Posts

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 31st October 2025

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

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

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) One District One Product (ODOP) Category: Government Schemes Context: In a bid to promote local talent, the Indian Railways will patronise the newly launched ‘Aabhar’ online store that will showcase a range of exquisite gift items manufactured under the ambit of One District One Product (ODOP). About One District One Product (ODOP): Nodal ministry: One District One Product (ODOP) was launched by the Ministry of Food Processing Industries in 2018. Objective: it aims to help districts reach their full potential, foster economic and socio-cultural growth, and create employment opportunities, especially, in rural areas. Every district as export hub: This initiative is carried out with the ‘Districts as Exports Hub’ initiative by the Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT), Department of Commerce. It aims to turn every district in India, into an export hub through promotion of the product in which the district specialises.  In line with Atmanirbhar Bharat: The initiative plans to accomplish this by scaling manufacturing, supporting local businesses, finding potential foreign customers and so on, thus helping to achieve the ‘Atmanirbhar Bharat’ vision. Process of selection: Under the ODOP initiative, all products have been selected by States/UTs by taking into consideration the existing ecosystem on the ground, products identified under Districts as Export Hubs (DEH), and GI-tagged products. Source: The Hindu Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) Category: Economy Context: Foreign Portfolio Investors net bought equities worth ₹14,610 crore in October after three consecutive months of selling, the strongest inflow since July this year. About Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI): Definition: Foreign portfolio investment (FPI) consists of securities and other financial assets passively held by foreign investors. It does not provide the investor with direct ownership of financial assets and is relatively liquid depending on the volatility of the market. Composition: FPIs include stocks, bonds, mutual funds, exchange traded funds, American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), and Global Depositary Receipts (GDRs). Part of capital account: FPI is part of a country’s capital account and is shown on its Balance of Payments (BOP). The BOP measures the amount of money flowing from one country to other countries over one monetary year. Regulated by SEBI: The Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) brought new FPI Regulations, 2019, replacing the erstwhile FPI Regulations of 2014. Hot money: FPI is often referred to as “hot money” because of its tendency to flee at the first signs of trouble in an economy. FPI is more liquid, volatile and therefore riskier than FDI. Key features: Investors do not participate in the management of the company. It aims for capital appreciation rather than long-term strategic interests. Further, it provides capital flow into financial markets, increasing efficiency and investment potential. Difference with FDI: A foreign investor can hold up to 10% of the total paid-up capital of an Indian company without being classified as an FDI. If the holding exceeds 10%, it is reclassified as Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). About FOREX Reserves: Nature: Foreign exchange (FOREX) reserves are assets held on reserve by a central bank in foreign currencies, which can include bonds, treasury bills and other government securities. Dominated by dollars: It needs to be noted that most foreign exchange reserves are held in US dollars. India’s Forex Reserve include: Foreign Currency Assets Gold reserves Special Drawing Rights Reserve Tranche Position with the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Source: The Hindu Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Category: International Relations Context: Chinese President Xi Jinping takes centre stage at Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meet and promises to defend global free trade. About Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC): Nature: The Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation is a regional economic forum and was formed in 1989. Objective: The aim of the grouping is to “leverage the growing interdependence of the Asia-Pacific and create greater prosperity for the people of the region through regional economic integration.” Focus: The focus of APEC has been on trade and economic issues and hence, it terms the countries as “economies.” Non-binding commitments: APEC operates based on no binding commitments or treaty obligations. Commitments are undertaken voluntarily and capacity-building projects help members implement APEC initiatives. Member Countries: Currently, APEC has 21 members, which includes Australia, Brunei, Hong Kong, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Indonesia, China, Japan, South Korea, Russia, Canada, the United States, Mexico, Peru, Chile, Malaysia, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand and Taiwan. Membership criterion: The criterion for membership, however, is that each member must be an independent economic entity, rather than a sovereign state. India as member: India was not its member till 1997 as it still had too many rules and restrictions. Further, the group decided to stop accepting new members in 1997, to focus on improving the existing cooperation among the current members. So, India is not its member and currently has the ‘observer’ status. Significance: Since its formation, the grouping championed the lowering of trade tariffs, free trade, and economic liberalisation. In the Seoul Declaration (1991), APEC member economies proclaimed the creation of a liberalised free trade area around the Pacific Rim as the principal objective of the organisation. Contribution in world trade: APEC accounts for approximately 62% of world GDP and about half of world trade. It is one of the oldest and most influential multilateral platforms in the Asia-Pacific region. Source: The Hindu Nauradehi Wildlife Sanctuary Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister said that Nauradehi Sanctuary will become the third home for cheetahs in the state after Kuno National Park and Gandhi Sagar Sanctuary. About Nauradehi Wildlife Sanctuary: Location: It is spread across three districts, i.e., Sagar, Damoh, and Narsinghpur, of Madhya Pradesh. The entire Sanctuary is situated on a plateau, forming part of the upper Vindhyan range. Area: It covers nearly 1197 sq.km. area. Declaration as wildlife sanctuary: It was declared a wildlife sanctuary in 1975. It is the largest wildlife sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh. Acts as a natural corridor: It acts as a corridor for Panna Tiger Reserve and Satpura Tiger Reserve while indirectly connecting Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve via Rani Durgawati Wildlife Sanctuary. Drainage: Three-fourths of the wildlife sanctuary falls in the basin of the Ganges tributary, the Yamuna River, of which the Ken River is a tributary, and one-fourth of the sanctuary falls in the Narmada basin. Major rivers: The north-flowing Kopra River, Bamner River, Vyarma River, and Bearma River, which are tributaries of the Ken River, are the major rivers of this protected area. Vegetation: It is mainly a dry mixed-deciduous forest type. Flora: Major trees found are teak, saja, dhawda, sal, tendu (Coromandel ebony), bhirra (East Indian satinwood), and mahua. Fauna: The chief faunal elements include Nilgai, Chinkara, Chital, Sambhar, Black Buck, Barking deer, Common Langur, Rhesus Macaque, Freshwater Turtles, Spotted Grey Creeper, Cranes, Egrets, Lapwings, etc. Source: NDTV Model Youth Gram Sabha Initiative Category: Government Schemes Context: The Ministry of Panchayati Raj, in collaboration with the Ministry of Education (Department of School Education & Literacy) and the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, launched the Model Youth Gram Sabha (MYGS) initiative today in New Delhi. About Model Youth Gram Sabha Initiative: Nature: Model Youth Gram Sabha Initiative is a simulated forum for school children to participate in mock Gram Sabha sessions. Objective: It is a pioneering initiative to strengthen Janbhagidari and promote participatory local governance by engaging students in simulated Gram Sabha sessions. Based on model UN: It is an initiative based on the Model UN – an educational simulation of the United Nations – in schools across the country. Nodal ministry: It is an initiative of the Ministry of Panchayati Raj, in collaboration with the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Tribal Affairs.  Implementation: It will be rolled out across more than 1,000 schools nationwide, including Jawahar Navodaya Vidyalayas, Eklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRSs), and State Government Schools. Key features: Students from classes 9-12 will play the roles of sarpanch, ward members, and village-level officials, including village secretary, Anganwadi worker etc. They will hold mock meetings of the Gram Sabha, discuss various issues, and prepare the village budget and development plans. Funding support: The Panchayati Raj Ministry will also provide a support of Rs 20,000 to each school for holding the mock Gram Sabha. Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) Integrated Cold Chain and Value Addition Infrastructure (ICCVAI) (GS Paper 3: Agriculture – Issues of Farm Subsidies, Post-Harvest Management, and Value Addition in Agriculture)   Context (Introduction) India suffers annual post-harvest losses of nearly ₹92,000 crore, particularly in perishables. To address inefficiencies across the supply chain, the Integrated Cold Chain and Value Addition Infrastructure (ICCVAI) scheme under PM Kisan SAMPADA Yojana (PMKSY) ensures farm-to-market connectivity and farmer income stability.   Objectives and Rationale of ICCVAI Reducing losses: Designed to minimize wastage in perishables — fruits, vegetables, dairy, meat, poultry, and fish — through an integrated cold chain network. Enhancing farmer returns: Enables producers to realize better prices by linking farm-level infrastructure to processing and retail. Comprehensive infrastructure: Promotes pre-cooling, pack houses, processing, refrigerated transport, and retail-level preservation. Employment generation: Supports agro-industrial linkages, creating over 1.7 lakh jobs (as of 2025). Value addition: Encourages processing and packaging that enhance shelf life, quality, and competitiveness in domestic and export markets.   Key Components and Eligibility Farm Level Infrastructure (FLI): Includes pre-cooling units, collection centers, and primary processing facilities. Distribution Hubs (DH): Centralized units for storage and dispatch with temperature-controlled systems. Transport linkage: Refrigerated/insulated vehicles ensure cold chain continuity. Eligible entities (PIAs): Individuals, FPOs, cooperatives, SHGs, NGOs, firms, PSUs, and companies can implement projects.   Complementary Government Schemes Mission for Integrated Development of Horticulture (MIDH): Supports cold storages up to 5,000 MT with 35% subsidy in general areas and 50% in hilly/North-Eastern states. Promotes horticulture infrastructure through State Horticulture Missions. Operation Greens: Started in 2018–19 for Tomato, Onion, Potato (TOP) value chain; later extended to more fruits, vegetables, and shrimp. Aims at price stabilization and integrated value-chain development. National Horticulture Board (NHB): Offers 35–50% subsidy for construction/modernization of cold storages (5,000–20,000 MT capacity). Focuses on Controlled Atmosphere (CA) and scientific storage systems. Agriculture Infrastructure Fund (AIF): Corpus of ₹1 lakh crore; provides collateral-free loans up to ₹2 crore with 3% interest subvention. Funds post-harvest management and community infrastructure like warehouses and cold stores.   Policy Revisions and Modernization Efforts June 2022: Fruits and vegetables shifted to Operation Greens for specialized focus.Prevented duplication and improved resource targeting. August 2024: Introduced multi-product food irradiation units for enhanced shelf life and food safety. Encouraged adoption of ionizing radiation as a non-chemical preservation method. May 2025: Strengthened end-to-end value addition; expanded coverage to non-horticulture perishables. Reinforced fair price realization for farmers through efficient market linkages. Technology inclusion: Focus on IoT-based cold monitoring, energy-efficient refrigeration, and AI-enabled logistics for optimization. Administrative simplification: Standardized guidelines, digital monitoring, and EOI-based selection enhanced transparency and speed.   Challenges and Limitations Fragmented infrastructure: Uneven distribution of facilities across states, with concentration in industrial belts. Energy inefficiency: High operational costs due to unreliable power supply and obsolete technology. Limited awareness: Small farmers lack knowledge or capital to access the scheme. Coordination gaps: Overlap with horticulture schemes causes duplication and administrative delay. Environmental concerns: Refrigerant gases and energy-intensive systems raise sustainability issues.   Reforms and Way Forward Integrated policy alignment: Greater convergence between ICCVAI, AIF, and e-NAM for holistic agri-logistics. Cluster-based models: Focused development in agri-export and FPO clusters to maximize utilization. Technology infusion: Promotion of IoT sensors, solar cold rooms, and blockchain traceability for efficiency and transparency. Capacity building: Training programs for FPOs and SHGs to manage cold chain assets sustainably. Sustainability thrust: Adoption of green refrigeration and renewable energy-powered systems to reduce carbon footprint.   Conclusion The ICCVAI scheme reflects adaptive and technology-driven governance aimed at bridging the post-harvest gap from farm to consumer. Ensuring inclusion of smallholders, energy efficiency, and integration with digital agri-platforms will determine its future success in achieving a sustainable, remunerative, and resilient food system.   Mains Question “Post-harvest management is not merely about storage but about creating a value chain from farm to consumer.” Discuss in light of the ICCVAI scheme under Pradhan Mantri Kisan SAMPADA Yojana. (150 words, 10 marks) Source: Press Information Bureau India’s $30 Trillion Dream: Assessing the Economic Projection (GS Paper 3 – Economy: Growth and Development, External Sector)   Context (Introduction) India’s Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal, at the Berlin Global Dialogue (2025), projected that India could become a $30 trillion economy in the next 20–25 years.  The statement underscores India’s long-term economic confidence amidst ongoing global economic turbulence.  Currently, India’s nominal GDP stands at $3.9 trillion (FY 2024) — about one-eighth of the US economy ($29.2 trillion). Goyal’s assertion draws attention to India’s growth potential, exchange rate dynamics, and economic resilience in a multipolar trading order.   Understanding the Economic Size and Context Nominal GDP Basis: India’s GDP, measured in nominal terms, represents the total market value of goods and services produced domestically without adjusting for inflation. Comparative Scale: As of 2024, California’s economy ($4.1 trillion) exceeds India’s total GDP, reflecting the gap India aims to bridge by 2050. Global Heft: The size of GDP determines global economic influence, trade negotiation leverage, and investment attractiveness. Exchange Rate Factor: In 2014, the rupee-dollar rate was ₹65; by 2024 it depreciated to ₹84, impacting the dollar value of India’s GDP. Conversion Significance: A rupee-denominated GDP of ₹330 trillion would translate into a $5 trillion economy only if the exchange rate stabilizes — illustrating the interplay of growth and currency strength.   The Basis of Goyal’s $30 Trillion Projection Historical Growth Trend: Between 2000–2024, India’s nominal GDP grew at a CAGR of 11.9%, while the rupee depreciated at 2.7% per annum. Forward Projection (25-year horizon): If these trends persist, India could achieve a $30 trillion economy by 2048, aligning with Goyal’s 20–25-year window. Exchange Rate Impact: Moderate depreciation aids export competitiveness but erodes dollar-based GDP valuation. Nominal vs. Real GDP: Projections use nominal growth rates; real GDP (inflation-adjusted) growth would be substantially lower but still indicative of productive expansion. Long-Term Vision: The projection assumes policy continuity, demographic dividends, and sustained capital formation.   Recent Slowdown: A Reality Check Post-2014 Performance: Nominal GDP growth slowed to 10.3% CAGR (2014–2025), while rupee depreciation accelerated to 3.08% annually. Revised Outcome: Under current growth-depreciation trends, India would reach the $30 trillion mark only by 2055 — about 7–8 years later than Goyal’s timeline. Structural Constraints: Slow manufacturing growth, export dependency, and productivity bottlenecks remain critical concerns. Fiscal Moderation: Fiscal consolidation efforts and inflation control have moderated nominal expansion. Policy Sensitivity: Marginal changes in growth rates, even by 1–1.5%, can alter long-term outcomes by several trillion dollars.   Long-Term Implications and Lessons Compounding Effect: Over 25 years, small growth differentials (11.9% vs 10.3%) yield vast divergences — up to 75% larger GDP by 2055 under higher growth Decadal Momentum: Each decade’s performance significantly affects cumulative GDP — emphasizing the need for sustained high growth Exchange Rate Stability: Maintaining currency stability is vital for credible dollar-denominated GDP growth Investment Cycle Revival: Sustaining 8%+ real growth will require investment in infrastructure, digitalization, and green industries Demographic Dividend: Harnessing India’s working-age population (68% share) remains a core enabler for productivity-driven expansion.   The Way Forward Structural Reforms: Deepening labour, land, and capital market reforms to boost total factor productivity. Trade Competitiveness: Diversifying export markets, joining global value chains, and negotiating balanced FTAs aligned with long-term interests. Fiscal & Monetary Coordination: Ensuring prudent fiscal policy alongside accommodative but inflation-aware monetary stance. Technological Leap: Leveraging AI, digital governance, and renewable technologies to create high-value sectors. Sustainable Growth Path: Balancing high GDP expansion with environmental and social sustainability, as underscored by SDG-linked economic strategies.   Conclusion Piyush Goyal’s projection is economically plausible but conditionally dependent — achievable only through consistent double-digit nominal growth, moderate rupee depreciation, and robust structural reforms.  While India’s economic fundamentals remain strong, the difference between $30 trillion by 2048 and by 2055 illustrates how even minor policy slippages can reshape long-term outcomes.  The path to $30 trillion is not merely a numeric goal but a test of India’s institutional resilience, reform credibility, and demographic execution in a rapidly changing global order.   Mains Question Examine the structural and policy reforms necessary for India to sustain double-digit nominal growth required to achieve a $30 trillion economy by mid-century. (150 words, 10 marks) Source: The Indian Express

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 31st October 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 31st October – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Quadrilateral Security Dialogue (QUAD) Category: International Relations Context: The summit between U.S. President and Chinese President in Busan, South Korea, ended with several outcomes for bilateral ties between the two countries and may also impact India and Quad.                            About Quad: Members: QUAD, also known as the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue is a strategic forum comprising four countries: the United States, Japan, India, and Australia. Objective: The Quad is aimed at promoting regional security and economic cooperation in the Indo-Pacific region. Not a formal grouping: The Quad is a loose grouping rather than a formal alliance. It does not have a decision-making body or a secretariat, or a formal structure like NATO or the United Nations. The alliance is maintained through summits, meetings, information exchanges, and military drills. Revolves around Indo-Pacific region: The four countries share a common interest in maintaining a free and open Indo-Pacific, promoting democracy, human rights, and the rule of law, and countering China’s expanding influence in the region. Counters influence of China: The Quad is seen as a mechanism for balancing China’s influence in the region (through ‘String of pearls’ theory), although its members have stressed that it is not a military alliance and is open to other countries who share their values and interests. Other focus areas: The QUAD aims to promote people-to-people ties through academic and cultural exchanges and enhance disaster relief and humanitarian assistance capabilities. It also resolves debt issues under the G20 Common Framework through the ‘Quad Debt Management Resource Portal.’ Evolution: 2007: The Quad was initially formed in 2007 during an informal meeting of leaders from the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). It was Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe who first proposed the idea of creating the Quad. 2012: The Japanese Prime Minister highlighted the concept of the ‘Democratic Security Diamond’ in Asia, which includes the US, Japan, India, and Australia. 2017: Once again confronted with the growing danger posed by China, the four nations revitalized the Quad by expanding its goals and devising a system that aimed to gradually establish an international order based on rules. India, Japan, USA, and Australia held the first ‘Quad’ talks in Manila ahead of the ASEAN Summit 2017. Source: The Hindu Adaptation Gap Report 2025 Category: Miscellaneous Context: Amid rising global temperatures, UNEP’s 2025 Adaptation Gap Report: Running on Empty finds that a yawning gap in adaptation finance for developing countries is putting lives, livelihoods and entire economies at risk. About Adaptation Gap Report: Published By: It is an annual flagship publication of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) –Copenhagen Climate Centre with contributions from multiple global institutions and experts. Objective: The Adaptation Gap Report tracks global progress on climate adaptation planning, implementation, and finance, assessing how far the world is from achieving climate resilience goals. Focus on developing countries: To evaluate whether nations—especially developing ones—are adapting fast enough to climate impacts, and to quantify the adaptation finance gap to support global negotiations under the UNFCCC and COP30. Important highlights from Adaptation Gap Report 2025: The report updates the cost of adaptation finance needed in developing countries, putting it at US$310 billion per year in 2035, when based on modelled costs. When based on extrapolated needs expressed in Nationally Determined Contributions and National Adaptation Plans, this figure rises to US$365 billion a year. Meanwhile, international public adaptation finance flows to developing countries were US$26 billion in 2023: down from US$28 billion the previous year. This makes adaptation financing needs in developing countries 12-14 times as much as current flows. If current finance trends continue, the Glasgow Climate Pact goal of doubling international public adaptation finance from 2019 levels by 2025 will not be achieved, while the New Collective Quantified Goal for climate finance is not ambitious enough to close the finance gap. The private sector could do more – with potential to provide around US$50 billion per year if backed by targeted policy action and blended finance solutions. Source: UNEP Bharat Taxi Category: Government Schemes Context: India is set to launch it’s first-ever cooperative cab service “Bharat Taxi” in November 2025 in Delhi and it aims to address challenges faced by both commuters and drivers using private cab services. About Bharat Taxi: Launched by: It is launched by Union Ministry of Cooperation and the National e-Governance Division (NeGD). Objective: It aims to build a robust, fairer system settling growing urban cab facility needs in the country. Based on cooperative model: This cooperative cab service offers a transparent, driver-owned alternative to private aggregators where drivers become members and shareholders instead only as ’employees’. One stop solution for passengers and drivers: Bharat Taxi is expected to be as a materialistic solution for the long-standing challenges faced by both commuters and drivers using private cab services. The model ensures all the stakeholders including the driver, the passenger behind the wheels have a voice in the system. Integration with other government services: The platform integrates with government digital services like DigiLocker and UMANG, ensuring seamless verification and service access. Management: Sahakar Taxi Cooperative Limited manages Bharat Taxi comprising cooperative leaders and driver representatives. It is backed by eight major institutions, renowned for its strong governance, transparency, and long-term sustainability for the initiative. Source: Deccan Herald Saranda Sanctuary Category: Environment and Ecology Context: The Supreme Court reserved its verdict on the Jharkhand government’s plea to reduce the expanse of to be notified Saranda sanctuary from its earlier 310 sq km to 250 sq km to exclude 60 sq km of forest inhabited by tribals to protect their forest rights. About Saranda Sanctuary: Location: It is a proposed wildlife sanctuary in West Singhbhum district of Jharkhand, located within the Saranda Forest Division, known as one of Asia’s largest Sal (Shorea robusta) forests and a key biodiversity hotspot at the Jharkhand–Odisha border. Nomenclature: Situated in southern Jharkhand, the Saranda region—means “land of seven hundred hills.” Area: It covers about 856 sq km, of which 816 sq km is reserved forest. Ecological corridor between several states: It lies within the Singhbhum Elephant Reserve, forming a vital ecological corridor between Jharkhand, Odisha, and Chhattisgarh. Evolution: It was declared a game reserve in 1968 under the Bihar Forest Act. The National Green Tribunal (2022) directed Jharkhand to notify it as a sanctuary under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. Flora: Dense cover of Sal, Kusum, Mahua, and rare orchids are found here. Fauna: It forms an important habitat for Asian elephants, four-horned antelope, sloth bears, flying lizards, and migratory birds. Important Communities: It is home to Ho, Munda, Oraon, and several PVTGs, reliant on forest produce like mahua and resin. Mineral resources: It contains nearly 26% of India’s iron ore reserves, making it a major mining zone for SAIL and private operators. Source: Times of India Koyla Shakti Dashboard and CLAMP Portal Category: Government Schemes Context: In a significant step toward digital transformation, the Union Minister of Coal and Mines launched two transformative digital platforms the KOYLA SHAKTI Dashboard and the Coal Land Acquisition, Management, Portal (CLAMP) at New Delhi. About Koyla Shakti Dashboard: Nature: The Koyla Shakti Dashboard is a pioneering digital platform that integrates the entire coal value chain from mine to market on a unified interface. Development: Developed by the Ministry of Coal, the Koyla Shakti – Smart Coal Analytics Dashboard (SCAD) serves as a centralized digital platform integrating data from multiple stakeholders. Objective: The primary objective of Koyla Shakti is to strengthen operational efficiency, promote transparency, and enhance coordination across the coal supply chain. Provides real-time coordination: The platform facilitates real-time coordination among coal companies, railways, ports, and end users, thereby enhancing operational efficiency and ensuring seamless coal logistics. Data-driven governance: As a comprehensive decision-support system, Koyla Shakti enables data-driven governance, optimizes resource allocation, and strengthens supply chain management. In line with Aatmanirbhar Bharat: This initiative underscores the Ministry’s commitment to transparency, efficiency, and technological innovation, in line with the Government’s vision of Aatmanirbhar Bharat and Minimum Government, Maximum Governance. About CLAMP Portal: Nature: The Coal Land Acquisition, Management, Portal (CLAMP) is a unified digital solution for the coal sector. Objective: It is aimed at streamlining land acquisition, compensation, and rehabilitation & resettlement (R&R) processes in the coal sector. Centralised depository: Serving as a centralized repository of land records, the portal ensures data integration, enhances accountability, and minimizes procedural delays. Step towards transparency: By digitizing the complete workflow from uploading land details to payment of compensation, CLAMP enhances transparency, efficiency, and inter-agency coordination in land management practices across coal PSUs. Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) Should AI be Introduced as Part of School Curricula? (GS Paper 2: Issues Relating to Education; GS Paper 3: Science and Technology – Developments and their Applications)   Context( Introduction) The Ministry of Education’s proposal to introduce an Artificial Intelligence (AI) curriculum from Class 3 onwards, along with the ‘Skilling for AI Readiness’ initiative, has sparked debate over India’s readiness, infrastructure, and educational priorities in integrating AI at the school level.   Main Arguments in Favour AI Literacy vs. AI Skills: A phased approach is being designed — early grades (Classes 3–8) focus on AI literacy (understanding concepts, ethics, responsible use), while senior grades (Classes 9–12) focus on AI skills such as coding, Python, and data analytics. Future Workforce Readiness: Early exposure prepares students for automation-driven job markets, supporting initiatives like Digital India and Skill India. Enhancing Critical Thinking: Integrating AI at foundational stages can strengthen analytical reasoning, creativity, and problem-solving skills among children. Evolving Pedagogy: Education must shift from rote learning and cognitive models to constructivist and experiential learning, making technology native to classrooms. Global Alignment: Countries such as Finland, Singapore, and the U.S. have successfully included AI ethics and digital education, showing that responsible introduction is possible and beneficial.   Criticisms and Drawbacks Rapid Technological Change: AI technologies evolve faster than curriculum design, risking obsolescence (e.g., prompt engineering may soon disappear). Digital and Language Divide: Over 50% of schools lack digital infrastructure, and AI tools in regional languages remain limited, creating inequity. Risk of “Dis-Education”: Overdependence on AI-generated responses may reduce students’ motivation to learn and think critically. Teacher Preparedness: About 9% of schools have only one teacher, and half lack full qualifications. Without AI literacy and training, implementation may fail. Ethical and Psychological Concerns: Children may overshare personal information with chatbots or develop dependency, risking data misuse and psychological issues. Infrastructure Gaps: Schools without electricity or internet connectivity cannot realistically deliver AI-based lessons, widening the urban-rural divide.   Reforms and Recommendations Phased and Contextual Introduction: Primary Level (Classes 3–5): Focus on AI awareness and ethical understanding using simple, real-life examples. Middle Level (Classes 6–8): Introduce hands-on, unplugged projects to develop critical thinking and ethical AI use. Secondary Level (Classes 9–12): Teach AI applications, programming, NLP, and data analytics to build professional skills. Teacher Capacity Building: Conduct in-service AI training, develop open-source AI teaching toolkits, and integrate pedagogical support systems. Inclusive Digital Infrastructure: Expand PM eVidya and National Digital Education Architecture (NDEAR) to provide AI learning access to rural and government schools. Child Safety and Data Protection: Enforce age-appropriate AI design codes, strict privacy rules, and data guardrails to ensure ethical AI interaction. Localization and Accessibility: Collaborate with Bhashini Mission and other initiatives to develop multilingual AI tools for diverse learners. Ethical AI Education: Integrate AI ethics, fairness, and accountability modules, in line with NEP 2020’s vision for value-based and experiential learning. Continuous Curriculum Review: Establish an AI in Education Council to periodically revise and update the syllabus based on technological developments.   Conclusion Introducing AI education is not merely about producing coders or engineers, but about nurturing critical thinkers capable of using technology wisely and ethically. With a phased, inclusive, and ethically grounded approach, India can cultivate an AI-ready generation that combines innovation with responsibility to shape a technologically empowered yet human-centered future.   Mains Question “Introducing AI education from the primary level can democratize future opportunities but risks deepening digital inequality.” Discuss in the context of India’s education system and NEP 2020. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu Journalism Ethics in Disaster Reporting (GS Paper 4: Ethics in Journalism and Public Service)   Context ( Introduction) The devastating North Bengal floods (2025), which claimed over 30 lives and caused 110 major landslides, highlight not only the tragedy of natural disasters but also the ethical dilemmas and moral responsibilities faced by journalists covering human suffering in crisis situations.   Core Ethical Principles in Disaster Journalism Empathy Over Exploitation: Reporting on trauma demands sensitivity. Journalists must avoid intrusive questioning or emotional exploitation of survivors for “scoops.” The dignity of victims should remain central, ensuring that storytelling does not become voyeuristic. Humanity and Compassion: Despite losing everything, many survivors displayed kindness and solidarity. Ethical journalism reciprocates that humanity — acknowledging resilience rather than only amplifying grief. Informed Consent: Victims are not obligated to share their pain. Ethical conduct requires seeking informed consent before interviews or photographs, especially when individuals are in psychological distress. Sensitivity to Visual Representation: Ethical journalists must be cautious with graphic imagery — ensuring that visuals evoke empathy and awareness, not sensationalism. Visuals should preserve privacy, cultural values, and emotional limits of affected communities. Objectivity with Compassion: Balancing truth-telling with emotional restraint is vital. Facts must be accurate, but the tone should remain compassionate, avoiding blame narratives or politicization during humanitarian crises. Cultural and Contextual Respect: Disaster zones often overlap with tribal, border, or minority communities. Ethical reporting means understanding local sensitivities, avoiding stereotypes, and ensuring representation of marginalized voices. Avoiding Harm and Re-traumatization: Journalists must recognize psychological limits — identifying visual cues and body language to know when to stop questioning. Ethical restraint protects both reporter and survivor from further trauma.   Ethical Challenges in the Field Access and Safety vs. Duty to Inform: Reporters often risk personal safety in unstable terrain to bring stories from remote, high-risk zones. Balancing public interest with personal responsibility is a recurring ethical dilemma. Media Absence in Marginal Areas: Many border or high-altitude communities go unreported due to bureaucratic hurdles or fear of reprisal. This reflects a failure in media justice, where certain lives remain invisible in national narratives. Economic and Institutional Pressures: The demand for “impactful stories” may tempt sensationalism. Ethical journalism must resist commercial pressure and focus on truthful, human-centered reporting. Reporter’s Emotional Trauma: Covering destruction and death leads to vicarious trauma. Ethical frameworks should extend to journalist well-being, promoting mental health support and peer debriefing mechanisms post coverage.   Reforms and Best Practices Adopt Ethical Codes: Implement the Press Council of India’s Guidelines on Disaster Coverage, emphasizing accuracy, restraint, and empathy. Capacity Building: Train journalists in psychological first aid, trauma-informed reporting, and ethical interviewing techniques. Community-Centric Reporting: Shift focus from event-driven to people-centric journalism — highlighting resilience, recovery, and lessons learned. Collaborative Reporting: Encourage partnerships with local reporters, NGOs, and disaster authorities to ensure authentic, safe, and holistic coverage. Institutional Support Systems: Establish media ethics cells within news organizations for ethical review of sensitive reports and visuals. Ethical Tech Use: Use AI verification tools to combat misinformation, but ensure data privacy and contextual accuracy in disaster-related visuals or stories.   Conclusion Ethical disaster journalism is not just about telling stories of pain, but about restoring dignity to those who suffer. By upholding empathy, truth, and responsibility, journalists transform from mere observers to agents of human solidarity and accountability. Amid ruins, it is not just infrastructure that needs rebuilding — it is trust and humanity.   Mains Question “Disaster reporting requires empathy as much as accuracy.” In the context of increasing natural calamities in India, discuss the ethical responsibilities of journalists in balancing truth-telling and human dignity. (150 words, 10 marks) Source: The Hindu Political Consolidation and National Unity in Post-Independence India (GS Paper 1 – Modern Indian History –“Post-independence consolidation and reorganisation within the country.”)   Introduction At the time of independence in 1947, India faced daunting challenges — partition, communal tensions, economic backwardness, weak institutions, and social fragmentation. The foremost task before the new leadership was to ensure political consolidation and national unity in a diverse and divided nation.   Framing a Sovereign and Democratic Constitution The making of the Constitution (1946–49) provided the foundation for a sovereign, democratic, and republican polity. The Constituent Assembly, partly elected and partly nominated under the Cabinet Mission Plan, reflected India’s plural diversity. Under B.R. Ambedkar’s chairmanship, the Constitution was adopted on November 26, 1949 and came into effect on January 26, 1950. It guaranteed Fundamental Rights, Directive Principles, and a federal structure with a strong centre, ensuring unity amidst diversity. The Constitution became the moral and institutional anchor of India’s political consolidation.   Integration of Princely States After independence, over 500 princely states existed outside direct British India. Their integration was vital for territorial unity. Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel and V.P. Menon led this process through diplomacy, persuasion, and strategic firmness. Most rulers acceded to India by August 15, 1947, except Hyderabad, Junagadh, and Jammu & Kashmir — each integrated through plebiscite, military action, or accession. Later, Pondicherry (1954) and Goa (1961) completed India’s territorial consolidation. Patel’s statesmanship earned him the title “Iron Man of India”, symbolising unity through pragmatic nationalism.   Linguistic Reorganisation and Federal Balance The early leadership postponed linguistic reorganisation fearing disintegration. The death of Potti Sriramalu (1952) during his fast for a Telugu-speaking state compelled the formation of Andhra Pradesh. The States Reorganisation Act, 1956, based on the Fazl Ali Commission, created 14 States and 6 Union Territories. It rationalised the political map and reduced regional discontent, preserving national unity through federal accommodation. As Rajni Kothari observed, it strengthened rather than weakened the Indian Union.   Reforming Education and Human Capital Colonial education was elitist, clerical, and divorced from India’s needs. Post-independence reforms sought to create a mass-based, scientific, and egalitarian education system. University Education Commission (1948–49) under S. Radhakrishnan called for a comprehensive university reform. Mudaliar Commission (1952) emphasised secondary education and vocational skills. Establishment of UGC (1953) and IITs (from 1950 onwards) laid the foundation of higher and technical education to build a modern nation. Article 45 of the Constitution mandated free and compulsory education up to 14 years, marking a shift toward inclusive development.   Shaping an Independent Foreign Policy India’s external outlook was guided by anti-colonialism, non-alignment, and peaceful coexistence. Drawing from the Congress’s 1921 resolution and Nehru’s vision, India aimed for strategic autonomy in global affairs. The Panchsheel Agreement (1954) embodied principles of mutual respect, non-aggression, and peaceful coexistence. Through Afro-Asian solidarity and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), India projected itself as a moral and independent voice of the developing world. Article 51 of the Constitution directed the State to promote peace, disarmament, and international cooperation.   Overcoming Challenges of Nation-Building The new nation had to navigate partition violence, refugee influx, food scarcity, and linguistic diversity. Leadership under Nehru, Patel, and Ambedkar maintained constitutional democracy when many post-colonial states drifted to authoritarianism. Democratic elections, free press, and secular governance became instruments of unity through participation. The emphasis on planning, education, and institutional building provided stability during formative years.   Conclusion India’s early decades were marked by visionary leadership, inclusive constitutionalism, and pragmatic statecraft.  The synthesis of unity with diversity, achieved through constitutional democracy, federal reorganisation, educational reform, and non-aligned diplomacy, ensured that the Indian nation not only survived but evolved into the world’s largest and most resilient democracy. The ongoing challenge remains to deepen this unity through social justice, participatory governance, and cooperative federalism — the true spirit of India’s freedom.   Mains Question “Political consolidation and national unity in post-independence India were achieved not merely through political integration, but through visionary constitutionalism and inclusive state-building.” Discuss. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Indian Express

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

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

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

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

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Indus Water Treaty (IWT) Category: International Relations Context: Writers are beginning to explain the ramifications of the suspension of the Indus Water Treaty, which was a shared heritage between India and Pakistan. About Indus Water Treaty (IWT): Parties: Indus Waters Treaty was signed on September 19, 1960, between India and Pakistan and was brokered by the World Bank. Objective: The treaty sets out a mechanism for cooperation and information exchange between the two sides on the use of the water of the Indus River and its five tributaries Sutlej, Beas, Ravi, Jhelum, and Chenab. Allocation of rivers: It prescribes how water from the six rivers of the Indus River System would be shared between India and Pakistan. It allocated the three western rivers Indus, Chenab and Jhelum to Pakistan for unrestricted use, barring certain non-consumptive, agricultural and domestic uses by India and the three Eastern rivers Ravi, Beas and Sutlej were allocated to India for unrestricted usage. Permanent Indus Commission: Under the Indus Waters Treaty, both countries must set up a Permanent Indus Commission, mandated to meet annually. Dispute Resolution Mechanism: The IWT provides a three-step dispute resolution mechanism under which “questions” on both sides can be resolved at the Permanent Commission, or can also be taken up at the inter-government level. Unresolved differences between the countries on water-sharing can be addressed by the World Bank-appointed Neutral Expert (NE). Appeal from a Neutral Expert of WB can be referred to a Court of Arbitration set up by the World Bank. Major projects under IWT: Pakal Dul and Lower Kalnai: Pakal Dul Hydro Electric Project is built on river Marusudar, a tributary of the Chenab. Lower Kalnai is developed on the Chenab. Kishanganga Hydroelectric Project: It is a run-of-the-river project located in J&K. Pakistan objected to the project arguing that it would affect the flow of the Kishanganga River (called the Neelum River in Pakistan). In 2013, The Hague’s Permanent Court of Arbitration (CoA) ruled that India could divert all the water with certain conditions. Ratle Hydroelectric Project: It is a run-of-the-river hydroelectric power station on the Chenab River, in J&K. Source: The Hindu Helium Category: Science and Technology Context: When cooled to just a few degrees above absolute zero, helium becomes a superfluid and can move freely without getting stuck, something impossible for any normal fluid. About Helium:   Nature: It is an inert gas and does not react with other substances or combust. Atomic number: Its atomic number is 2, making it the second lightest element after hydrogen. Uniqueness: Helium has a very low boiling point (-268.9° C), allowing it to remain a gas even in super-cold environments. Non-toxic: The gas is non-toxic, but cannot be breathed on its own, because it displaces the oxygen humans need for respiration. Space technology: Helium is used to pressurize fuel tanks, ensuring fuel flows to the rocket’s engines without interruption; and for cooling systems. As fuel and oxidiser are burned in the rocket’s engines, helium fills the resulting empty space in the tanks, maintaining the overall pressure inside. Easy detection of leaks: Its small atomic size and low molecular weight mean its atoms can escape through small gaps or seals in storage tanks and fuel systems. But because there is very little helium in the Earth’s atmosphere, leaks can be easily detected – making the gas important for spotting potential faults in a rocket or spacecraft’s fuel systems. Source: The Hindu 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC) Category: Polity and Governance Context: The Union Cabinet has approved the Terms of Reference of the 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC), the body in charge of deciding the pay structure and retirement benefits of central government employees.                   About 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC): Nature: The 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC) is a temporary expert body set up by the Union Government to review and recommend revisions in the salary structure, allowances, and pension benefits of Central Government employees. Establishment: It was announced in January 2025 and formally constituted after Cabinet approval in October 2025 to ensure timely implementation from 2026. Composition: It has 3 members. It is headed by Justice Ranjana Prakash Desai (Retd.) and the other two members include Prof. Pulak Ghosh (IIM Bangalore) and Pankaj Jain, IAS (Petroleum Secretary). Tenure: The Commission will submit its final report within 18 months of constitution and may provide interim recommendations on specific issues. Coverage: The 8th CPC covers serving and retired employees of the Central Government, defence forces, All India Services, and Union Territories. Functions: It will examine and propose changes in pay scales, allowances, and pension structures. It will also consider the overall economic situation and maintain budgetary discipline while recommending pay revisions. Equity Across Sectors: It will ensure parity between Central services, PSUs, and private sector employees in terms of emoluments and working conditions. Sustainability of Pensions: It will address concerns related to non-contributory pension liabilities and their long-term fiscal implications. Expected Implementation: The recommendations are expected to come into effect from January 1, 2026, continuing the decade-long cycle of pay revisions followed since the First CPC (1946). Source: The Indian Express SJ-100 Aircraft Category: Defence and Security Context: The Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) and Russia’s United Aircraft Corporation (UAC) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding for production of civil commuter aircraft SJ-100. About SJ-100 Aircraft:   Nature: It is a new generation short-haul jet aircraft of Russian origin. It is a twin-engine, narrow-body aircraft. Design: Earlier called the Sukhoi Superjet 100, it originally was designed by the now-merged Russian aircraft company Sukhoi Civil Aircraft. Operation: The aircrafts are being operated by more than 16 airlines across the world, nine of them being from Russia. Uses: The aircraft is primarily used for commercial purposes. It can operate at extreme weather conditions, from -55 degrees Celsius to +45 degrees Celsius. Seating capacity: It is capable of accommodating 103 seats and has a flight range of 3,530 kilometres. The aircraft has been touted as having low operating costs for airlines. Significance for India: The SJ-100 can be a game changer for short-haul connectivity under the UDAN Scheme and marks a major stride towards achieving ‘Aatmanirbharta’ in civil aviation. Source: The Hindu Rehabilitation Council of India (RCI) Category: Polity and Governance Context:   In a decisive move, the Rehabilitation Council of India (RCI) has announced a sweeping set of reforms designed to bring transparency, efficiency and inclusivity to the rehabilitation ecosystem across the country. About Rehabilitation Council of India (RCI): Nature: It is a statutory body established by an Act of Parliament. Establishment: It was set up as a registered society in 1986. In 1992 the RCI Act was enacted by Parliament and it became a Statutory Body in 1993. The Act was amended by Parliament in 2000 to make it more broad-based. Objective: It aims to regulate and monitor services given to persons with disabilities, to standardise syllabi and to maintain a Central Rehabilitation Register of all qualified professionals and personnel working in the field of Rehabilitation and Special Education. Nodal Ministry: It comes under the Ministry of Social Justice & Empowerment. Functions: It regulates the training policies and programmes in the field of rehabilitation of persons with disabilities. It brings about standardization of training courses for professionals dealing with persons with disabilities. Recognition to associated institutions: It recognizes the national institutes and apex institutions on disability as manpower development centres. The Council also prescribes minimum standards of education and training for 16 categories of professionals and personnel allocated to RCI. Important laws in India to deal with disabilities: Indian Lunacy Act, 1912 Mental Health Act, 1987 Rehabilitation Council of India Act, 1992 Persons With Disability Act, 1995 National Trust Act, 1999 Right To Education Act, 2010 Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) Delhi’s Cloud Seeding Experiment: Short-term Fix for a Long-term Crisis (GS Paper 3: Environment – Pollution and Degradation; Science and Technology – Developments and their Applications and Effects in Everyday Life; Disaster and Disaster Management) Context (Introduction) Delhi’s failed cloud seeding experiment aimed at inducing artificial rain highlights the limited effectiveness of weather modification technology and the city’s overdependence on temporary fixes rather than sustained, science-backed solutions for its chronic air pollution problem. Main Arguments About Cloud Seeding Technology: Cloud seeding involves dispersing substances like silver iodide or sodium chloride into clouds to induce precipitation. It is primarily designed for drought mitigation, not air purification. Scientific Mechanism: The technique depends on the presence of moisture-laden clouds, proper temperature, and wind conditions. Delhi’s autumn clouds lacked sufficient moisture, resulting in only 0.3 mm of rainfall over Noida. Global Uncertainty: The World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) and Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology acknowledge high variability in results. Success depends heavily on atmospheric conditions, making it unreliable for consistent outcomes. Limited Impact on Pollution: Even if rainfall is achieved, it only gives localized and temporary relief by settling suspended particulates. It cannot remove deep-rooted emission sources or improve overall air quality sustainably. Policy Desperation: The Delhi government’s attempt reflects a pattern of post-Diwali crisis management. Despite robust CPCB and satellite-based data on pollution sources, governance remains reactive and fragmented. Criticisms / Drawbacks Temporary Measure: Artificial rain offers short-term respite but fails to address emission sources such as vehicles, industries, stubble burning, and road dust that drive year-round pollution. Environmental Concerns: Chemicals like silver iodide can contaminate water bodies and affect aquatic life if used repeatedly without monitoring. Institutional Weakness: The Commission for Air Quality Management (CAQM) lacks enforcement powers across states, leading to weak regional coordination. Municipal Gaps: Simple interventions like road dust control, waste management, and green buffers are poorly executed due to administrative overlaps and lack of accountability. Public Health Impact: According to The Lancet (2022), over two million premature deaths in India annually are linked to air pollution — highlighting the gravity of inaction and ineffective policy design. Reforms and Way Forward Airshed-based Regional Planning: Form a National Capital Region (NCR) Airshed Management Framework integrating emission data, meteorological patterns, and mitigation strategies across Delhi, Haryana, Punjab, and Uttar Pradesh. Institutional Empowerment: Strengthen CAQM with statutory powers similar to the National Green Tribunal (NGT) for stricter compliance and inter-state coordination. Science-led Policy: Establish real-time source apportionment models, low-cost air quality sensors, and integrate findings into municipal and state-level action plans. Urban Design and Mobility Reforms: Expand electric vehicle networks, promote non-motorized transport, develop urban forests, and implement dust suppression through water sprinkling and permeable pavements. Fiscal and Policy Incentives: Introduce green municipal budgeting and provide financial incentives for industries adopting cleaner fuels and emission control technologies. Public Engagement: Foster citizen participation through air quality monitoring apps, awareness campaigns, and community-based pollution management initiatives. Research Collaboration: Encourage joint studies by IITs, IMD, and MoES on long-term atmospheric patterns and innovations in clean technology, such as bioaerosol and nanotech filtration. Conclusion Delhi’s cloud seeding experiment serves as a reminder that technology cannot substitute systemic reform. Artificial rain may wash the skies briefly, but only sustained governance, regional cooperation, and institutional accountability can ensure clean air for Delhi’s citizens. The solution lies not in chasing clouds but in reforming ground-level policy. Mains Question “Technological quick fixes like cloud seeding offer temporary relief but fail to resolve the structural causes of Delhi’s air pollution. Discuss in light of the need for regional and institutional reforms. To tackle chronic air pollution in Indian cities. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Indian Express Honest Welfare vs. Freebie Politics in India (GS Paper 2: Governance – Welfare Schemes, Issues in Implementation and Governance Accountability; GS Paper 3: Economy – Fiscal Prudence ) Context (Introduction) The 2025 Bihar Assembly election reflects India’s growing crisis of competitive populism, where pre-election freebies worth over ₹8 lakh crore overshadow welfare intent, distort fiscal priorities, and blur the line between social justice and political bribery. Main Arguments Elections as Auctions: Indian elections increasingly resemble auctions, where state treasuries are used to buy votes. In Bihar, poll promises exceed three times the annual state budget, undermining fiscal discipline. Weaponisation of Welfare: Welfare, originally a constitutional duty to secure basic needs, is being misused as an electoral currency. Populism has transformed welfare into vote-buying rather than nation-building. Distinction Between Welfare and Freebies: – Welfare strengthens human capability — e.g., education, food, health, pensions. –  Freebies generate dependency and short-term satisfaction — e.g., cash transfers weeks before elections. Mid-day meals or MGNREGA create empowerment, unlike unproductive handouts. Double Standards in Economic Policy: Benefits to corporates are often termed “reforms,” while aid to the poor is labelled “freebies.” The 2019 corporate tax cut cost ₹1.45 lakh crore yearly, yet was celebrated as bold economics. Legal and Ethical Loopholes: The Supreme Court’s 2013 judgment (S. Subramaniam Balaji vs State of Tamil Nadu) ruled that manifesto promises do not constitute “corrupt practices” under the RPA, leaving space for misuse. Moral Paradox: Offering a cup of tea to a voter is bribery under Section 123(1) of the RPA, but promising ₹2,500 monthly to millions is legally acceptable. This inconsistency erodes electoral integrity. Fiscal and Economic Risks: The RBI’s Report on State Finances 2022–23 warned that populist subsidies threaten fiscal collapse. Punjab’s debt-to-GSDP ratio reached 47.2%; Rajasthan’s pre-poll spending crossed ₹56,000 crore. Socioeconomic Inequities Persist: Despite welfare rhetoric, inequality deepens — the richest 1% own 51.5% of India’s wealth (Oxfam 2022). India ranks 130th in HDI; one-third of children remain malnourished, and 81 crore depend on free rations. Criticisms / Drawbacks Erosion of Democratic Ethos: Freebies convert elections into fiscal auctions, reducing citizens to beneficiaries rather than empowered voters. Distortion of Fiscal Priorities: State budgets are diverted from long-term investments (education, health, infrastructure) to short-term populism. Weak Legal Oversight: Absence of clear guidelines allows manifestos to remain outside electoral accountability, encouraging reckless promises. Ethical Governance Deficit: Politicians misuse the Model Code of Conduct window to announce schemes, exploiting administrative gaps before EC intervention. Dependency Syndrome: Freebies weaken productivity and discourage self-reliance, especially among youth seeking sustainable livelihoods. Reforms and Way Forward Define and Regulate Freebies: Establish a constitutional or statutory body under the Election Commission to distinguish legitimate welfare from electoral bribes. Mandatory Costed Manifestos: Political parties must publish audited, costed manifestos explaining funding sources — whether through taxes, loans, or budget cuts. Amend Representation of People Act (RPA): Classify direct cash transfers to voter groups before elections as “corrupt practices” under Section 123. Pre-election Fiscal Code: Prohibit the announcement of new subsidies or direct benefit schemes within six months of election notification. Performance-linked Welfare: Prioritise welfare linked to outcomes — education, job creation, irrigation, and healthcare — over consumption-based subsidies. Transparency and Accountability: Mandate annual disclosure by state finance departments on fiscal impact of welfare schemes and their developmental returns. Public Awareness and Voter Education: Promote informed voting through EC and civil society initiatives highlighting fiscal literacy and ethical governance. Conclusion India needs honest welfare, not hollow populism. Welfare must empower citizens through health, skills, and education — not lure them through cash doles. A democracy that survives on freebies risks both fiscal bankruptcy and moral decay. True welfare is nation-building; reckless populism is nation-draining. Mains Question “Freebies and fiscal populism threaten the integrity of India’s democratic and economic system. Discuss how India can institutionalise ‘honest welfare’ while preserving fiscal discipline and electoral fairness.” (250 words) Source: The Indian Express  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

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

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

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

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Index of Industrial Production (IIP) Category: Economy Context: Growth in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP), released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, stood at 3.2% in September last year. However, growth had since accelerated to 4.3% by July 2025, following which it slowed again. About Index of Industrial Production (IIP): Nature: The Index of Industrial Production (IIP) is a key statistical tool used to measure the short-term changes in the volume of production in Indian industries.  Objective: It provides insight into the growth or contraction of industrial activity over a given period, making it a crucial economic performance indicator. Nodal ministry: The IIP is published by the Central Statistics Office (CSO), which is part of the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). Base year: The current base year for the index is 2011–12. This base year was adopted to reflect modern industrial structure and production patterns, following periodic revisions from earlier base years such as 1937, 1946, 1951, 1956, and so on. Sectoral Composition of IIP (Weight-wise): Manufacturing: 77.63% of total weight (809 items) Mining: 14.37% (29 items) Electricity: 7.99% (1 item) Composite indicator: It is a composite indicator that measures the growth rate of industry groups classified under: Broad sectors, namely, Mining, Manufacturing, and Electricity. Use-based sectors, namely Basic Goods, Capital Goods, and Intermediate Goods. Eight Core Sectors: These comprise 40.27% of the weight of items included in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP). The eight core sector industries in decreasing order of their weightage: Refinery Products, Electricity, Steel, Coal, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Cement, Fertilizers. Source: The Hindu National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) Category: Polity and Governance Context: Ahead of Cyclone Montha’s landfall on Tuesday night, the National Disaster Response Force deployed 25 teams across Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Puducherry, and Tamil Nadu, while another 20 teams were on standby. About National Disaster Response Force (NDRF): Establishment: NDRF was established under section 44 of the Disaster Management Act, 2005. Role: It is a multi-skilled and highly specialist force capable of dealing with all types of natural and man-made disasters like Floods, Cyclone, Earthquakes, Landslides, Building-collapse, Trains and road accidents etc. Objective: It is aimed at specialized response to natural and man-made disasters. Nodal ministry: It functions under the purview of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) and is headed by a Director General. Expansion: Initially established in 2006 with 8 Battalions, the NDRF has now expanded to 16 Battalions, drawn from the CAPF, viz Border Security Force, Central Reserve Police Force, Central Industrial Security Force, Indo-Tibetan Border Police, Sashastra Seema Bal and Assam Rifles. Importance: The strategic deployment of NDRF resources, characterized by “proactive availability” and “pre-positioning” during imminent disaster situations, has proven instrumental in mitigating damages caused by natural calamities across the country. It has also been very active in responding to natural disaster under multi-lateral and bi-lateral agreement at international level. Notable works: The NDRF teams responded during triple disaster (Earthquake, Tsunami and Radiation Leakage) of Fukushima, Japan in 2011 and during Earthquake in Nepal in 2015. Source: The Hindu Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS) Category: Government Schemes Context: Union Electronics and IT Minister announced the approval of first trench of 7 projects under the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS). About Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS): Launch: The ECMS, was launched in April 2025 as a complement to the India Semiconductor Mission. Objective: It seeks to strengthen India’s electronics value chain beyond finished goods and chip fabrication by boosting Domestic Value Addition (DVA) and linking Indian firms with Global Value Chains (GVCs).   Major sectors: ECMS supports horizontal linkages with automobile, power, and industrial sectors. Uniqueness: It is the first dedicated Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme focused specifically on boosting electronics components manufacturing. Tenure: The scheme has a tenure of 6 years (1 year of gestation period) i.e. from FY2025-26 to FY2031-32. Incentive Structure: The ECMS provides turnover-linked, capex-linked, or hybrid fiscal incentives, with a portion of both turnover and capex incentives linked to employment generation. Incentives will be given on a first-come, first-served basis to firms ready for early production.   Importance: Electronics is India’s third-largest export, with the country being the 2nd-largest mobile manufacturer globally. The ECMS, along with Production Linked Incentive (PLI) and semiconductor initiatives, is crucial for establishing a USD 500 billion electronics manufacturing ecosystem by 2030-31. Source: PIB Dogri Language Category: History and Culture Context: According to the former Director of the Central Institute of Languages (CIIL), India has lost over 220 languages in the last 50 years. In recent years, growing concern has emerged over the gradual decline of the Dogri language in the Jammu region.                          About Dogri Language: Origin: It is an Indo-Aryan language (language of the Vedas and Laukik Sanskrit), part of the larger Indo-European family of languages. Earliest reference: The earliest written reference to Dogri (using the paleonym Duggar) is found in the Nuh sipihr (“The Nine Heavens”), written by the poet Amir Khosrow in 1317 CE. Evolution over time: Like other modern Indo-Aryan languages, Dogri has also passed through Old Indo-Aryan (Sanskrit) and Middle Indo-Aryan (Pali, Prakrit, and Apabhramsha) stages of development and entered the modern Indo-Aryan stage around the 10th century A.D. Hence, it shows its three-fold process of development of its sound structure, expressing its affinity with Shaurseni Prakrit. Script: Once the official script of the Dogra princely state under Maharaja Ranbir Singh (1857–85 CE), it was written in Dogra Akkhar but later replaced by Devanagari script in the 20th century. Current relevance: It is one of the 22 scheduled languages under the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution and an official language of J&K since 2020. It was added to the Eighth Schedule of the Indian Constitution through the 92nd Constitutional Amendment Act of 2003. Major features: Dogri uses 10 vowels and 28 consonants with tonal variations (level, falling, rising). It displays nasalization, metathesis, and tone-based sound differentiation. It also incorporates borrowings from Persian and English while retaining Sanskritic roots. Prevalent in northern states: It is spoken in India, chiefly in the Jammu region of Jammu and Kashmir. It is also spoken in the state of Himachal Pradesh and in northern Punjab, other parts of Jammu and Kashmir, and elsewhere. Source: The Hindu Fertilisers Category: Geography Context: The Union Cabinet decided to provide ₹37,952 crore as fertilizer subsidy for the ongoing rabi crop of this winter season. The subsidy on phosphorous (P) and sulphur (S) fertilizers was increased by ₹736 crore, while the subsidy for nitrogen (N) and potash (K) will remain the same as the kharif (summer) crops. About Fertilisers in India: Definition: Fertilisers are substances that are applied to soil or plants to supply essential nutrients required for optimal growth and development. These nutrients, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, are crucial for plants to carry out various metabolic processes, including photosynthesis, protein synthesis, and cell division.  Importance: Fertiliser use is widespread in agriculture, horticulture, and gardening to enhance crop yields and improve plant health. Agriculture and allied sectors contribute nearly 16% to GDP and support over 46% of India’s population. Thus, fertilisers play important role and act as foundational pillar for economic livelihood indirectly. Trends in production: India is the second-largest user and third-largest producer of fertilizers globally. The total Fertilizer production has increased from 385.39 Lakh Metric Tonnes (LMT) in 2014–15 to 503.35 LMT in 2023–24. In 2023–24, fertilizer production was led by the private sector (57.77%), followed by cooperatives (24.81%) and the public sector (17.43%). Trends in consumption: Fertiliser consumption has increased from less than 1 million tonnes of total nutrients in the mid-1960s to almost 17 million tonnes in recent times. The introduction of high-yielding varieties in the 1960s boosted Fertiliser use. Import Dependency: In 2023–24, India consumed 601 LMT of fertilizers, producing 503 LMT domestically and importing 177 LMT. Self-sufficiency reached 87% for urea, 90% for NPK (nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium), but only 40% for DAP (Di-Ammonium Phosphate), while Muriate of Potash (MOP) remains 100% imported. About One Nation One Fertiliser Scheme (ONOF): Feature: Under ONOF companies are allowed to display their name, brand, logo and other relevant product information only on one-third space of their bags. On the remaining two-thirds space, the “Bharat” brand and Pradhanmantri Bharatiya Jan Urvarak Pariyojana logo will have to be shown. Single brand name: The single brand name for UREA, Di-Ammonium Phosphate, Muriate of potash (MOP) and Nitrogen Phosphorus Potassium NPK etc. would be BHARAT UREA, BHARAT DAP, BHARAT MOP and BHARAT NPK etc. respectively for all Fertiliser Companies, State Trading Entities and Fertiliser Marketing Entities (FMEs). Coverage: This scheme applies to both public & private sector companies. Importance: It will bring about uniformity in fertiliser brands across the country. It will also prevent the criss-cross movement of fertilisers and reduce high freight subsidies. Source: The Hindu (MAINS Focus) Relief and Rehabilitation in India’s East-Coast Cyclone Zone (GS Paper III: Disaster Management; Environment and Climate Change)   Context (Introduction)  India’s east coast—especially along the Bay of Bengal—regularly endures intense cyclones in October–November that cause widespread devastation. While preparedness has improved, relief and rehabilitation of vulnerable people, livelihoods and infrastructure remain major challenges.   Main arguments Historical vulnerability of east coast – Of the 12 major cyclones between the 18th and 20th centuries, nine struck in October–November, including the 1977 Andhra cyclone (landfall 19 Nov) and the 1999 Odisha super-cyclone (landfall 29 Oct). Both caused approximately 10,000 deaths each. Improved preparedness, yet residual damage persists – The last 20 years have seen far fewer mass-casualty events, thanks to better forecasting, evacuation and early-warning systems. Nevertheless, property loss, disruption of livelihoods (especially among the under-privileged), and losses of milch and draught animals and poultry continue. Structural & non-structural mitigation efforts – Coastal States (e.g., Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu) are investing in cyclone shelters, evacuation plans, early-warning dissemination, evacuation of livestock, strengthening of public infrastructure and mapping of hazard-prone zones. Need for equity and responsive rehabilitation – Political leadership must ensure that relief reaches all affected impartially, especially marginalised communities whose livelihoods are disrupted (fishing, agriculture, livestock). Rehabilitation must restore more than just built infrastructure—livelihoods, animal assets and social capital must be regenerated. Climate-change intensification and future risk – Warming ocean temperatures are increasing the risk of more intense cyclones and possibly shifting or expanding the zones of impact. This elevates the burden on relief and rehabilitation frameworks.   Criticisms / Drawbacks Despite better forecasting, damage to private assets and livelihoods remains high because relief frameworks often emphasise life-saving but weaker on livelihood restoration (for example draught animals, poultry). Rehabilitation often focuses on reconstruction of houses and public infrastructure, but less on rebuilding the asset base of the poor (livestock, boats, tools), or psychological/social recovery. Equity issues: relief and rehabilitation sometimes favour visible public infrastructure rather than less visible but socially critical assets (e.g., small-holder poultry, informal fisheries). Institutional inertia: though the systems have been greatly improved, in many cases coordination among agencies, timely fund disbursal, and community-level participation remain weak. Future risk under-estimated: Given climate change, the intensity or track of cyclones may vary; some states may not have fully adapted to new risk profiles.   Reforms / Best Practices  Strengthen and proliferate multi-purpose cyclone shelters that double as schools/community centres, thereby justifying investment and ensuring maintenance. For instance, the Odisha government has sought central support (~₹9,500 crore) to build ~800 new shelters and underground cabling in cyclone-prone areas. Implement livelihoods-centred rehabilitation: restore and replace goats/poultry, provide fodder and veterinary support for draught/milch animals, guarantee boat-engine and net replacement for fishing communities. Enhance post-disaster rapid asset-damage assessment (including animals, boats, infrastructure) using tools like UAVs for remote or difficult-terrain zones. Research indicates UAVs can expedite damage assessment and resource allocation. Strengthen community-based disaster risk reduction (CBDRR): train local volunteers, conduct mock drills, maintain evacuation-ready lists of vulnerable persons (elderly, pregnant women, disabled), and integrate local knowledge (traditional warning signs; community shelters). Institutionalise equitable relief fund access and social inclusion: ensure marginalised groups (scheduled tribes, fishermen, landless labour) are proactively listed for relief; adopt transparent criteria and community monitoring. Integrate climate-change adaptation into cyclone planning: update hazard mapping with future-scenario modelling, raise design standards for shelters/infrastructure (higher wind/surge thresholds), and invest in nature-based coastal buffers (mangroves, dunes) to reduce storm surge impact. Accelerate pre-positioning of resources and rapid restoration infrastructure: stockpile tarpaulins, food, water, medicines and fuel; pre-deploy heavy equipment (JCBs, chain saws) for immediate clearing; plan power-network resilience (e.g., underground cabling). Improve institutional coordination and governance: regular drills involving municipal, district, state and central agencies; real-time governance centres for monitoring; strong accountability mechanisms for relief-rehabilitation.   Conclusion While India’s east-coast cyclone belt has made impressive strides in reducing mortality through early warning, evacuation and institutional readiness, the true test lies in resilient and inclusive rehabilitation that rebuilds livelihoods and community assets.  As climate-induced cyclone intensity rises, the shift must go from response to transformational recovery—one that empowers the most vulnerable, rebuilds ecological buffers and embeds adaptive planning.  Only then can we convert the progress made into sustainable resilience across coast-facing communities.   Mains Question Given the recurrent cyclone threat along India’s east coast, critically analyse the relief and rehabilitation challenges and propose measures to build resilient livelihoods for vulnerable communities.(250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu Urban Planning in India must move beyond Land-use towards Sustainable and Resilient Growth (GS Paper III: Urban Development, Infrastructure, and Environment)   Context (Introduction) India’s Viksit Bharat @2047 vision of a $30-trillion economy hinges on cities that are productive, resilient, and sustainable. However, urban planning in India largely remains limited to land-use zoning, neglecting economic potential, environmental sustainability, and inclusive urban governance.   Main Arguments Economic Vision as the Foundation of Planning: Urban planning must begin with an economic growth strategy, identifying future employment sectors, industrial corridors, and skill clusters.  The UN-Habitat’s New Urban Agenda advocates aligning spatial plans with economic priorities to transform cities into growth engines. For instance, Ahmedabad’s Town Planning Schemes link land readjustment to infrastructure-driven industrial expansion, demonstrating this integration in practice. Integrated Systems Planning: Cities function as interlinked systems — housing, mobility, energy, waste, and water.  Planning must, therefore, move beyond static zoning to systems-based urban design, aligning with SDG 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities. Integrated land, water, and energy plans can prevent resource stress and improve resilience to shocks such as floods or droughts. Natural Resource and Climate Budgeting: Urban growth must be guided by resource budgeting—evaluating available water, green cover, and waste-handling capacity.  The Second Administrative Reforms Commission (2nd ARC) and the National Mission on Sustainable Habitat recommend integrating disaster resilience and climate adaptation into every urban plan, ensuring no city expands beyond its ecological carrying capacity. Environmental and Mobility Integration: Cities contribute about 70% of India’s carbon emissions and face severe air quality crises. Each city plan must include an Air Pollution Management and Mobility Plan, promoting mass transport, non-motorised modes, and electrification.  The Delhi Metro is an effective model—integrating land-use, transport, and emission reduction, helping avoid nearly 4.8 million tonnes of CO₂ annually (CSE, 2024). Regional and Polycentric Urbanisation: Urbanisation now extends to peri-urban belts and smaller towns. UN-Habitat and India’s National Urban Policy Framework (NUPF) emphasise polycentric growth—developing multiple city clusters instead of one mega-city focus.  The Delhi–Meerut–Ghaziabad corridor under the Regional Rapid Transit System (RRTS) exemplifies such a regional planning model connecting jobs, transport, and housing across jurisdictions.   Criticisms and Drawbacks Outdated legal framework: Urban planning acts still rely on 20th-century zoning logic, unsuited to fast urbanisation. Weak coordination: Multiplicity of agencies leads to fragmented planning, violating the “one city–one plan” principle. Neglect of informality: Over 80% of India’s urban workers are informal, yet livelihood zones remain unplanned. Limited environmental integration: Air, water, and waste management are peripheral rather than integral planning goals. Boundary constraints: Planning stops at municipal limits, excluding fast-growing peri-urban regions.   Reforms and Policy Directions Legislative Modernisation: Revise the Town and Country Planning Acts to include economic, environmental, and social parameters, adopting performance-based planning instead of rigid zoning. Economic and Resource-linked Planning: Make City Economic Strategies mandatory precursors to Master Plans—linking job forecasts, GDP potential, and carrying-capacity assessments. Integrated Metropolitan Governance: Create unified Metropolitan Planning Authorities with fiscal autonomy and accountability, as suggested by the 2nd ARC, to ensure cohesive planning across agencies. Climate and Environmental Accountability: Institutionalise City Climate Action Plans, Carbon Budgets, and Air Quality Cells to operationalise India’s net-zero 2070 roadmap and meet Paris Agreement commitments. Data, Education, and Local Capacity: Modernise urban education through GIS-enabled, sustainability-focused curricula. Planners must be trained in digital mapping, environmental auditing, and participatory planning, as encouraged by UN-Habitat’s Capacity Development Framework.   Model Example: Surat City Resilience Model                       Surat, once prone to floods and epidemics, is now cited globally (by UN-Habitat) as a Resilient City Model. Through Surat Urban Development Authority (SUDA) and the 100 Resilient Cities initiative, the city integrated flood forecasting, solid waste management, and early warning systems into its planning. This demonstrates how multi-sectoral, adaptive planning can convert vulnerability into resilience — a template for other Indian cities.   Conclusion India’s urban future must transcend land-use rigidity and embrace strategic, data-driven, and climate-conscious urbanism. By linking planning to economic growth, sustainability metrics, and resilient governance, India can build cities that power inclusive development while meeting its climate and social justice obligations — truly realising the vision of Viksit Bharat 2047.   Mains Question Urban planning in India is overly focused on land-use regulation and ignores its economic and ecological dimensions. Discuss with examples how Indian cities can adopt integrated and resilience-based planning models to achieve sustainable urban growth. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Indian Express  

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 28th October 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 28th October – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Maha MedTech Mission Category: Government Schemes Context: The Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF), in collaboration with the ICMR and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, has launched the Maha MedTech Mission to boost India’s medical technology ecosystem. About Maha MedTech Mission: Nature: The Mission for Advancement in High-Impact Areas (MAHA)–MedTech is a national initiative to accelerate innovation, manufacturing, and commercialization of cutting-edge medical technologies in India, enhancing access and affordability in healthcare. Launch: It is jointly launched by the Anusandhan National Research Foundation (ANRF), the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR), and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Objective: It aims to reduce India’s dependence on high-cost medical imports, strengthen domestic capacity, and ensure equitable access to affordable and high-quality medical devices and diagnostics aligned with national health priorities such as tuberculosis, cancer, and neonatal care. Funding: It provides Rs. 5–25 crore per project (up to ₹50 crore for exceptional cases) for startups, MSMEs, academic, hospital, and industry collaborations. Coverage: It covers devices, diagnostics, implants, AI/ML-based tools, robotics, and assistive technologies. Enabling Frameworks: It includes Patent Mitra for IP protection, MedTech Mitra for regulatory clearances, and a Clinical Trial Network for validation. Source: PIB Great Nicobar Island Project Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Home minister Amit Shah said that India’s maritime global trade will get a boost with proposed Great Nicobar Island Project. About Great Nicobar Island (GNI) Project: Launch: The Great Nicobar Island (GNI) Project was conceived by NITI Aayog and it was launched in 2021. Objective: It aims to build an International Container Transshipment Terminal (ICTT), a greenfield international airport, a township, and a gas–solar power plant. Implementation: It is implemented by Andaman and Nicobar Islands Integrated Development Corporation (ANIIDCO).  In sync with Vision 20147: It aligns with India’s Maritime Vision 2030 and is one of the key projects under the Amrit Kaal Vision 2047. Tribal Safeguards: Large-scale development in GNI is permitted only after consultations with the Ministry of Tribal Affairs, Directorate of Tribal Welfare and Andaman Adim Janjati VikasSamiti (AAJVS), as mandated by the Jarawa Policy (2004) and Shompen Policy (2015). Environmental Safeguards: The Project incorporates strict environmental safeguards, following the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification, 2006, and based on detailed EIAs and an Environmental Management Plan (EMP). Source: The Hindu Vande Mataram Category: History and Culture Context: PM Modi acknowledged 150 years of ‘Vande Mataram’ in Mann ki Baat episode. About Vande Mataram: Meaning: Vande Mataram (meaning “I bow to thee, Mother”) is India’s national song, symbolizing reverence to the motherland and evoking patriotism and unity among citizens. Composition: It was composed in Sanskritised Bengali by Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay in the 1870s and it was first published in his novel Anandamath (1882). First public rendition: The song’s first public rendition was by Rabindranath Tagore at the 1896 Congress Session. It became the anthem of India’s freedom struggle, sung in protests and revolutionary gatherings despite being banned by the British. Adoption as national song: The Indian National Congress in 1937 adopted its first two stanzas as the National Song, balancing inclusivity and secular appeal. Comparison to national anthem: On January 24, 1950, the Constituent Assembly accorded Vande Mataram equal honour to the National Anthem “Jana Gana Mana.” Current Status: It is recognized by the Government of India as equal in stature to the National Anthem and its instrumental version is played at the closing of every Parliament session. Source: The Hindu CRYODIL Category: Science and Technology Context: In a breakthrough, scientists have developed a ready-to-use, egg yolk-free solution, CRYODIL with shelf life of 18 months, at refrigeration temperature, for cryopreserving buffalo semen. About CRYODIL: Nature: CRYODIL is a ready-to-use, egg yolk-free semen extender designed to preserve buffalo semen for long durations while maintaining fertility and motility. Development: It is developed by scientists at the National Institute of Animal Nutrition and Physiology (NIANP) under the Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR), Bengaluru. Objective: It aims to provide a safe, efficient, and affordable alternative to traditional egg-yolk-based semen extenders and enhance buffalo breeding efficiency in India. Long Shelf Life: It has the ability to preserve semen for up to 18 months without contamination or loss of motility. No risk of microbial defilement: It eliminates risk of microbial contamination associated with egg yolks and uses purified whey proteins instead of egg yolk, ensuring consistent semen quality. Cost-Effective: It is cheaper and easier to produce compared to imported commercial extenders. Source: The Hindu MISHTI Scheme Category: Government Schemes Context: While 19,220 hectares of land under MISTHI scheme has been taken up in Gujarat, only 10 hectares of mangrove plantation has been taken up in West Bengal which accounts for about 42% of mangrove cover in country. About MISHTI Scheme: Nature: The Mangrove Initiative for Shoreline Habitats & Tangible Incomes (MISHTI) scheme is a government-led initiative aimed at increasing the mangrove cover along the coastline and on salt pan lands. Launch: It was launched after India joined the ‘Mangrove Alliance for Climate’ launched during the 27th Conference of Parties (COP27) to the UNFCCC held in November 2022. Objective: It aims to restore mangrove forests by undertaking mangrove reforestation/afforestation measures along the coast of India across various states. Nodal Ministry: It comes under the Ministry of Environment, Forest & Climate Change. Focus areas: It is primarily focused on the Sundarbans delta, Hooghly Estuary in West Bengal and other bay parts of the country, but also includes other wetlands in the country. Financial assistance: Under this scheme the government is providing financial assistance to local communities to undertake mangrove plantation activities.  Leverage of other schemes: It leverages the strengths and provisions of different government schemes and initiatives such as the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), the Compensatory Afforestation Fund Management and Planning Authority (CAMPA) Fund and other relevant sources. Participatory mechanism: The plantation activities are carried out in a participatory manner, involving local communities and NGOs, to ensure sustainability and community ownership of the initiative. Source: The Hindu (MAINS Focus) Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses (GS Paper 3: Major Crops – Cropping Patterns in Various Parts of the Country)   Context (Introduction) India, the world’s largest producer and consumer of pulses, faces a persistent demand–supply gap due to low yields and climatic risks. The Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses (2025–31) aims to enhance productivity, reduce imports, and ensure farmer profitability.   Main Objectives and Features of the Mission Launched in 2025 with a financial outlay of ₹11,440 crore, the mission targets self-reliance in pulses by 2030–31. Production goal: Increase pulses output by 45%, from 242 lakh MT (2023–24) to 350 lakh MT (2030–31). Area expansion: From 275 to 310 lakh ha (+13%); yield increase from 881 to 1130 kg/ha (+28%). Focus crops: Tur (Arhar), Urad, and Masoor, covering 34% of total pulses area. Key interventions: Climate-resilient seed varieties and improved genetics. Protein enhancement and yield improvement through R&D. Post-harvest management and storage upgrades to reduce losses. Remunerative pricing via assured procurement under PM-AASHA. Cluster-based approach: Each cluster (≥10 ha) to serve as a model value-chain node.   Current Status and Challenges in Pulses Sector Production pattern: Rabi pulses dominate (60% of production). Top states: Madhya Pradesh (59.74 LMT), Maharashtra (40 LMT), Rajasthan (33 LMT), Uttar Pradesh (31 LMT). Major crops: Gram, Moong, Tur, Urad, Masoor. Low productivity: India’s yield (881 kg/ha) is far below Canada (2200 kg/ha) and China (1815 kg/ha) due to rainfed cultivation, fragmented holdings, and poor technology adoption. Import dependence: Despite being the largest producer, India imports 2–3 million tonnes annually from Myanmar, Tanzania, Mozambique, Australia, and Canada to meet consumption needs. Rising demand: NITI Aayog projects demand at 268 LMT by 2030 and 293 LMT by 2047, highlighting the need for sustained domestic growth.   Significance of the Mission Nutritional Security: Pulses are a key protein source for India’s largely vegetarian population. Economic Security: Reduces import bills and improves farm incomes via assured procurement. Climate Resilience: Encourages crop diversification and optimises use of rice fallow lands in states like Bihar, West Bengal, and Chhattisgarh. Regional Balance: Focus on aspirational, LWE, border, and NE districts promotes inclusive agricultural growth. Value Chain Development: Integration of production, storage, and market linkages fosters agri-entrepreneurship and reduces post-harvest losses.   Criticisms and Challenges Implementation hurdles: Cluster-based approach requires strong institutional coordination across states. Procurement inefficiencies: Past experiences with PM-AASHA show delays and coverage gaps. Market volatility: Dependence on MSP procurement may distort prices if not matched by demand. Technology adoption: Small farmers may find it difficult to access high-yield seeds and mechanisation. Climate variability: Pulses are sensitive to erratic monsoons, drought, and pest attacks.   Reforms and Way Forward R&D investment: Strengthen ICAR and IIPR-led research for high-yield, drought-tolerant, and pest-resistant varieties. Digital integration: Use Aadhaar-enabled procurement and geo-tagged clusters for transparency. Private participation: Incentivise agritech startups, FPOs, and cooperatives for storage, processing, and marketing. Crop insurance and irrigation: Expand PMFBY and micro-irrigation coverage in pulses regions. Nutrition-sensitive agriculture: Link pulses production with Mid-Day Meal and ICDS programmes to stabilise demand and ensure nutritional impact.   Conclusion The Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses marks a strategic step toward food and nutritional sovereignty. Its success hinges on bridging the yield gap, ensuring market assurance, and promoting technology-driven inclusivity. A resilient pulses ecosystem would not only achieve self-reliance but also strengthen India’s rural economy and environmental sustainability.   Mains Question India’s Mission for Aatmanirbharta in Pulses seeks to bridge the demand–supply gap and reduce import dependence. Examine the structural challenges in India’s pulses sector and suggest reforms needed for sustainable self-reliance.(250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu Should India Take Global Leadership on Climate Change? (GS Paper 3: Conservation, Environmental Pollution and Degradation, Environmental Impact Assessment)   Context (Introduction) As the world prepares for COP30 in Belém, Brazil, global climate leadership appears weakened due to Western reluctance and U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement. This vacuum offers India both a challenge and an opportunity to assert climate leadership.   India’s Emerging Role and Strengths Steady and Credible Actor: Unlike many developed nations, India’s climate action has remained bipartisan and consistent, with a focus on implementation rather than rhetoric. ‘Axis of Good’: Growing partnerships with Europe and Brazil reflect India’s position as a dependable player in areas like climate technology and forest conservation. Implementation Focus: India’s credibility rests on fulfilling commitments—achieving its Paris goals ahead of time and aiming for 50% electricity from non-fossil sources by 2030. Energy–Emission Decoupling: India’s power sector emissions have plateaued, despite economic growth, signaling a structural shift toward renewable energy dominance.   Major Arguments for India’s Leadership Moral and Developmental Imperative: India represents the Global South’s concerns—balancing development needs with climate action, emphasizing equity and common but differentiated responsibilities (CBDR). Pragmatic Diplomacy: International cooperation succeeds when driven by strategic and security interests, not charity. India’s approach aligns climate goals with energy security and industrial competitiveness. Economic and Technological Leverage: Corporate giants like Adani and Reliance are heavily investing in green hydrogen, renewables, and storage, positioning India as a low-cost clean-tech hub. Adaptation as Opportunity: Large-scale schemes like PM-KUSUM and solar-powered cold chains combine mitigation and adaptation, showing scalable models for developing nations. Institutional Innovation: India can champion new financing frameworks, integrating multilateral banks, private capital, and philanthropy to mobilize the $1.3 trillion annual climate finance target by 2035.   Challenges and Criticisms Finance and Technology Deficit: Domestic funding alone cannot sustain large-scale adaptation. India needs global financial commitments and technology transfer mechanisms. Hard-to-Abate Sectors: Industrial emissions from steel and cement remain major hurdles, requiring innovation beyond fuel-switching. Fragmented Global Will: Western reluctance and geopolitical divides undermine collective ambition, limiting room for new global frameworks. Domestic Implementation Gaps: Despite ambitious policies, project-level execution often faces bureaucratic and capacity-related delays. Risk of Overstretch: Overemphasizing leadership could divert focus from internal resilience-building and adaptation to local climate shocks.   Reforms and Strategic Path Ahead National Adaptation Plan (NAP): Prioritise sector-wise resilience in agriculture, water, and coastal zones with state-level customisation. NDC Upgradation: Include green hydrogen linkage, solar-plus-storage systems, and industry-specific emission reduction pathways. Blended Finance Models: Encourage joint public-private funding to leverage concessional capital and risk guarantees. Carbon Market Development: Operationalise a robust domestic carbon trading system aligned with international markets. Technology Partnerships: Promote India–EU–Brazil trilateral initiatives on forests, carbon sinks, and climate-smart agriculture. South–South Cooperation: Lead by example—share India’s solar, adaptation, and digital monitoring models with other developing nations.   Conclusion India’s leadership in climate action must be rooted in pragmatism, inclusivity, and implementation. Rather than assuming symbolic leadership, India should shape coalitions of credible doers, exemplifying how economic growth, equity, and ecological sustainability can coexist. In a fragmented world, India’s steady hand and scalable models can redefine global climate cooperation.   UPSC Mains Question Critically examine India’s efforts till date and  potential to emerge as a global leader in climate action. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu