Category: International Organisations
Context:
About United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC):
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Category: Geography
Context:
About Pratas Islands:
Source:
Category: Defence and Security
Context:
About INS Sudarshini:
About Lokayan 26:
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Category: Science and Technology
Context:
About C-DOT’s Cell Broadcast Solution:
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Category: Environment and Ecology
Context:
About Bor Tiger Reserve:
Source:
GS III: “Science and Technology developments and their applications and effects in everyday life; Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilization of resources, growth, development and employment; Energy – conventional and non-conventional energy, renewable energy.”
Context (Introduction)
The global transition to electric vehicles (EVs) is central to climate mitigation and energy transition strategies. However, beneath the technological optimism lies a structural resource constraint an accelerating copper crunch that threatens to slow electrification, raise costs, and reshape global energy geopolitics.
Core Idea / Definition
Copper is the indispensable metal of electrification, forming the backbone of EV batteries, motors, wiring, charging infrastructure, and power grids. Unlike lithium or cobalt, copper has no scalable substitute, and EVs require 4–5 times more copper than internal combustion engine vehicles, making electrification inherently resource-intensive.
Key Trends and Evidence
Challenges: Why a Copper Crunch is Emerging
Why It Matters for India and the Energy Transition
Way Forward
Conclusion
The EV revolution is not merely a technological transition but a resource-intensive transformation. Copper has emerged as the critical artery of electrification, and without decisive action on mining, recycling, and innovation, the energy transition risks being throttled by material scarcity. For countries like India, energy security in the 21st century will increasingly hinge on mineral strategy, not just clean technology adoption.
Mains Question
GS-III: “Awareness in the fields of Information Technology, Space, Computers, robotics, nano-technology, bio-technology and issues relating to intellectual property rights.”
GS-IV: “Ethics and Human Interface: Essence, determinants and consequences of Ethics in human actions.; Public/Civil service values and Ethics in Public administration: Status and problems; ethical concerns and dilemmas in government and private institutions.”
Context (Introduction)
India is preparing to host the AI Impact Summit (2026) at a time when Artificial Intelligence is rapidly entering public governance, welfare delivery, policing, healthcare, and finance. However, AI ethics in India risks remaining rhetorical unless translated into enforceable, context-sensitive, people-centred standards.
Core Idea
AI Ethics refers to the application of human rights–based principles—privacy, equality, non-discrimination, dignity, accountability, and transparency—to the design, deployment, and governance of AI systems, especially when used by the State.
The ethical AI must move beyond abstract principles to enforceable, auditable, and grievance-enabled frameworks, grounded in India’s social realities.
Key Ethical Concerns
Why This Matters
Governance and Technology
Ethics and Human Values
Way Forward:
Conclusion
As India positions itself as a global AI leader and hosts the AI Impact Summit, ethical AI cannot remain aspirational. The article underscores that AI ethics must be enforceable, intersectional, and rooted in lived realities.
By anchoring AI governance in human rights, accountability, and community control, India can demonstrate that technological leadership and ethical leadership are not contradictory but complementary and offer a globally relevant model of people-centred AI governance.
Mains Question