanced research in smart textiles, sustainability, process efficiency, and emerging technologies to boost India’s innovation capacity. Data, Analytics & Diagnostics: Creation of robust data systems including employment assessments, supply chain mapping, and the India-Size study to facilitate evidence-based policymaking. Integrated Textiles Statistical System (ITSS): A real-time, integrated data and analytics platform to support structured monitoring and strategic decision-making. Capacity Development & Knowledge Ecosystem: Strengthening of State-level planning, dissemination of best practices, capacity building workshops, and organisation of sectoral events. Start-up & Innovation Support: Support for incubators, hackathons, and academia-industry collaborations to nurture high-value textile start-ups and entrepreneurship. Expected outcomes: The Tex-RAMPS Scheme is expected to- Enhance India’s competitiveness in global markets Strengthen research and innovation ecosystems Improve data-driven policymaking Generate employment opportunities Foster deeper collaboration between States, industry, academia, and government institutions Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) Rebuilding India’s Statistical Architecture: Lessons from IMF’s Low Grading and Broader Data Concerns (UPSC GS Paper III – “Indian Economy; Government Budgeting; Inclusive Growth; Data and Statistical Systems”)   Context (Introduction) The IMF’s ‘C’ grade for India’s national accounts, outdated base years for key indicators, and persistent blind spots in informal sector measurement expose systemic weaknesses in India’s statistical architecture, raising concerns over macroeconomic reliability, policy precision, and global credibility.   Main Arguments Global Credibility Signal: The IMF’s ‘C’ grade signals impaired economic surveillance and places India alongside low-transparency economies, reducing confidence in GDP, GVA, exports, investment, and consumption estimates. Outdated Base Years: Key indicators — GDP, IIP, and CPI — still rely on the 2011–12 base year, failing to capture a decade of structural shifts such as rising services, digital consumption, gig platforms, and urbanisation. Policy Distortion: An outdated CPI basket (with excessive food weight) misrepresents inflation, weakening the RBI’s inflation-targeting framework and complicating monetary-policy calibration during volatile global conditions. Informal Sector Underestimation: With the majority of Indians still working in unregistered and cash-based activities, weak informal-sector capture leads to misestimated growth, disguised distress, and misplaced welfare targeting. Fragmented Data Reforms: While improvements like MCA-21 (corporate dataset) and upcoming GST-based GDP estimation exist, their slow integration and fragmented implementation undermine their effectiveness.   Challenges / Criticisms  Delayed Updates: Repeated postponements of base-year revisions reveal administrative inertia despite rapid shifts in economic composition. Inadequate Institutional Capacity: Statistical agencies remain understaffed, underfunded, and often dependent on outdated survey frameworks, affecting frequency and depth of data collection. Weak High-Frequency Indicators: IIP and CPI lack responsiveness to contemporary consumption and production patterns, producing mismatches with real-time economic activity. Opaque Methodologies: Limited transparency in back-series revisions, sampling decisions, and estimation techniques invites suspicion and politicisation of data. Digital Economy Blind Spots: Informal digital work, e-commerce, platform-based labour, and peer-to-peer financial ecosystems remain statistically invisible in current models.   Way Forward Five-Year Base-Year Revision Cycle: Institutionalise periodic resets for GDP, IIP, and CPI to keep pace with structural economic change. Comprehensive Informal Sector Mapping: Integrate GST records, EPFO/ESIC databases, household surveys, labour force data, and fintech transaction trends to estimate informal output more accurately. Upgrade CPI Methodology: Rebalance weights to reflect contemporary consumption — services, digital goods, mobility, health, and education — over the outdated food-centric basket. Institutional Strengthening: Provide statutory autonomy, expanded staffing, and modern digital infrastructure to NSO, MoSPI, and the new National Data Governance Framework. Transparent Methodological Communication: Publish assumptions, revisions, and estimation practices openly to build public and international trust. Leverage Big Data: Use GST filings, satellite imagery, e-way bills, UPI transaction patterns, and machine-learning tools for nowcasting and real-time economic monitoring.   Conclusion A rapidly diversifying economy cannot be governed with outdated statistical foundations. The IMF’s low grading is a timely reminder that credible data is not merely technical infrastructure — it is central to sound monetary policy, welfare targeting, investment planning, and India’s global economic reputation. Strengthening statistical systems is thus essential for India’s transition to a modern, high-growth economy.   Mains Question  Why did the IMF downgrade India’s national accounts statistics, and what does this reveal about weaknesses in India’s data systems? What reforms would you suggest? (250 words)   Source: The Hindu Aravallis Need Protection: Ecological Value vs. Weakening Definitions (UPSC GS Paper III – “Environment; Conservation; Environmental Impact Assessment; Land Degradation”)   Context (Introduction) A recent Supreme Court acceptance of the Environment Ministry’s proposal to classify only landforms above 100 metres as part of the Aravalli range risks shrinking its protected area by nearly 90% in Rajasthan, raising serious concerns over mining, ecological loss, and policy inconsistency.   Main Arguments Critical Ecological Functions: The Aravallis act as a 700 km green lung, moderating hot winds, preventing Thar Desert expansion, recharging aquifers, and supporting rich biodiversity. Massive Reduction in Protection: The 100-metre height filter shrinks protected Aravalli area in Rajasthan drastically, from 12,081 hills (20m+ as mapped by FSI) to just 1,048 qualifying under the new definition. Contradiction with Scientific Criteria: The panel’s definition contradicts the Forest Survey of India’sestablished mapping standards, which treat all hillocks, plains, ridges, and plateaus as parts of a single functioning ecosystem. Historical Judicial Recognition: Since 2002, the Supreme Court has recognised the Aravalli as an integrated ecological unit essential for preventing air pollution and desertification. Continued Degradation: Surveys, including the SC’s Central Empowered Committee (2018), show the Aravallis have already lost a quarter of their hills due to mining, deforestation, and encroachments.   Challenges / Criticisms  Weakened Ecological Safeguards: The new definition risks opening large tracts of fragile terrain to mining, accelerating degradation. Policy Inconsistency: The Ministry’s stance contradicts its own Aravalli Landscape Restoration Action Plan (May 2025) which emphasises protection from deforestation, mining, grazing, and encroachment. Desertification Threat: Eastward movement of desert sands has already affected areas like Gurugram and Alwar, underscoring the need for comprehensive protection. Mining Pressure: Rajasthan’s mining industry may exploit the narrowed definition, intensifying ecological damage in already vulnerable zones. Loss of Ecosystem Services: Fragmentation of the landscape will impair hydrology, local climate moderation, biodiversity corridors, and pollution buffering for NCR.   Way Forward Restore Scientific Criteria: Adopt FSI’s broader geomorphological definition which includes hills, slopes, ridges, plains, and plateaus as a single ecosystem. Strengthen Regulatory Framework: Reinstate strict mining restrictions across the entire Aravalli landscape, including low-elevation hillocks. Implement Restoration Plan: Operationalise the Aravalli Landscape Restoration Action Plan with clear timelines, funding, and monitoring. Use Satellite-Based Mapping: Leverage GIS, remote sensing, and ecological zoning to identify vulnerable areas and regulate land use. Community-Centric Conservation: Engage local communities in afforestation, water conservation, and protection efforts to ensure long-term stewardship.   Conclusion India’s oldest mountain system cannot be safeguarded through narrow definitions that privilege extractive interests over ecological stability. A holistic, science-based protection framework is essential to preserve the Aravallis’ irreplaceable environmental functions and shield northern India from worsening desertification and pollution.   Mains Question  The Supreme Court’s acceptance of the Environment Ministry’s new definition of the Aravallis has significant ecological implications.” Examine. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: Indian Express