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Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 20th November 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 20th November – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) Tribunal Reforms Act, 2021 Category: Polity and Governance Context: Recently, the Supreme Court struck down provisions of the Tribunal Reforms Act of 2021, a law designed to alter the tribunal system.                 About Tribunal Reforms Act, 2021: Objective: The Act was enacted to streamline the functioning of tribunals by dissolving certain appellate tribunals and transferring their functions to existing judicial bodies like the High Courts.   Associated SC Judgement: It was introduced in response to the Supreme Court’s ruling in the case of Madras Bar Association vs. Union of India (2021), which struck down certain provisions of the Tribunal Reforms (Rationalisation and Conditions of Service) Ordinance, 2021.  Selection Committee for Central Tribunals: Chairperson: Chief Justice of India (CJI) or a Supreme Court judge nominated by the CJI (casting vote).  Two Secretaries nominated by the Central Government.  Sitting/outgoing Chairperson of the tribunal, or a retired Supreme Court judge, or a retired Chief Justice of a High Court.  Non-voting member: Secretary of the relevant Union Ministry.  Selection Committee for State Administrative Tribunals: Chairperson: Chief Justice of the respective High Court (casting vote).  Chief Secretary of the State Government.  Chairman of the State Public Service Commission.  Sitting/outgoing Chairperson of the Tribunal or a retired High Court Judge.  Tenure of members: The tenure for Chairperson and Members is 4 years, with a minimum age of 50 years. The maximum age limit is 67 years for tribunal members and 70 years for chairpersons, or completion of the 4-year tenure, whichever is earlier.  Members eligible for reappointment: Tribunal Chairpersons and Members are eligible for reappointment, with preference given to their past service.  Removal of Tribunal Members: Central government on the recommendation of the Search-cum-Selection Committee can remove Chairperson or a Member. About SC Observations and Rulings: The Bench of Chief Justice B.R. Gavai and Justice K. Vinod Chandran held that the 2021 Act was an attempt to “repackage” the very provisions earlier invalidated.  The Court noted that Parliament cannot circumvent judicial directions by re-enacting an unconstitutional provision in slightly modified form. The Court found the 2021 Act to be a “legislative override” that consciously defied earlier judgments relating to tribunal autonomy. The Supreme Court invalidated provisions that: Allowed the Centre to control tenure and age limits of tribunal members, Included government secretaries on the selection committee, Limited tenure to four years, undermining institutional stability, Granted excessive rule-making powers to the executive over tribunals. Source: The Hindu CE20 Cryogenic Engine Category: Science and Technology Context: ISRO has successfully demonstrated the bootstrap mode start test on the CE20 cryogenic engine which powers the upper stage of the Launch Vehicle Mark-3 rocket. About CE20 Cryogenic Engine: Development: It is a cryogenic rocket engine developed by the Liquid Propulsion Systems Centre, a subsidiary of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). Objective: It is used to power the upper stage of the LVM3 launch vehicle and has been qualified to operate at a thrust level of 19 tonnes. This engine has also successfully powered the upper stage of six LVM3 missions so far. Uniqueness: It is the first Indian cryogenic engine to have a gas-generator cycle. The CE-20 uses a combination of LOX and LH2 propellants in a gas generator cycle.  Significance: It marks a significant step in ISRO’s indigenous engine development, showcasing its ability to overcome complex rocket propulsion challenges. Mechanism: During nominal operation, the engine ignition is initiated under tank head conditions, followed by the start of turbo pumps using a stored gas start-up system. Important for LVM3 flights: The test on the CE20 cryogenic engine, which was successfully conducted under vacuum conditions in the High-Altitude Test (HAT) facility at ISRO Propulsion Complex, Mahendragiri is an important development towards enhancing the restart capability and mission flexibility of future LVM3 flights. Qualified for important missions like Gaganyaan: The CE20 cryogenic engine, powering the LVM3 upper stage, is already qualified for operation at thrust levels ranging from 19 to 22 tonnes in flight with a single start, and also for the Gaganyaan missions. Essential for flexible multi-orbit missions: For future missions, multiple in-flight restarts of the CE20 engine will be needed for flexible multi-orbit missions. Exploring possibility of bootstrap mode start: With the current set-up, each restart demands an additional start-up gas bottle and associated systems. Hence, achieving bootstrap mode start, where the engine builds up to steady operation without external start-up assistance is essential. Source: The Hindu Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Category: International Organisations Context: The Gulf Cooperation Council has approved a landmark one-stop travel system designed to streamline movement across member states. About Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC): Establishment: It is a regional political and economic alliance established in 1981. Members: The member countries include Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). Objective: It aims to foster economic, security, cultural, and social cooperation among its members. This cooperation is based on common Islamic values, tribal links, and mutual security and development goals. History: It was formed in response to escalating regional tensions, particularly the Iranian Revolution (1979) and the Iran-Iraq War (1980–1988). Headquarters: Its headquarters is located in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Significance: GCC countries are located strategically along the Persian Gulf, linking Europe, Asia, and Africa through maritime routes. Further, the bloc controls around 30% of global oil reserves and is a major exporter of natural gas. Organizational Structure: Supreme council is the highest authority of the GCC, composed of the heads of the member states. Ministerial council is composed of foreign ministers or their representatives from member states. It proposes policies and implements decisions of the Supreme Council. About One-stop Travel System: It is part of the GCC’s ambitious push to eliminate redundant travel procedures and foster stronger cooperation between member states.  It will allow Gulf citizens to complete all travel procedures including immigration, customs and security checks at a single checkpoint. Source: News on AIR Adam Chini Rice Category: Miscellaneous Context: Farmers in Uttar Pradesh are seeing their dreams take flight with the revival as BHU researchers revive timeless rice variety ‘Adam Chini’ with innovation. About Adam Chini Rice: Nature: It is an aromatic black rice variety known for its pleasant aroma and superior cooking qualities. It received Geographical Indication (GI) in 2023. Growing areas: It is mainly grown in the Eastern Uttar Pradesh region including Chandauli, Varanasi and Vindhya region. GI tagged: It received Geographical Indication (GI) status on 22 February 2023 (valid till November 2030). The GI tag proposed by Ishani Agro Producer Company Ltd. and Human Welfare Association of Uttar Pradesh. Uniqueness: It is known for its sugar-crystal-like grains, drought tolerance, and disease resistance qualities. It has long maturity period (155 days) and low yields (20-23 quintals per hectare). Structure: It reaches height up to 165 cm and its grains are short-bold, scented with intermediate alkali digestion value. Presence of amylose: It has intermediate amylose content which helps rice to remain fluffy and remains soft on cooling. It is renowned for its excellence in flavour. Improved features by BHU: Reduced height (105 cm for mutant-14), Early maturity (120 days for mutant-19), Higher yields (30-35 quintals per hectare for mutants 14, 15, 19, and 20). Now it is more suitable for mass production while retaining its coveted fragrance. Source: The New Indian Express Exercise Ajeya Warrior 2025 Category: Defence and Security Context: The eighth edition of the India-UK Joint Military Exercise ‘Ajeya Warrior-25’ commenced at the Foreign Training Node, Mahajan Field Firing Ranges, Rajasthan. About Exercise Ajeya Warrior: Nature: It is a bilateral military exercise conducted between India-UK. Commencement: It is held biennially since 2011, AJEYA WARRIOR has evolved into a flagship engagement between the Indian Army and the British Army. Objective: The objective of the exercise is to facilitate the exchange of best combat skills and experiences between the two armies and to enhance their ability to operate together in complex situations. Uniqueness: It is conducted under a United Nations mandate, specifically aligned with Chapter VII of the UN Charter, which deals with peacekeeping duties related to threats to peace, breaches of peace, and counter-terrorism scenarios. Significance: The exercise further reinforces shared values of professionalism, cooperation and commitment to regional stability and global peace. About Exercise Ajeya Warrior 2025: The Indian Army is being represented by troops of the Sikh Regiment. It includes joint mission planning at Brigade level, integrated tactical drills, simulation-based scenarios and company-level field training exercises replicating real-life counter-terror contingencies. The exercise also aims to share best practices, enhance tactical proficiency and develop coordinated responses for managing complex operations in challenging environments. Source: PIB (MAINS Focus) End of the Red Corridor: India’s Battle Against Left-Wing Extremism Turns a Corner (GS Paper III – Internal Security: Left-Wing Extremism, Security Forces, Governance & Development)   Context (Introduction) The killing of top Maoist commander Madvi Hidma in Andhra Pradesh marks a turning point in India’s two-decade struggle against Left-Wing Extremism (LWE). Improved policing, leadership targeting, and development efforts have sharply shrunk Maoist influence across the Red Corridor.   Main Arguments Shift from Maoist dominance to State control: In the early 2000s, PWG cadres held vast tribal-forest belts from Andhra Pradesh to Nepal — termed the “Compact Revolutionary Zone.” Maoists controlled interiors due to weak governance and favourable terrain. Political ambiguity enabled regrouping: States, especially Andhra Pradesh in 2004, alternated between police withdrawal and peace talks. Ceasefires allowed Maoists to consolidate, culminating in the 2004 PWG–MCC merger forming CPI (Maoist). Severe constraints on early security operations: Forces lacked anti-mine vehicles, fortified police stations, and helicopter support. Stints in Maoist zones were viewed as punishment postings. Intelligence suffered due to lack of local-language capacity. Escalation of Maoist violence (2006–2013): Attacks intensified: the Tadmetla ambush killed 76 CRPF personnel (2010) and the 2013 Jhiram Ghati attack wiped out Chhattisgarh’s Congress leadership. Affected districts reached 126 in 2013. Strategic overhaul since 2014: The Centre prioritised modernisation of forces, strengthened inter-State coordination, choked financing networks, targeted top leadership, and expanded welfare schemes. Affected districts reduced to 38 (2024) and now to just 11.   Criticisms / Drawbacks/Limitations Treating LWE merely as a law-and-order problem: Early policies underestimated its ideological and armed revolutionary character, resulting in slow, inconsistent State responses. Ceasefire missteps and political signalling: Talks without verification mechanisms enabled Maoists to regroup, recruit, and rearm — reversing earlier operational gains. Weak grassroots policing infrastructure: Insufficient police stations, poor road networks, and scarce local recruitment limited State presence in remote tribal belts. Persistent governance vacuum in interiors: Slow progress in roads, schools, telecom, and welfare schemes allowed Maoists to position themselves as parallel authorities. Maoist adaptability to terrain and borders: Dense forests, tri-junction borders (AP–Chhattisgarh–Odisha), and tribal alienation provided operational and social cover for cadres.   Reforms and Way Forward Strengthen Local Policing & Intelligence Expand fortified police stations in interior tribal zones. Recruit local youth fluent in dialects for intelligence. Replicate Greyhounds and C-60–style specialised units nationally. Technology-driven Operations Scale use of drones, satellite mapping, helicopter mobility, and anti-landmine vehicles. Build integrated command systems across affected tri-junctions. Leadership Targeting & Financial Disruption Sustain operations removing top leaders and active dalams. Target extortion, illegal mining, and forest-produce revenue streams. Address Governance Deficits Accelerate Special Central Assistance for roads, telecom, health and education. Ensure fast compensation and grievance redressal in conflict-hit areas. Expand power supply, banking access, and digital services. Community-Centric Development & Rehabilitation Promote tribal welfare, forest rights implementation, and participatory planning. Strengthen surrender, rehabilitation, and livelihood programmes. Counter Maoist narratives through local influencers and SHG networks.   Conclusion Two decades after being termed India’s “single biggest internal security challenge,” Left-Wing Extremism is in visible retreat. The convergence of improved policing, targeted operations, and expanding development has fractured Maoist organisational capacity. Yet, sustaining gains requires deep governance penetration, empowered tribal communities, and continued vigilance to prevent resurgence.   Mains Question Left-Wing Extremism has seen a marked decline in recent years. Analyse the factors behind this trend and suggest measures to consolidate the gains achieved. (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Indian Express The Threat of Digital Tradecraft in Modern Terrorism (GS Paper III – Internal Security: Terrorism, Cybersecurity, Encrypted Communication, Counter-Radicalisation)   Context (Introduction) The Red Fort car blast in Delhi on November 10, which killed 15 people, has exposed a new frontier in terrorism where extremist cells combine encrypted digital tools, private servers, and spy-style communication to evade surveillance and coordinate attacks.   Main Arguments Use of high-privacy encrypted apps: Investigators found that the accused used Threema, an E2EE messaging app that requires no phone number and leaves minimal metadata. The module may have operated from a private Threema server, enabling isolated, untraceable communication. Adoption of digital “dead-drop” emails: The cell reportedly used shared email accounts in which drafts (not sent messages) were updated and deleted — a classic espionage method leaving no communication trail, bypassing phone or email logging systems. Sophisticated operational planning: The group conducted multiple reconnaissance missions using routine vehicles, stockpiled ammonium nitrate, and maintained disciplined communication gaps after arrests — reflecting a professional understanding of counter-surveillance. External ideological or operational linkages: Preliminary leads suggest possible ties with or inspiration from Jaish-e-Mohammed (JeM). The communication architecture — encrypted apps, dead-drop emails, minimal digital footprint — indicates high-level training and organisational backing. Alignment with global academic research: Scholarship repeatedly warns that extremist actors increasingly exploit E2EE platforms, VPNs, and decentralised networks, combining physical tradecraft with digital anonymity in ways that weaken traditional counter-terrorism tools.   Criticisms / Drawbacks/Limitations Limitations of traditional surveillance: Phone tapping, metadata analysis, and email intercepts become ineffective when extremists use private servers, VPNs, and apps with zero metadata retention. Regulatory gaps on self-hosted platforms: Banning Threema (under IT Act Sec 69A) has limited impact because terror modules use VPNs and offshore hosting. Law enforcement lacks a framework to monitor private encrypted servers. Inadequate cyber-forensics capability: Many agencies still rely on device seizure rather than advanced memory forensics, server-side analysis, or encrypted-network mapping. Failure to detect radicalisation in professional spaces: The involvement of medical professionals from a university shows that radicalisation can occur among highly educated individuals, where existing monitoring or awareness systems are weak. Risks of transnational networks: If external handlers are confirmed, India faces challenges in securing cross-border cooperation, especially where encrypted infrastructure is located abroad.   Reforms and Way Forward Build specialised digital-forensics and cyber-intelligence units Expand teams skilled in decrypting memory dumps, analysing E2EE misuse, and tracking private servers. Train personnel in dark-web monitoring, digital dead-drop detection, and server-level forensics. Strengthen NIA and State ATS cyber labs with modern tools. Regulate self-hosted encrypted infrastructure Create frameworks requiring private communication servers to maintain minimal lawful-access compliance. Establish judicially supervised protocols for cooperation with providers of encrypted apps. Track VPN exit nodes and anonymisation networks linked to terror activity. Modernise legal frameworks for digital terrorism Amend counter-terrorism laws to recognise encrypted dead-drops, decentralised communication, and private servers. Mandate detection of high-risk shared accounts or draft-only mailboxes in investigations. Strengthen admissibility standards for cyber-forensic evidence. Strengthen institutional and community vigilance Equip universities, hospitals, and professional bodies with counter-radicalisation resources. Launch targeted awareness programmes for high-skill sectors vulnerable to ideological recruitment. Build early-warning mechanisms through counselling cells, faculty training, and student support networks. Deepen international cooperation Engage foreign governments, cybersecurity entities, and encrypted-app host countries through tech diplomacy. Enhance intelligence sharing on E2EE misuse, server hosting, funding routes, and cross-border handlers. Partner with global cyber-forensics centres for training and joint operations.   Conclusion The Red Fort blast demonstrates that modern terrorism is increasingly digital, decentralised, and encrypted. As extremist cells adopt sophisticated tradecraft across physical and virtual domains, India must expand cyber-forensics, regulate private encrypted infrastructure, strengthen institutional vigilance, and collaborate globally. Counter-terrorism now requires not only boots on the ground, but also capability in code, servers, and encrypted networks.   Mains Question The Red Fort blast highlights how encrypted communication and digital tradecraft are reshaping terrorism. Examine how such technologies complicate counter-terrorism efforts and suggest reforms to strengthen India’s digital security architecture.(250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 19th November 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 19th November – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) PM-KISAN Category: Government Schemes Context: Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) West Bengal president said that over ₹10,500 crore has been disbursed to the State’s farmers under the PM-KISAN scheme. About PM-KISAN: Launch: Pradhan Mantri Kisan Samman Nidhi (PM-KISAN) is a Central-Sector scheme (100% funded by Government of India) and it was launched in December 2018. Objective: It aims to provide financial assistance to all land-holding farmer families across India. Under the scheme, eligible farmer families receive income support of Rs 6,000 annually, distributed in three equal installments of Rs 2,000 each. Nodal ministry: The Department of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare (DA&FW) of the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers Welfare is the implementing agency.  The DA&FW works with the Department of Agriculture of all the states and union territories to implement the scheme. Eligibility: All landholding farmers’ families, which have cultivable land holding in their names are eligible to get benefit under the scheme. For the purposes of this scheme, a farmer “family” consists of the husband, wife, and any minor children. Identification of beneficiaries: The responsibility to identify eligible farmer families rests with State Governments and Union Territory (UT) administrations, following the scheme’s guidelines. Use of DBT: The scheme ensures that funds are directly transferred to beneficiaries’ bank accounts to promote transparency and reduce delays. The government has also linked Kisan Credit Card with PM-KISAN to streamline farmers’ access to formal credit, reduce documentation, and make loan processing faster. Exclusion: The PM-KISAN scheme excludes beneficiaries with higher economic status, making them ineligible for benefits. These exclusions are as follows: All institutional landholders.  Families where any member holds, or has held, constitutional posts.  Former and present Ministers (Central or State), Members of Parliament (Lok Sabha/Rajya Sabha), State Legislative Assemblies/Councils, as well as former/present Mayors of Municipal Corporations and Chairpersons of District Panchayats.  All serving or retired officers and employees of Central/State Government Ministries, Departments, and field units, including Public Sector Enterprises (PSEs) and autonomous institutions under government and regular employees of local bodies.   Professionals such as Doctors, Engineers, Lawyers, Chartered Accountants, and Architects registered with professional bodies. Source: The Hindu BrahMos Missile Category: Defence and Security Context: Indonesian Defence Minister is scheduled to visit India in the last week of November for follow-up to the major defence agreement involving the BrahMos missile. About BrahMos Missile: Nomenclature: It is named after the Brahmaputra River of India and the Moskva River of Russia. Development: BrahMos has been jointly developed by DRDO, India, and NPOM, Russia (with India owning 50.5% of the JV and Russia owning the remaining 49.5%). Range: An Indo-Russian joint venture, the BrahMos missile has a range of 290 km. Uniqueness: It is the world’s fastest cruise missile with a top speed of Mach 2.8 (about three times the speed of sound).  Two-stage missile: It is a two-stage (solid propellant engine in the first stage and liquid ramjet in the second) missile.  Multiplatform missile: It is a multiplatform missile which can be launched with great accuracy from land, air and sea having multi-capability capabilities and can operate during day and night despite bad weather.  Based on fire and forget principle: It operates on the “fire and forget” principle i.e. it does not require guidance after launch. First launch: On June 12, 2001, the first successful launch of BrahMos occurred. The missile was launched from a land-based launcher at the Interim Test Range off the coast of Chandipur in Orissa. About BrahMos-NG (Next Generation): BrahMos-NG promises to become one of the most potent weapon systems in the future, carrying forward the excellent lineage of the existing world-class BrahMos. Its range is 290 km and it has a speed of 3.5 Mach. It has a smaller radar cross-section (RCS) than the previous missile, making it more difficult for air defence systems to detect and engage the target. Because of its small size, this missile can be launched from submarine torpedo rooms. Source: The Hindu Vrindavani Vastra Category: History and Culture Context: Assam Chief Minister left for London on Saturday to initiate the process of bringing back the revered Vrindavani Vastra from the British Museum. About Vrindavani Vastra: Nature: It is a 400-year-old traditional textile from Assam, woven with the theme of Krishna’s various exploits. Prominent themes: The childhood stories of Lord Krishna in Vrindavan, his divine pastimes, and various events are woven with thread on this cloth. Building technique: It was made of woven silk using the complex ‘lampas’ technique. This technique requires two weavers working simultaneously. The designs were woven with a large variety of colored threads, like red, white, black, yellow, green, etc. History: It was created under the guidance of Srimanta Sankardeva, at the request of Koch king Nara Narayan, who ruled over parts of modern-day Assam and West Bengal. Notably, Nara Nararan had sheltered Sankardeva after the Vaishnav saint was targeted by the Ahom kingdom on the instigation of Brahmin priests in the state. Significance: The textile serves as a testament to Assamese weaving, incorporating elements from various artistic traditions, and travelled from Assam to Tibet before being acquired by the British Museum in 1904. Associated with Vaishnavism: A masterpiece of sacred art, the Vrindavani Vastra is a central part of Assamese Vaishnavism. Source: The Hindu Marburg Virus Disease (MVD) Category: Science and Technology Context: Ethiopia has reported its first-ever outbreak of Marburg virus disease with laboratory tests confirming nine cases, the World Health Organization (WHO) said. About Marburg Virus Disease (MVD): Nomenclature: It was first identified in 1967 in the German city of Marburg. And it was named after an outbreak linked to laboratory workers exposed to infected green monkeys imported from Uganda. Geographical spread: Most outbreaks have occurred in sub-Saharan Africa, including countries like Tanzania, Uganda, Angola, Ghana, Kenya, and Zimbabwe. Nature: MVD is a severe and often fatal hemorrhagic fever caused by the Marburg virus, with high case fatality rates and no approved treatments currently available.  Symptoms: MVD starts with high fever, severe headache, and malaise. As it progresses, it can cause severe bleeding, shock, and multi-organ failure, with death occurring 8-9 days post-symptom onset.  Transmission: It is transmitted from fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) to humans, and spreads through direct contact with bodily fluids of infected individuals.  Diagnosis: Diagnosis is confirmed through tests like RT-PCR (Reverse Transcription Polymerase Chain Reaction), and virus isolation, which require maximum biohazard containment.  Fatality rate: The average case fatality rate is approximately 50%, varying from 24% to 88% depending on the virus strain and case management. Treatment: Presently, no approved vaccine or antiviral treatments exist to treat it. Supportive care, such as rehydration and symptom management, improves survival. Control: Key control measures include community engagement, safe burials, contact tracing, and infection control in healthcare settings. Source: DD News Maram Naga Tribe Category: Society Context: Under the Prime Minister’s Jan Man Scheme, the Centre has sanctioned a Rs 9 crore development program for the Maram Naga tribe of Manipur. About Maram Naga Tribe: Location: The Maram Naga tribe belongs to the Naga ethnic group, inhabiting the Northeastern part of India as well as the Western part of Myanmar. The Maram habitat falls under the Senapati district of Manipur.  Race: They are considered to be a part of the Tibeto-Burman family of the Mongoloid race. The Marams are surrounded by other Naga tribes in all directions. Language: Linguistically, they belong to the sub-family of the Sino-Tibetan family. The people speak the Maram language. There are some variations in the way the dialect is spoken, corresponding with geographical location. Script: They use Roman script in writing their language. Occupation: Agriculture is the main occupation of the people. Shifting cultivation is the main cultivation practiced by them. They are also involved in wet cultivation. Hunting is the secondary occupation of Maram tribes. Religious beliefs: Maram tribes are the worshippers of supernatural benevolent and malevolent beings.  Festivals: The two major festivals of the Marams are Punghi (celebrated in July) and Kanghi (in December). The tribe also celebrates a unique festival called Mangkang around April every year, dedicated to the women folks. Source: Northeast Now (MAINS Focus) Time to Sort Out India’s Cereal Mess (GS Paper III – Agriculture, Food Security, MSP, PDS Reforms)   Context (Introduction) India faces a paradox: record paddy procurement and overflowing rice stocks far above buffer norms, even as the country spends heavily on importing pulses and edible oils. The Tamil Nadu procurement controversy reflects deeper structural flaws in India’s cereal-centric policy regime.   Main Arguments  Excess procurement and rising stocks: Rice stocks in the central pool on Oct 1, 2025 stood at 356.1 lakh tonnes, over 3.5 times the required norm (102.5 lakh tonnes). Annual rice procurement remains high at 525–547 lakh tonnes, while PDS offtake remains lower (392–427 lakh tonnes). MSP-driven skew towards paddy: Farmers increasingly shift to paddy due to minimum assured returns, as seen in Tamil Nadu’s kuruvai season expansion by 2 lakh acres. This creates procurement pressure and disincentivises diversification. Import dependence despite domestic capacity: India imports ₹1.2 lakh crore of edible oils and ₹30,000 crore of pulses, even though it is the world’s largest pulses producer (252.4 lakh tonnes, 2024–25). Oilseed production has stagnated around 400 lakh tonnes only once since 2014. Mismatch between procurement and consumption: While rice is over-procured, wheat shows the opposite trend: PDS utilisation exceeded procurement in two of the last three years. This highlights lack of dynamic, crop-wise planning. High fiscal cost with systemic leakages: The food subsidy bill remains around ₹2 lakh crore annually, yet leakage continues. An ICRIER study reported ~28% loss of rice and wheat during distribution — highlighting inefficiencies in PDS and procurement.   Criticisms / Drawbacks  Unsustainable cereal-heavy procurement: Over-dependence on rice procurement crowds out essential nutritional crops, contradicting the broader goals of food security and nutrition security. Disincentivisation of crop rotation and diversification: Paddy dominance erodes soil health, depletes groundwater, and discourages pulses/oilseeds that are crucial for dietary diversity. Ineffective MSP operations for pulses and oilseeds: Despite high production, procurement of notified pulses has fallen substantially over the last two years, signalling weak support systems unlike for paddy/wheat. Structural inefficiencies in FCI and State corporations: Time overruns, potential corruption, and poor coordination—as seen in TNCSC—reflect broader weaknesses in centralised procurement, storage, and transport systems. Weak institutional mechanisms for market integration: FPOs remain nascent, and farmers lack secure linkages with processors (e.g., blackgram growers and papad makers). Fragmented value chains worsen farmer uncertainty.   Suggested Reforms  Incentivise Crop Diversification Conduct area-specific demand–supply market studies to guide farmers. Provide financial support, crop-specific advisories, and risk mitigation tools. Replicate models from Punjab-Haryana diversification pilots and Telangana’s oilseed push. Rationalise Procurement Policies Introduce flexible procurement ceilings based on nutritional needs and buffer norms. Revisit MSP coverage to include more pulses and oilseeds under assured procurement. Permit unrestricted rice exports, avoiding ad hoc bans that depress farmer incomes. Strengthen Farmer–Market Linkages Encourage FPO–processor partnerships; e.g., blackgram growers–papad units. Promote contract farming frameworks with safeguards to reduce intermediaries. Expand FPO capacity in procurement (e.g., West Bengal’s successful use of FPOs in paddy procurement). Reform PDS and Reduce Leakages Digitise end-to-end supply chains (e-NAM–PDS linkage, GPS tracking). Expand portability under One Nation One Ration Card (ONORC). Adopt community monitoring and SHG-led distribution in vulnerable districts. Boost Oilseed and Pulse Productivity Expand area under NFSM-Oilseeds & Pulses, promote HYVs and water-saving technologies. Invest in R&D: India has stagnant yields (around 1 tonne/ha for oilseeds). Incentivise private sector in processing and storage for value addition.   Conclusion  India’s cereal policy, designed six decades ago to address scarcity, is misaligned with today’s nutritional, environmental, and fiscal realities. Rebalancing procurement towards pulses and oilseeds, empowering FPOs, enabling freer markets, and modernising PDS can transform this paradox into an opportunity—ensuring both food security and farmer security in a sustainable manner.   Mains Question  India’s foodgrain procurement system has created a cereal-heavy imbalance. Analyse the structural reasons for this paradox and suggest necessary reforms.(250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu Proposed Amendments to the PPV&FRA Act: Farmers’ Concerns and Policy Implications (GS Paper III – Agriculture: IPR, Seeds, Farmer Rights, Biotechnology)   Context (Introduction) The Centre plans to amend the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Act (2001) after two decades. A committee led by R.S. Paroda has begun consultations to align the law with new technologies, seed-sector changes, and farmers’ rights concerns.   Main Arguments Updating definitions in line with new technologies: Stakeholders are discussing expanding the definition of ‘variety’ to include “combination of genotypes”—bringing it closer to the draft Seeds Bill, 2019. This recognises modern breeding techniques and evolving seed types. Wider inclusion of planting materials: Proposed expansion of the definition of “seed” to include seedlings, tubers, bulbs, rhizomes, roots, tissue culture plantlets, synthetic seeds and all vegetatively propagated materials—ensuring comprehensive legal coverage. Clarifying status of breeders and institutions: The law may define “institution” more explicitly to include both public and private entities, bringing clarity for registration, rights, and liability within the seed sector. Strengthening DUS (Distinctness, Uniformity, Stability) testing norms: Discussions focus on adding trait-based parameters into DUS guidelines and questioning current testing processes to ensure rigorous and transparent evaluation of new varieties. Defining “abusive acts”: Proposed amendments seek to criminalise actions such as producing, selling, or exporting a variety with the same or identical denomination as an already registered variety—preventing market confusion and bio-piracy.   Key Concerns of Farmers’ Groups Protection of community-developed seeds: Farmer unions like Samyukt Kisan Morcha argue that all community-developed and traditional varieties should be mandatorily registered as community property to prevent future private monopolisation. Misuse of DUS tests for private benefit: Farmers fear that flawed or manipulated testing could allow private firms to register community varieties. The alleged improper DUS testing of njavara (a traditional South Indian paddy) has heightened distrust. IPR model incompatible with traditional seed practices: Analysts argue that small farmers treat seeds as shared, biocultural material, not as products of exclusive ownership. Expanding IPR without safeguards risks undermining age-old seed exchange systems. Pressure to align domestic law with UPOV standards: Activists note international pressure to harmonise Indian law with UPOV (International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants)—which grants stronger breeders’ rights and weaker farmers’ privileges compared to India’s current Act. Lack of clear compensation rules: Although the original Act mandated compensation for failure of IP-protected seeds, Rules do not detail compensation criteria, leaving farmers unprotected when seeds fail to perform.   Reforms and Way Forward  Strengthen registration of traditional varieties Create a mandatory community registry for all local and traditional seeds. Ensure DUS exemptions or simplified protocols for farmers’ varieties, similar to global “farmer-led seed systems.” Transparent and independent DUS testing Publish full DUS protocols, results, and test locations. Establish third-party oversight to prevent manipulation. Adopt trait-based DUS parameters to reflect modern breeding. Farmer-friendly IPR safeguards Maintain India’s strong farmers’ rights to save, reuse, share, exchange seed—a global model distinct from UPOV. Implement open-source seed licences for publicly funded varieties. Ensure accountability of breeders Frame Rules for compensation, covering crop loss, non-performance, and defective planting material. Introduce time-bound redressal mechanisms through Seed Consumers’ Courts or district-level authorities. Capacity building and awareness Provide farmer organisations with legal and technical training on IPR and seed rights. Bring small farmers into the system through local-language advisories and local seed committees.   Conclusion  Two decades after its enactment, India’s plant variety law faces the dual challenge of recognising scientific advances while safeguarding the seed sovereignty of millions of small farmers. Balanced reforms—strengthening community rights, improving testing integrity, and ensuring accountability—can modernise the Act without compromising India’s unique pro-farmer framework.   Mains Question  Why is the Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Act being amended? Discuss the major proposed changes and examine the concerns raised by farmers’ groups (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Hindu

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 18th November – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) 6th Schedule Category: 6th Schedule Context: The Leh Apex Body (LAB), which is spearheading an agitation over Statehood and Sixth Schedule status for Ladakh, submitted a draft proposal to the Ministry of Home Affairs. About 6th Schedule: Constitutional provision: The Sixth Schedule of the Constitution, under Article 244(2) and Article 275(1) of the Constitution, is provided for the administration of tribal areas in Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram. Objectives: To protect tribal land and resources and prohibits the transfer of such resources to non-tribal individuals or communities. To ensure the tribal communities are not exploited or marginalized by non-tribal populations and that their cultural and social identities are preserved and promoted. Creation of Autonomous districts and autonomous regions: The tribal areas in the four states of Assam, Meghalaya, Tripura, and Mizoram are to be administered as Autonomous Districts. If there are different Scheduled Tribes in an autonomous district, the Governor can divide the district inhabited by them into Autonomous Regions. The Governor is empowered to organize and reorganize the autonomous districts. He can also increase, decrease the boundaries or alter the name of any autonomous district. Constitution of District Councils and Regional Councils: There shall be a District Council for each autonomous district consisting of not more than 30 members, of whom not more than four persons shall be nominated by the Governor, and the rest shall be elected on the basis of adult suffrage. There shall be a separate Regional Council for each area constituted an autonomous region. Powers of the District Councils and Regional Councils: The District and Regional councils are empowered to make laws on certain specified matters like lands, management of forest (other than the Reserved Forest), inheritance of property, etc. These councils also empowered to make law for the regulations and control of money-lending or trading by any person other than Scheduled Tribe residents in that Scheduled District. However, all laws made under this provision require the assent of the Governor of the State. Administration of justice in autonomous districts and autonomous regions: The District and Regional Councils are empowered to constitute Village and District Council Courts for the trial of suits and cases where all parties to the dispute belong to Scheduled Tribes within the district. The High Courts have jurisdiction over the suits and cases which is specified by the Governor. However, the Council Courts are not given the power to decide cases involving offenses punishable by death or imprisonment for five or more years. Exceptions: To autonomous districts and autonomous regions, the acts of Parliament or the state legislature do not apply or apply with specified modifications and exceptions. The Governor can appoint a commission to investigate and provide a report on any issue pertaining to the autonomous districts or regions. Source: The Hindu Green Hydrogen Category: Science and Technology Context: India is a key part of global transition to a self-reliant hydrogen economy, Dr. Jitendra Singh said while addressing 3rd International Conference on Green Hydrogen. About Green Hydrogen: Definition: Green Hydrogen refers to hydrogen produced through electrolysis, where renewable energy sources like solar, wind, or hydro are used to split water molecules (H₂O) into hydrogen (H₂) and oxygen (O₂). It can also be produced via biomass gasification, a process that converts biomass into hydrogen-rich gas. Applications: Its uses include a wide range of applications such as Fuel Cell Electric Vehicles (FCEVs), aviation and maritime transport, and various industrial sectors like fertilizers, refineries, and steel. It also holds potential in road and rail transport, shipping, and power generation. Various methods of producing Green Hydrogen: Alkaline electrolysis: The most mature technology, uses an alkaline solution (KOH or NaOH) as the electrolyte. Despite its high efficiency and low cost, it requires expensive materials like nickel and platinum as electrodes. Proton exchange membrane electrolysis: An advanced method using a solid polymer membrane as the electrolyte. It offers higher efficiency and faster response times, but the high cost of the membrane and precious metal catalysts is a challenge. Solid oxide electrolysis: A high-temperature process (700°C to 1000°C) using a solid ceramic material as the electrolyte. It offers high efficiency and the potential for co-electrolysis (simultaneous conversion of water and CO2 into H2 and CO), but the high temperatures and need for specialised materials make it more complex and expensive. Initiatives taken by India towards production of Green Production: Financial funding: India has sanctioned a $2 billion incentive scheme to boost green hydrogen production. The initiative aims to improve the affordability of green hydrogen, positioning India as a significant exporter. Presently, the cost of green hydrogen in India is $4-5 per kg. National Green Hydrogen Mission: Initiated in January 2023, this mission targets an annual production of 5 million metric tonnes of green hydrogen by 2030, leveraging 125 gigawatts of renewable energy. SIGHT program: It is a part of National Green Hydrogen Mission and offers substantial financial backing to boost domestic electrolyser manufacturing and green hydrogen production, reinforcing India’s vision to emerge as a leading green hydrogen economy. Source: PIB Electronics Development Fund (EDF) Category: Government Schemes Context: With ₹257.77 crore invested, the Electronics Development Fund has supported 128 startups nationwide. About Electronics Development Fund (EDF): Launch: The Government of India had launched the Electronics Development Fund (EDF) on 15 February 2016. Objective: The Fund aims to promote research, development, and entrepreneurship in the fields of electronics, nano-electronics, and information technology. Acts as a fund of funds: The EDF functions as a Fund of Funds, designed to invest in professionally managed Daughter Funds such as early-stage angel and venture funds. These Daughter Funds, in turn, provided risk capital to startups and companies developing new technologies. Key objectives of EDF include: To foster research and development in electronics, nano-electronics, and information technology by supporting market-driven and industry-led innovation. To invest in professionally managed Daughter Funds such as early-stage angel and venture funds that, in turn, provide capital to startups and technology ventures. To nurture entrepreneurship by supporting companies involved in the creation of new products, processes, and technologies within the country. To enhance India’s capacity for indigenous design and development in the Electronics System Design and Manufacturing (ESDM) sector. To generate a strong base of intellectual property in key technology areas and encourage ownership of innovation within India. To enable acquisition of foreign technologies and companies where such products are imported in large volumes, promoting self-reliance and reducing import dependence. Main Features of EDF: EDF participates in Daughter Funds on a non-exclusive basis, allowing wider collaboration and participation across the industry. The share of EDF in a Daughter Fund’s total corpus is determined by market requirements and the capacity of the Investment Manager to administer the fund in accordance with EDF’s policy guidelines. EDF generally maintains a minority participation in each Daughter Fund, encouraging greater private investment and professional fund management. Investment Managers of Daughter Funds are given flexibility and autonomy to raise corpus, make investments, and monitor portfolio performance. EDF participation is available across the entire value chain of electronics, information technology, and related ecosystems, ensuring comprehensive sectoral coverage. The final selection of Daughter Funds is carried out after detailed due diligence by the Investment Manager. Achievements: The Electronics Development Fund (EDF) has made remarkable progress in nurturing India’s innovation ecosystem. EDF has drawn a total of ₹216.33 crore from its contributors, including ₹210.33 crore from MeitY. The supported startups operate in frontier areas such as Internet of Things (IoT), Robotics, Drones, Autonomous Vehicles, HealthTech, Cyber Security, and Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, positioning India as a hub for advanced technological innovation. Source: PIB Exercise Garuda 2025 Topic: Defence and Security Context: The Indian Air Force (IAF) is participating in the 8th edition of the bilateral air Exercise ‘Garuda 25’ with the French Air and Space Force (FASF) at Mont-de-Marsan, France. About Exercise Garuda 2025: Origin: First held in 2003, Garuda is one of India’s longest-running air exercises with a Western nation. It reflects deepening defence and strategic ties under the India–France Strategic Partnership (established in 1998). Objective: It is held alternately in India and France to promote operational interaction, mutual learning, and enhanced interoperability between the two Air Forces. Deployment of fighter jets: The IAF has deployed six Su-30MKI fighter jets, supported by IL-78 refuellers and C-17 Globemasters, to operate alongside French Rafale and other multirole fighters in complex simulated air combat missions. Focus Areas: It focuses on air-to-air combat drills, air defence missions, joint strike operations, and the refinement of tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs). Importance: This exercise promotes India-France collaborations like Rafale deal, Indo-Pacific cooperation, and joint space defence research. Other Exercises with France: It includes Exercise Varuna (naval), and Exercise Shakti (army) and Exercise Desert Knight (India, France, and UAE). Source: PIB Territorial Army Category: Polity and Governance Context: In a first-of-its-kind move, the Army is planning to induct women soldiers in its Territorial Army (TA) battalions. About Territorial Army: Establishment: It was established by Territorial Army Act, 1948; and was formally launched on October 9, 1949. Composition: It comprises of a volunteer reserve force comprising part-time “citizen soldiers” from civilian backgrounds (businessmen, professionals). Objective: It aims to relieve the regular Army from non-combat duties and augment its manpower during conflict or crisis. Nodal ministry: It comes under Ministry of Defence, Government of India. Governed by: It is governed by Territorial Army Act, 1948 and Rule 33 of the Act permits full mobilisation during national exigencies. Objectives: It supports army operations during war, terrorism, or border tension. It assists civil administration during floods, earthquakes, and pandemics. It also aids in counter-insurgency and stability operations in conflict-prone areas. Evolution: It evolved from the Indian Territorial Force (1920), which saw action in global conflicts like WWI and the Boer War. After the independence, it was established to serve as the second line of defence and engage citizens in nation-building through defence service. Eligibility: Indian citizens aged 18–42, who are medically fit (with civilian occupations) are eligible to join Territorial Army. Training Model: It consists of approximately 2 months of annual training (no full-time military obligation in peace times). Operational Participation: It provided logistical support, rear area defence, and vital infrastructure protection during 1947–48, 1962, 1965, 1971 wars. It also guarded ammunition dumps, supply lines, and sensitive zones during Kargil Conflict (1999). Source: The Indian Express (MAINS Focus) The Lower Judiciary: Litigation, Pendency and Stagnation (UPSC GS Paper II – “Structure, organisation and functioning of the Judiciary”)   Context (Introduction) India’s subordinate courts face severe pendency (4.69 crore cases as per NJDG), procedural delays, inexperienced judicial recruits, and outdated laws. The Supreme Court recently linked stagnation in the lower judiciary with systemic inefficiencies and rising litigation.   Main Arguments Clerical burden on subordinate judiciary: Subordinate judges spend mornings issuing summons, calling cases, receiving vakalatnamas, and noting appearances, leaving little time for hearings and judgments. Listing work continues past noon, reducing quality judicial time. Need for a specialised “ministerial court”: A lower-tier judicial officer in each district could handle ministerial tasks throughout the day—summons, ex parte evidence, filing, pleadings—freeing regular courts for trials and arguments from 10:30 a.m. onward. Declining quality and experience of judicial entrants: Earlier, district munsifs came with 10+ years of practice under senior lawyers. Now, fresh graduates with no exposure face difficulties in workload, reasoning, and drafting orders. Some reportedly struggle to pass basic orders. Inadequate training: High Court–attached training for months—observing judicial conduct, interaction with bar, drafting orders—is suggested as a way to build practical knowledge and work culture. Procedural laws inadvertently creating delays: New statutory mechanisms, intended for faster disposal, often slow down litigation: Commercial Courts Act Section 12(A)— mandatory pre-suit mediation often unnecessary where parties have exchanged notices. Marriage Laws— mandatory six-month cooling-off creates avoidable pendency; inconsistent dispensation across courts. New Rent Act— confusion about oral leases and jurisdiction leads to forum shopping and delays. Archaic CPC provisions enabling delay: Multiple provisions—preliminary vs final decrees in partition suits, 106 rules under Order XXI (execution), rigid timelines like Order VIII Rule 1—allow litigants to drag proceedings despite amendments in 1976 and 2002. Pendency not limited to lower courts; Higher judiciary’s slow termination of proceedings adds to systemic backlog. Appeals and interim orders prolong the lifecycle of disputes.   Criticisms / Drawbacks Procedural rigidity without substantive benefit: Mandatory mediation, cooling-off periods, and multi-stage decrees delay resolution without improving dispute settlement. Statutory “gaps” and drafting ambiguities: Rent Act’s ambiguity on oral leases and jurisdiction creates a nebulous system—pushing litigants to civil or commercial courts rather than specialised rent courts. Execution as the weakest link: Order XXI’s technicalities allow judgment-debtors to stall the execution of decrees and arbitration awards for years, undermining access to justice. Inexperienced judicial officers: Recruiting judges without adequate bar experience leads to poor quality orders and hesitation in decision-making, increasing adjournments and pendency. Outdated legal architecture: CPC (1908) and many procedural statutes operate in a litigation environment very different from today, yet reforms have been piecemeal.   Reforms Suggested Reduce Clerical Burden on Judges Create a small “ministerial court” in every district to handle summons, filings, ex parte evidence, and daily listing. • Let regular courts focus only on hearings and judgments. Improve Judge Training and Experience Prefer recruits with some bar experience. • Give new judges a few months of training at High Court Benches to learn practical judicial work. • Continuous training in judgment writing and procedure. Simplify Procedural Laws Merge preliminary and final decrees in partition suits or make final decree automatic. • Cut down unnecessary steps in execution (Order XXI) to stop delay tactics. • Allow flexible timelines for written statements in non-commercial cases. Fix Problematic Statutory Provisions Make pre-suit mediation optional where parties have already exchanged notices. • Allow uniform waiver of six-month cooling-off period in mutual divorce when settlement is clear. • Remove confusion in the Rent Act by recognising oral leases and clarifying jurisdiction. Make Execution Faster and Simpler Require early asset disclosure by defendants. • Set strict timelines for execution. • Penalise frivolous objections. Improve Higher Judiciary’s Role Dispose appeals within reasonable timelines. • Restrict frequent adjournments. • Prioritise final hearings instead of endless interim matters.   Conclusion India’s lower judiciary suffers not merely from insufficient manpower but from structural inefficiencies, outdated procedures, and inadequate judicial preparation. Real reform lies in freeing judges from clerical burdens, simplifying archaic laws, improving training, and modernising execution processes—turning the judiciary into a system that delivers timely and qualitative justice.   Mains Question Pendency in subordinate courts is rooted in procedural rigidity, inadequate training, and legislative design flaws. Discuss how structural reforms in the lower judiciary can address India’s chronic backlog. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu China’s Air Pollution Control: Lessons for India (UPSC GS Paper III – “Environmental pollution and degradation”)   Context (Introduction) India’s recurring winter smog and year-round pollution in cities like Delhi and Mumbai mirror China’s crisis of the 2000s. China’s rapid improvements—80% of its territory saw better air quality after 2013—offer relevant lessons for India’s struggle.   Main Arguments China’s ‘Airpocalypse’ resembled India’s current crisis: Rapid industrialisation, coal-based heating, vehicle emissions, crop burning and unfavourable meteorology caused severe PM2.5 levels. India today faces similar drivers, compounded by winter inversions, stubble burning and biomass fuel use. 2006–2013 marked China’s policy shift: The 11th Five-Year Plan recognised pollution as a national priority. The “cadre evaluation system” linked promotions of governors, mayors and officials to pollution reduction—creating strong administrative accountability. Forceful industrial regulation: Outdated coal boilers, smelters, chemical units and paper mills were shut; heavy industry was modernised with pollution-control equipment. This targeted high-emission sources responsible for PM2.5. Aggressive transition to clean mobility: Cities like Shenzhen fully electrified 16,000 buses by 2017; Shanghai followed. EVs, despite coal-heavy grids, still reduced urban emissions by eliminating tailpipe pollution. Multi-pronged control measures (2013–17): Tsinghua University research found that cleaner heating, coal boiler controls, industrial closures and vehicle standards—jointly—led to significant air quality improvement across Chinese cities. Caveats and limitations: Top-down pressure led to data manipulation and hidden reopening of factories. China’s air quality standards remain weaker than Western benchmarks. The return to coal investment after the 2021 power shortage risks reversing gains.   Criticisms / Drawbacks China’s highly authoritarian enforcement model often encouraged officials to falsify pollution datato meet targets, instead of ensuring real on-ground compliance. Heavy dependence on coal continues, increasing the risk of rising PM2.5 levels and ground-level ozone despite earlier gains. China’s air quality standards themselves are relatively weak, so “improvement” does not always translate into air that is actually safe or comparable to global health norms. Centralised governance reduces avenues for legal accountability, unlike India where PILs and courts can hold authorities responsible for environmental failures. India faces additional structural challenges—widespread biomass use, uneven access to electricity, and multi-layered federal governance—which make replicating China’s model more complex.   Reforms / Lessons for India Continuous, Not Seasonal, Action China acted year-round; India’s GRAP activates only after AQI crosses limits. India needs 24×7, 365-day implementationof emission control—industrial, vehicular, waste-burning, and construction dust. Strong Accountability for Pollution Control • Put clear responsibility on State Pollution Control Boards, municipalities and industrial regulators. • Link institutional performance to measurable improvements, similar to China’s cadre evaluation system but adapted to democratic structures. Target Major Emitters First • Strict control of coal-based industries, brick kilns, and diesel generators. • Enforce continuous emissions monitoringand credible penalties for non-compliance. • Phase out outdated industrial units with financial support for clean upgrades. Cleaner Mobility & Public Transport Expand electric buses in major Indian cities (Delhi has begun, but scale is limited). Promote EV infrastructure where grid capacity exists. Encourage modal shift to metro, buses, cycles through better last-mile connectivity. Address Rural Biomass Emissions • Ensure affordable LPG or clean cooking energyfor all households. • Strengthen Ujjwala subsidies; improve rural distribution networks. Tailor China’s Approach to Indian Realities • China acted after achieving near-universal electricity access; India must balance pollution control with growth needs. • Use Indian-style legal accountability—PILs, NGT rulings, decentralised monitoring—to supplement executive action. Invest in Monitoring & Research • Strengthen air quality stations, satellite measurements and local forecasting models. • Use real-time data to guide enforcement and public advisories.   Conclusion China’s experience shows that air quality can improve quickly when political will, clear accountability, strong industrial regulation and clean mobility come together. India’s pathway must be democratic, decentralised and socially inclusive, but drawing upon China’s successes—continuous action, strict enforcement and scientific monitoring—can help India build a cleaner, healthier urban future.   Mains Question “China achieved rapid reductions in urban air pollution through strict enforcement, industrial regulation and clean mobility. What lessons can India draw while balancing growth, governance complexity and public health?” (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Indian Express

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 18th November 2025

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

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 17th November 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 17th November – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) MGNREGS Category: Government Schemes Context: Recently, nearly 27 lakh workers’ names were removed from the database of Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS). About MGNREGS: Launch: Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS) was passed by the Indian government in 2005 that guarantees the “right to work” to rural citizens of India. Objective: The main objective of the MGNREGS is to provide employment to rural citizens and improve their economic conditions. Under this, the government assures a minimum of 100 days of unskilled manual work to an adult member of an eligible rural household. Eligibility Criteria: Citizen of India 18 years of age at the time of application Rural Household Willing to do unskilled work Initiative towards right to work: It guarantees 100 days of unskilled employment to all willing rural citizens, at the government-set minimum wage. If work is not assigned within 15 days, the applicant is entitled to receive an unemployment allowance. Social Audit: Section 17 of the MGNREGA has mandated a social audit of all the works executed under the MGNREGA. Employment near home: The work provided is usually within a 5 km radius of the applicant’s village, with a travel allowance provided for work beyond this radius. Payments are made on a weekly basis and cannot be delayed more than 15 days, with compensation for delays. Role of Gram Sabha: Panchayati Raj Institutions take the lead role in planning, implementing, and monitoring the allocated works. Gram Sabhas are given the authority to suggest work and are required to carry out at least half of the work. Use of technology: The scheme has introduced several technological tools, such as online registration, electronic fund transfer, and geotagging through mobile apps to make the implementation more transparent and efficient. The National Mobile Monitoring Software (NMMS) App was made mandatory in January 2023. It demands online attendance from employees twice a day Integration with other schemes: The scheme has been integrated with other programs such as the National Rural Livelihood Mission (NRLM), the Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana (PMAY), and the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan to achieve better convergence of resources and efforts. Source: The Hindu Raja Ram Mohan Roy Category: History and Culture Context: M.P. education minister apologised for calling Raja Ram Mohan Roy a ‘British agent’ after he accused him of aiding missionaries in religious conversion. About Raja Ram Mohan Roy: Birth: Raja Ram Mohan Roy was born on 22nd May 1772 in Bengal. Education: His early education included the study of Persian and Arabic at Patna where he read the Quran, the works of Sufi mystic poets and the Arabic translation of the works of Plato and Aristotle. In Benaras, he studied Sanskrit and read Vedas and Upnishads. Professional life: From 1803 to 1814, he worked for East India Company as the personal diwan first of Woodforde and then of Digby. In 1814, he resigned from his job and moved to Calcutta in order to devote his life to religious, social and political reforms. Title of Raja: Ram Mohan Roy was given the title of ‘Raja’ by the titular Mughal Emperor of Delhi, Akbar II whose grievances the former was to present before the British king. Ideology: Ram Mohan Roy was greatly influenced by western modern thought and stressed on rationalism and modern scientific approach. He believed that religious orthodoxies have become causes of injury to social life instead of tending to the amelioration of the condition of society. Literary works: Raja Ram Mohan Roy’s first published work Tuhfat-ul-Muwahhiddin (a gift to deists) published in 1803 exposed irrational religious beliefs and corrupt practices of the Hindus as the belief in revelations, prophets, miracles etc. In Precepts of Jesus (1820), he tried to separate the moral and philosophical message of the New Testament, which he praised, from its miracle stories. Institutions: He founded the Atmiya Sabha in 1814, the Calcutta Unitarian Association in 1821, and the Brahmo Sabha in 1828 which later became the Brahmo Samaj. Social reforms: He campaigned against the caste system, untouchability and superstitions. He attacked child marriage, the degraded state of widows and demanded the right of inheritance for women. In 1830, he sailed for England to be present there to counteract the possible nullification of the Act banning Sati. Educational reforms: Roy did much to disseminate the benefits of modern education to his countrymen. He supported David Hare’s efforts to find the Hindu College in 1817, while Roy’s English school taught mechanics and Voltaire’s philosophy. In 1825, he established Vedanta college where courses in both Indian learning and Western social and physical sciences were offered. Political Reforms: Through his writings and activities, he supported the movement for free press in India. When press censorship was relaxed by Lord Hastings in 1819, Ram Mohan found three journals- The Brahmanical Magazine (1821); The Bengali weekly, Samvad Kaumudi (1821); and the Persian weekly, Mirat-ul-Akbar. Economic Reforms: Roy condemned oppressive practices of Bengali zamindars and demanded fixation of minimum rents. He also demanded the abolition of taxes on tax-free lands. He called for a reduction of export duties on Indian goods abroad and the abolition of the East India Company’s trading rights. Administrative reforms: He demanded the Indianisation of superior services and separation of the executive from judiciary. He demanded equality between Indians and Europeans. Source: The Hindu Senkaku Islands Category: Geography Context: A China Coast Guard ship formation passed through the waters of the Senkaku Islands on a “rights enforcement patrol.”                      About Senkaku Islands: Location: The Senkaku Islands are an uninhabited group of islands situated in the East China Sea, approximately 90 nautical miles north from the Yaeyama Islands in Japan’s Okinawa Prefecture and 120 nautical miles northeast of the island of Taiwan.  Different names: They are also known as the Diaoyu Islands in mainland China, the Diaoyutai Islands in Taiwan, and the Pinnacle Islands by other observers. Group of islands: The islands comprise Uotsuri Island, Kuba Island, Taisho Island (also called Kumeakashima Island), Kitakojima Island, Minamikojima Island,Tobise Island,Okinokitaiwa Island, and Okinominamiiwa Island.  Area: The total land area of all the islands is roughly 6.3 square kilometers, with the largest, Uotsuri Island, being some 3.6 square kilometers in size. Composition: They consist of conglomerate sandstone (alternate layers of sandstone and conglomerate in some parts), tuff, andesite, andesitic lava, coral outcroppings elevated above sea level during the Holocene era, and other rocky material.  Dispute: The islands are the focus of a territorial dispute between Japan and China and between Japan and Taiwan. Administration: They were never administered by any other country before Japan incorporated them into its territory in 1895. Currently, Japan administers and controls the Senkaku Islands as part of the city of Ishigaki in Okinawa Prefecture. Source: The Hindu Escapade Mission Topic: Science and Technology Context: Blue Origin has successfully launched Nasa’s highly anticipated Escapade mission to Mars, marking a historic day for the future of multi-planetary exploration. About Escapade Mission: Nomenclature: The ESCAPADE stands for Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers. Objective: This mission is the first coordinated multi-spacecraft orbital science mission to Mars. Its twin orbiters are known as Blue and Gold which will take simultaneous observations from different locations around Mars. Part of NASA’s program: It is part of NASA’s SIMPLEx (Small Innovative Missions for Planetary Exploration) program. Management: The ESCAPADE mission is managed by the Space Sciences Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, with key partners Rocket Lab, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, Advanced Space LLC, and Blue Origin. Use of ‘launch and loiter’ strategy: This mission has chosen ‘launch and loiter’ strategy. It means the satellites will launch from Earth toward the Lagrange 2 Point (L2), a point in space where the balance of Earth and Sun’s gravitational pull ensures that a spacecraft stays put. The spacecraft will stay loiter at L2 until the apt window for Mars travel opens up, and then it will move toward Mars in late 2026. Reveal critical information about Mars: It will reveal the planet’s real-time response to space weather and how the Martian magnetosphere changes over time. These spacecraft will travel to Mars to study the interaction between solar wind, streams of charged particles from the Sun, and the Martian magnetic field. Opens new gateways for future human explorations: Understanding how solar wind strips Mars of its atmosphere is critical for planetary science and future human exploration. Source: India Today INVAR Missile Category: Defence and Security Context: The Ministry of Defence has signed a ₹2,095.70 crore contract with BDL to procure INVAR anti-tank missiles. About INVAR Missile: Nature: It is an anti-tank guided missile (ATGM) designed to be launched from tank platforms.  Construction: The Invar missile is built by Rosoboronexport of Russia, and it is produced under license in India by Bharat Dynamics Limited (BDL). Capability: The Invar missile, capable of being fired from the barrel of T-90 tanks, has been in active deployment by Indian forces and is known for its long-range precision strike capability. The missile can neutralise adversaries tanks fitted with Explosive Reactive Armour Protection. Range: It has a calibre of 125 mm and a range of 5000 m. Resistant to electronic jamming: The missile uses semi-automatic laser beam-riding guidance, making it resistant to electronic jamming. Can destroy moving targets: It can destroy both stationary and moving targets traveling at speeds up to 70 kilometres per hour. The missile is fired through the tank’s main gun barrel and guided to the target by the gunner using the vehicle’s integrated fire-control optics. Structure: Weighing 17.2 kilograms with a length of 695 millimetres, the Invar features a tandem warhead specifically designed to defeat explosive reactive armour, a defensive system commonly fitted to modern battle tanks. Other technical features include a length of 695 mm (missile) and 395 mm (throwing device). Source: News on AIR (MAINS Focus) Gender Neutrality of the POCSO Act: Text, Intent, and Purpose (UPSC GS Paper II – “Mechanisms for protection of vulnerable sections”)   Context (Introduction) A Supreme Court notice in a case involving an alleged female perpetrator of penetrative sexual assault has reopened debate on whether the POCSO Act — India’s primary child-protection law — is gender-neutral in prosecuting both victims and offenders.   Main Arguments  Statutory Interpretation Favors Inclusion Section 3 uses the pronoun “he”, but Section 13(1) of the General Clauses Act (1897) clarifies that masculine words include females unless context dictates otherwise.  The broad definition of penetrative sexual assault — including digital, object-based, and oral penetration — clearly enables prosecution of women as potential offenders.  The inclusion of acts where a person makes a child perform penetration further strengthens this gender-neutral reading. Legislative Intent Unambiguously Confirms Neutrality Parliamentary records consistently reflect gender neutrality. The Ministry of Women and Child Development (Lok Sabha, 20 December 2024) and the 2019 Amendment Bill’s Statement of Objects and Reasons explicitly describe POCSO as gender-neutral.  In contrast, Section 63 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (2023) clearly limits rape to a male perpetrator and female victim. The fact that POCSO avoids such gendered language indicates a deliberate legislative choice. Normative and Judicial Logic Require Neutral Protection The Supreme Court in Sakshi vs Union of India (2004) recognised that child sexual abuse spans a wide spectrum beyond penile-vaginal intercourse.  Abuse stems from power, trust, and vulnerability, not gender alone. Survivor accounts and research affirm that women can also perpetrate abuse.  A gender-specific interpretation would conceal these experiences and deny justice to certain victims, undermining the Act’s protective purpose.   Criticisms and Drawbacks Identified Ambiguity from Masculine Pronouns: Use of “he” in statutory text triggers avoidable interpretive disputes despite the GC Act’s clear rule. Inconsistent Official Communication: Some earlier Parliamentary replies emphasised gender neutrality only for victims, inadvertently creating confusion over perpetrators. Social Biases Limit Recognition: Deep-rooted notions that women cannot commit sexual offences hinder reporting, investigation, and acknowledgement of abuse against boys. Limited Jurisprudence: Few POCSO cases have involved female offenders, resulting in sparse judicial precedent and uncertainty in enforcement. Doctrinal Overlap with BNS: The coexistence of a gender-specific rape definition in the BNS and a gender-neutral penetrative assault definition in POCSO risks interpretive inconsistency in similar factual situations involving minors.   Reforms and Strengthening Measures Clarify Statutory Language: Amend Section 3 to replace pronouns with gender-neutral terms (“person”), eliminating reliance on interpretive rules. Ensure Consistent Government Messaging: Uniform Ministry clarifications and FAQs should emphasise that gender neutrality applies to both victims and perpetrators. Sensitise Law-Enforcement and Judiciary: Training modules must address non-traditional abuse patterns and empower officials to handle cases involving female offenders without bias. Improve Research and Documentation: Systematic studies on abuse by women and non-conforming offenders can inform policy design and correct societal misconceptions. Harmonise POCSO with the BNS: A clarificatory amendment or authoritative Supreme Court ruling can ensure coherent interpretation between POCSO and BNS, avoiding doctrinal conflict.   Conclusion The POCSO Act was consciously drafted as a gender-neutral framework to protect all children from diverse forms of sexual harm. Upholding this neutrality best aligns with its text, legislative intent, and protective purpose. Clear statutory language, consistent official communication, and informed judicial interpretation can ensure equal justice for every child, regardless of the gender of the offender.   Mains Question Evaluate the POCSO Act’s overall design in ensuring justice for all child victims irrespective of the gender of the offender. (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu Precision Medicine and India’s Opportunity in the Global Market (UPSC GS Paper III – “Science & Technology: Biotechnology, Health and Disease Prevention”)   Context (Introduction) The rise of precision biotherapeutics—therapies tailored to a person’s genetic and molecular profile—is reshaping global healthcare. As the global precision medicine market grows rapidly, India’s genetic diversity, research base, and biotech ecosystem present unique opportunities and challenges.   Main Arguments  What Are Precision Biotherapeutics? Precision biotherapeutics involve treatments designed around an individual’s genetic, molecular, and cellular signatures, enabling direct correction of disease causes rather than symptom management.  Technologies underpinning this field include genomic and proteomic analysis, gene editing (CRISPR), mRNA and nucleic acid therapeutics, monoclonal antibodies, advanced biologics, and AI-driven drug discovery, which predicts therapeutic efficacy using molecular datasets. Why India Needs Precision Approaches Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, and diabetes account for nearly 65% of deaths in India. India’s vast genetic diversity complicates treatment responses, and drugs developed in other populations may show reduced effectiveness.  Programmes like GenomeIndia and IndiGen can tailor therapies to local genetic variations, shifting India’s health system towards predictive, preventive, and personalised care. India’s Current Capacities The Department of Biotechnology has prioritised precision biotherapeutics under the Biotechnology for Economy, Environment, and Employment policy.  Leading institutions—including IGIB, NIBMG, and THSTI—are mapping genetic diversity and disease susceptibility. Private-sector activity is rising: Biocon Biologics, Dr. Reddy’s Labs – biosimilars, monoclonal antibodies Immuneel Therapeutics – immuno-oncology Bugworks – next-generation antibiotics Akrivia Biosciences, 4baseCare, miBiome – precision diagnostics and oncology solutions ImmunoACT – India’s first CAR-T therapy Collectively, these represent a growing ecosystem aligned with global trends. Global Market Landscape The global precision medicine market is projected to exceed $22 billion by 2027. Rising chronic diseases, gene therapies, and personalised drug development are key growth drivers.  India, with its skilled manpower, AI and data analytics capabilities, and low-cost R&D environment, can emerge as a global hub for affordable precision biotherapeutics.   Criticisms / Drawbacks  Regulatory Ambiguity: India lacks a clear regulatory framework for gene editing, cell therapies, and emerging biologics. Guidelines restrict therapeutic use but do not define therapeutic scope, creating uncertainty for innovators. Limited Manufacturing Capacity: Biologics and advanced therapies require high-end manufacturing, but India’s capabilities in viral vectors, plasmid DNA, and cell-processing remain limited, increasing dependence on imports. High Costs and Low Access: Precision drugs are prohibitively priced, accessible mostly to affluent urban populations, and out of reach for most Indians, widening health inequities. Ethical and Privacy Concerns: Large-scale genomic datasets raise unresolved issues of data security, consent, discrimination, and potential misuse without a stringent data protection ecosystem. Uneven Clinical Translation: Many innovations remain stuck in research stages due to gaps in clinical trials infrastructure, biopharma investments, and technology transfer.   Reforms and Way Forward Establish a Clear, Modern Regulatory Architecture: Develop specific guidelines for gene editing, cell therapies, RNA therapeutics, and AI-driven drug discovery. A unified regulatory pathway under CDSCO/DBT is essential. Expand Manufacturing and R&D Capacity: Build GMP-compliant biologics facilities, support domestic production of vectors and CAR-T components, and promote tech-transfer hubs. Enhance Genomic Literacy and Data Governance; Adopt strong data protection laws, consent frameworks, and ethical review mechanisms for genomic research, ensuring public trust. Incentivise Affordable Precision Innovations: Use public–private partnerships, viability-gap funding, and innovation grants to drive down costs and expand access, particularly for NCD-related therapies. Integrate Precision Medicine into Public Health: Embed genetic screening and precision diagnostics into NCD programmes, using the IndiGen and GenomeIndia datasets to develop Indian population-specific therapies.   Conclusion Precision biotherapeutics represent a transformative shift from symptomatic treatment to cause-correcting interventions. With its genetic diversity, scientific base, and cost advantage, India can position itself as a global leader in affordable precision medicine—provided regulatory clarity, manufacturing capacity, and ethical safeguards evolve in tandem.   Mains Question “Evaluate the potential of precision biotherapeutics in transforming India’s NCD landscape. What regulatory and ethical challenges must be addressed to realise this opportunity? (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu

Daily Prelims CA Quiz

UPSC Quiz – 2025 : IASbaba’s Daily Current Affairs Quiz 15th November 2025

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

DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS IAS | UPSC Prelims and Mains Exam – 15th November – 2025

Archives (PRELIMS  Focus) National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) Category: Polity and Governance Context: Supreme Court said that CJI must deal with claim that HC judge approached National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) member on order. About National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT): Nature: The NCLAT is a quasi-judicial body constituted under Section 410 of the Companies Act, 2013. It was established to hear appeals against the decisions of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), functioning since 1st June 2016. Objective: Its main objective is to promote timely corporate dispute resolution, ensure transparency, and improve efficiency in insolvency and corporate governance matters. Functions: Hearing appeals against orders of NCLT under Section 61 of IBC. Hearing appeals against orders of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Board of India (IBBI) under Sections 202 and 211 of IBC. Hearing appeals against orders of the Competition Commission of India (CCI). Hearing appeals related to the National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA). Giving advisory opinions when legal issues are referred by the President of India. Headquarters: Its headquarters is located in New Delhi. Composition: It includes a Chairperson, along with Judicial and Technical Members, all appointed by the Central Government based on expertise in law, finance, accountancy, and administration. Regulation: It can regulate its own procedure and possesses powers equivalent to a civil court under the Civil Procedure Code, 1908. Powers: It can summon witnesses, receive affidavits, enforce production of documents, and issue commissions. Orders passed by NCLAT are enforceable like civil court decrees. Appeals: Appeals against NCLAT orders can be filed in the Supreme Court of India. Exceptions: Civil courts have no jurisdiction over matters within the purview of NCLAT. No court or authority can grant injunctions against any action taken by NCLAT under its legal authority. Disposal of appeals: NCLAT is required to dispose of appeals within six months from the date of receipt to ensure swift resolution. Source: The Hindu Ambaji Marble Category: Miscellaneous Context: Marble from Ambaji, Gujarat’s prominent pilgrimage site and Shaktipeeth, has been awarded the Geographical Indication (GI) tag for its high-quality white stone. About Ambaji Marble: Nature: It is a type of marble known for its stunning white appearance and unique natural patterns. Nomenclature: It is named after the town of Ambaji in the state of Gujarat, where it is predominantly quarried. It is also known as Amba White Marble and Ambe White Marble. Uniqueness: It is characterized by its pristine white colour, which often features subtle grey or beige veining. It has very long-lasting shine and durability.  Distinctive variations: The veins can vary in intensity, ranging from fine and delicate to bold and pronounced, giving each slab a distinct and individualistic appearance. These variations occur naturally due to the presence of minerals and impurities during the marble formation process. Uses: The smooth and polished surface of the marble adds to its appeal and sophistication. It is widely used for luxury architectural projects, sculptures, and monuments. About Geographical Indication (GI) Tag: Nature: A GI tag is a name or sign used on certain products that correspond to a specific geographical location or origin.  Objective: The GI tag ensures that only authorised users or those residing in the geographical territory are allowed to use the popular product name. It also protects the product from being copied or imitated by others.  Validity: A registered GI is valid for 10 years and can be renewed.  Nodal ministry: GI registration is overseen by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. Legal framework: It is governed by Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999. Source: The Hindu Vitamin D Category: Science and Technology Context: According to a new study, Vitamin D deficiency may quietly raise the risk of heart diseases. About Vitamin D: Nature: Vitamin D (also referred to as calciferol) is a fat-soluble vitamin. Production: It is produced endogenously when ultraviolet (UV) rays from sunlight strike the skin and trigger vitamin D synthesis. During periods of sunlight, vitamin D is stored in fat and then released when sunlight is not available. Foods rich in vitamin D: Very few foods have vitamin D naturally. The foods with the most are fatty fish (like salmon and tuna), liver, mushrooms, eggs, and fish oils. Further, food companies often “fortify” milk, yogurt, baby formula, juice, cereal, and other foods with added vitamin D. Importance: Vitamin D promotes calcium absorption and helps maintain adequate levels of calcium and phosphorus in the blood, which is necessary for healthy bones and teeth. Without sufficient vitamin D, bones can become thin, brittle, or misshapen. Role in cell growth: Vitamin D has other roles in the body, including reduction of inflammation as well as modulation of such processes as cell growth, neuromuscular and immune function, and glucose metabolism. Deficiency: A lack of vitamin D can lead to bone diseases such as osteoporosis or rickets. Osteoporosis is a disease in which your bones become weak and are likely to fracture (break). Chronic and/or severe vitamin D deficiency, can also lead to hypocalcemia (low calcium levels in your blood).  Persons prone to its deficiency: Anyone can have vitamin D deficiency, including infants, children and adults. Its deficiency may be more common in people with higher skin melanin content (darker skin) and who wear clothing with extensive skin coverage, particularly in Middle Eastern countries. Source: The Times of India Global Cooling Watch Report 2025 Category: Environment and Ecology Context: Global Cooling Watch 2025, launched recently at COP30 in Belém, Brazil, finds that cooling demand could more than triple by 2050 under business as usual. About Global Cooling Watch Report: Nature: The Global Cooling Watch 2025 is UNEP’s second global assessment on the environmental, economic, and equity dimensions of cooling, providing the scientific foundation for the Global Cooling Pledge. Publishing agency: It is published by United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). Objective: It aims to analyse global cooling trends, project future emissions, and propose a “Sustainable Cooling Pathway” to achieve near-zero emissions while ensuring equitable access to cooling worldwide. Key highlights of Global Cooling Watch Report 2025: Global cooling capacity is projected to rise 2.6 times by 2050, driven by rapid urbanization, income growth, and intensifying heatwaves, particularly in developing nations. Cooling demand in Article 5 countries (developing nations) is set to increase fourfold, highlighting a widening divide in energy use and infrastructure readiness between rich and poor economies. Global electricity use for cooling may rise from 5,000 TWh (2022) to 18,000 TWh (2050), straining power grids and escalating peak load demands, especially in tropical regions. Phasing down high-global-warming refrigerants (HFCs) and adopting low-GWP alternatives could eliminate up to 0.4°C of projected global warming this century. So far, 72 nations and 80 organizations have joined the Global Cooling Pledge, collectively aiming for a 68% emission reduction in the cooling sector by 2050. Source: UNEP Mudh-Nyoma Airbase Category: Defence and Security Context: Chief of the Air Staff recently inaugurated the Mudh-Nyoma airbase in Ladakh by landing a C-130J special operations aircraft there. About Mudh-Nyoma Airbase: Location: It is an Indian Air Force (IAF) base located in Nyoma, in southeastern Ladakh. It lies close to the southern bank of the Pangong Tso and earlier had a mud-paved landing ground. Near LAC: It is located at a height of 13,700 feet and is 23 km from the contested Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China. History: It was originally built as a mud-paved landing ground in 1962, but it remained inactive for decades. It was reactivated in 2009 when an AN-32 aircraft landed successfully. Further, following the 2020 India–China border standoff, Nyoma ALG supported operations of C-130J, AN-32, Apache, and Chinook aircraft. Uniqueness: Nyoma is the fourth IAF base in Ladakh, the highest airfield in the country, and the fifth highest in the world now. Organisation responsible for upgradation: The responsibility of upgrading the airbase was entrusted to the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) under Project Himank. The upgrade included extending the original airstrip into a 2.7 km ‘rigid pavement’ runway, a new ATC complex, hangars, a crash bay, and accommodation. Features: The airfield is designed to house a number of military unmanned, rotary-wing, fixed-wing aircraft, including heavier transport planes, like the C-17 Globemaster III, and fighter jets, like the Sukhoi-30MKI. Designed to operate below minus 20°C: The infrastructure at the airbase includes necessary facilities for maintenance and sustaining air and ground crews, essential for operations in a region where winter temperatures can plummet to below minus 20°C. Source: Hindustan Times (MAINS Focus) Global Carbon Project 2025: Clean Energy Investment & Climate Resilience (UPSC GS Paper III – “Conservation, environmental pollution, degradation and climate change”)   Context (Introduction) The Global Carbon Project’s 2025 report warns that global emissions will hit a record high, keeping the world on a 2.6°C trajectory. COP-30 negotiators in Brazil face urgent pressure to accelerate clean energy and strengthen people’s climate resilience.   Main Arguments Global emissions nearing historic peak: Emissions are projected to reach a record high in 2025. The US shows the highest increase (1.9%), followed by India (1.4%) and China/EU (0.4%). Rising demand offsets clean-energy progress. India’s carbon intensity declining: Slower emission growth stems from large renewable deployment, a cooler summer, and early monsoon, causing a fall in electricity-sector emissions. Long-term carbon intensity is improving — GHG growth dropped from 6.4% (2004–15)to 3.6% (2015–24). Renewables exceed coal but pace inadequate: Renewables have overtaken coal as the largest electricity source worldwide. Yet fossil-fuel dependence persists because energy consumption continues to grow, especially in fast-developing countries. Paris temperature target slipping away: At current rates, the world is on track for 2.6°C warming, far above the 1.5°C goal. Carbon budgets for 1.5°C may be exhausted within the decade, leaving little leeway for error or delay. COP-30 must deliver a clean-energy roadmap: The COP-30 must provide concrete directions for expanding renewables and building climate-resilient infrastructure to protect lives and livelihoods from floods, droughts, and cyclones.   Criticisms / Drawbacks Slow decarbonisation despite renewable progress: Global mitigation efforts are insufficient. Fossil-fuel use remains embedded in transport, industry, and thermal power. Reversal in developed economies: The surge in US emissions breaks a nearly 20-year downward trajectory, weakening global leadership credibility and burden-sharing expectations. Weak adaptation investment: Financing for climate resilience — flood defences, drought management, cyclone preparedness — remains far below required levels. Vulnerable communities continue to face high climate risks. Energy-security constraints in developing economies: Countries like India cannot abruptly abandon fossil fuels without jeopardising growth and energy access. This complicates uniform global expectations. Gaps in global collective action: Post-Paris cooperation has stagnated. Vague commitments such as “phase-down of unabated coal” leave room for interpretation and delay.   Reforms and Way Forward Scale Clean Energy Deployment: Expand solar, wind, and green hydrogen manufacturing; modernise grids; enhance battery storage capacity. India’s renewable capacity (200+ GW) should be complemented with round-the-clock storage solutions. Strengthen Climate Resilience Investments: Prioritise climate-resilient housing, urban drainage, cyclone shelters, drought-proof agriculture, and heat-action plans. UN estimates show adaptation financing needs to grow five- to ten-fold for developing nations. Establish Time-bound Fossil-Fuel Transition Pathways: COP-30 should adopt firm timelines on fossil-fuel phase-down and expand climate finance beyond the long-pending $100-billion commitment. Developed nations must undertake deeper absolute cuts. Build Just and Equitable Energy Transitions: Ensure technology transfer, concessional climate finance, and affordable capital for the Global South. Energy poverty concerns must be balanced with global climate goals. People-Centric Climate Security: Increase early-warning systems, livelihood protection schemes, and community-based adaptation. Investments should prioritise vulnerable groups exposed to floods, droughts, sea-level rise, and heat waves.   Conclusion The Global Carbon Project’s findings underline a critical truth: clean-energy expansion alone cannot stabilise the climate unless accompanied by deep decarbonisation and strong resilience-building. COP-30 offers an opportunity to reconcile both — delivering a roadmap that accelerates clean energy and safeguards vulnerable populations from intensifying climate impacts.   Mains Question “The Global Carbon Project highlights rising global emissions despite rapid renewable expansion. In this context, examine the need for clean-energy investment and climate resilience as twin pillars of future climate policy.” (250 words, 15 marks) Source: The Indian Express India’s Flexible Inflation Targeting Framework: Stability, Growth & Future Options (UPSC GS Paper III – “Indian Economy: Monetary policy, Inflation and Growth”)   Context (Introduction) India’s Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework—mandating a 4% inflation target with a ±2% band—comes up for review in March 2026. The RBI’s discussion paper reopens key questions on headline vs. core inflation, acceptable inflation levels, and the applicable target band.   Main Arguments FIT has stabilised inflation despite shocks: Since adoption in 2016, inflation has remained broadly range-bound, even through episodes such as COVID-19, commodity spikes, and supply disruptions. The framework improved policy predictability and institutional autonomy. Headline inflation is the appropriate target: Because inflation affects savings, investments, and disproportionately harms the poor, the headline inflation, not core inflation, should be targeted. Food inflation often reflects monetary conditions, not merely supply shocks. Monetary policy influences general price level: As Friedman had said that without expansion in overall liquidity, sustained inflation cannot occur. Food inflation can create second-round effects—through wages and cost pass-through—making it relevant for monetary policy. Acceptable inflation for India is around 4%: Historical data (since 1991, excluding the COVID year) show a non-linear inflation–growth relationship, with a turning point near 3.98%. This supports continuing the 4% target. Simulations for 2026–2031 also suggest inflation below 4% as consistent with stable growth. The current ±2% band provides adequate flexibility: The existing 2–6% tolerance band has helped the RBI manage shocks. However, the article warns that staying persistently near the upper bound undermines the spirit of FIT, especially since growth declines sharply beyond 6%.   Criticisms / Drawbacks  Debate confused between relative and general prices: Public discourse often overlooks that food-price movements reflect both supply shocks and monetary expansion. Without distinguishing these, arguments for core inflation targeting become misleading. Phillips Curve evidence weak in India: India’s data show only a short-run inflation–growth trade-off; long-run trade-offs are unconvincing. High inflation eventually harms growth, reinforcing the case for a firm target. Risk of fiscal slippage undermining FIT: Historically, monetisation of fiscal deficits in the 1970s–80s caused chronic inflation. FIT works only when complemented by fiscal discipline under FRBM. Weakening either framework harms macro stability. Lack of clarity on duration near upper band: The current framework does not specify how long inflation can remain near 6% without triggering accountability mechanisms, diluting the credibility of the target. Arguments for higher targets lack empirical basis: Preliminary empirical simulations indicate no justification for raising the target above 4%. Higher targets risk unanchoring expectations and reducing the RBI’s credibility.   Reforms and Way Forward  Retain headline CPI as the primary target: Given India’s consumption patterns and the welfare impact of food inflation, headline CPI remains the most relevant indicator for policy credibility and public welfare. Maintain the 4% target with stricter accountability norms: A mid-course review mechanism could be introduced to scrutinise policy stance if inflation remains close to 6% for prolonged periods. Strengthen FRBM–FIT coordination: Fiscal dominance must be avoided. Clear fiscal glide paths, reduced off-budget borrowings, and better debt transparency will support monetary policy effectiveness. Improve inflation forecasting and food-market reforms: Strengthen early-warning systems for food inflation; improve agri-logistics, cold chains, and storage to reduce supply volatility. Better forecasting reduces policy lags. Conduct periodic empirical assessments of threshold inflation: Every review cycle (5 years) should incorporate updated structural models to determine threshold inflation levels consistent with evolving growth prospects, external risks, and fiscal realities.   Conclusion India’s experience since 2016 shows that FIT has anchored expectations and contained inflation despite repeated shocks. Evidence suggests that a 4% target with a ±2% band strikes a practical balance between stability and flexibility. Going forward, policy success will depend on maintaining fiscal discipline, refining inflation forecasting, and ensuring that headline inflation—not just core—remains firmly under control.   Mains Question “India’s Flexible Inflation Targeting framework is due for review in 2026. Critically examine whether the 4% target with a ±2% band remains appropriate in light of India’s inflation–growth dynamics.” (250 words, 15 marks)   Source: The Hindu