Subject: Geography & International Relations
News Context/Background:
Recently, Israeli airstrikes destroyed the Qasmiyeh Bridge, a key crossing over the Litani River on The Litani River has regained strategic focus in the Israel–Hezbollah conflict, serving as a key boundary under UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which mandates the area south of it remain free of armed groups except Lebanese forces and UNIFIL.
Key Details & Important Facts:
Keywords for Prelims:
Core Theme & Analysis:
The Litani River is a key geopolitical boundary in the Israel–Lebanon context. Attacks on infrastructure like the Qasmiyeh Bridge highlight its strategic role in disrupting logistics. Its geography underpins regional conflict dynamics, relevant for UPSC on West Asian rivers and UN Resolution 1701.
Subject: Polity & Economy
News Context/Background:
The Corporate Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2026, introduced on March 23, seeks to amend the Companies Act, 2013 and Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) Act, 2008, to decriminalise minor offences and improve ease of doing business, and has been referred to a JPC for scrutiny.
Key Provisions:
Keywords for Prelims:
Core Theme & Analysis:
The Bill reflects a balance between ease of doing business and regulatory oversight. While the government stresses decriminalisation and growth, concerns remain over excessive delegation, CSR dilution, and governance standards; JPC referral highlights its political and constitutional sensitivity.
Subject: Social Justice & Governance
News Context/Background:
India has included the HPV vaccine (Gardasil-4) under Mission Indradhanush from March 2026, providing a single dose to 14-year-old girls to reduce cervical cancer burden, which causes around 1.2 lakh cases and 80,000 deaths annually.
Key Details & Important Facts:
Keywords for Prelims:
Core Theme & Analysis:
The HPV vaccine rollout under Mission Indradhanush is a major step in cancer prevention, but success depends on public trust, transparent rollout, safety monitoring, and tackling misinformation. Challenges include past controversies, vaccine debates, and ensuring high coverage.
Subject: Polity & Governance
News Context/Background:
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) of India has recently taken suo motu cognizance of two grave human rights issues:
About NHRC: Establishment and Status
Constitutional & Statutory Basis:
Definition of Human Rights (under PHRA, 1993):
Human rights are the rights relating to life, liberty, equality and dignity of the individual guaranteed by the Constitution (Fundamental Rights) or embodied in the International Covenants and enforceable by courts in India.
International Covenants:
High-Powered Committee for Appointments (as per 2019 Amendment):
Tenure and Removal
Powers and Functions: How NHRC Operates
| Function | Description |
|---|---|
| Suo Motu Cognizance | Can take up cases on its own based on media reports, NGO inputs, or any information revealing human rights violations (as seen in recent AP and Chhattisgarh cases). |
| Investigation Powers | Has powers of a civil court (summoning, requiring discovery of documents, receiving evidence). |
| Intervention | Can intervene in any proceeding involving human rights violation pending before a court. |
| Visits | Can visit any jail or institution to study living conditions and make recommendations. |
| Recommendations | Recommends compensation, disciplinary action, or prosecution to the concerned government/authority. |
| Annual Report | Submits an annual report to the President, which is laid before Parliament. |
| Research & Promotion | Promotes human rights literacy, research, and awareness through various programs. |
Important Limitations:
UPSC-Oriented Analysis: Static-Dynamic Linkages
| Static Linkage | Dynamic Application |
|---|---|
| Article 21 — Right to Life | Adulterated milk deaths (public health failure) and prison deaths (custodial rights) |
| Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993 | Suo motu cognizance power, quasi-judicial functions, recommendatory nature |
| Separation of Powers | NHRC’s role as a check on executive action without being a court |
| Federal Structure | Relationship between NHRC, SHRCs, and state governments |
| International Covenants | India’s commitment to UDHR, ICESCR, ICCPR and their domestic integration via PHRA |
Source: https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2245532®=3&lang=1
https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2245531®=3&lang=1
UPSC Syllabus Coverage: Economy (Energy Security), Geography (Strategic Chokepoints), Science & Tech (Hydrocarbons)
Recent Context:
The ongoing US-Israel-Iran war has severely disrupted energy supplies, with the Strait of Hormuz—a critical chokepoint for global energy flows—being a major flashpoint. India’s LPG supplies have been more immediately affected than its LNG supplies.
LPG vs. LNG: A Quick Comparison
| Feature | LPG (Liquefied Petroleum Gas) | LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Composition | Propane & Butane | Methane (CH₄) |
| Source | Byproduct of crude oil refining & natural gas processing | Natural gas cooled to cryogenic temperatures |
| Liquefaction | Under moderate pressure or low temperature | Cryogenic cooling to -162°C |
| Density | Heavier than air (sinks, accumulates in leaks) | Lighter than air (disperses quickly in leaks) |
| Transportation | Cylinders (road transport) | Specialized cryogenic ships → regasification terminals → pipelines |
| Storage | Pressurized cylinders (easy, portable) | Cryogenic tanks (complex, energy-intensive) |
| End-Use | Domestic cooking, industrial heating, auto fuel | Converted back to natural gas for PNG (households), CNG (vehicles), power, fertilizers |
| Infrastructure | No pipeline required; reaches remote areas | Requires pipeline network for last-mile delivery (PNG) |
Key Factors for LPG’s Greater Vulnerability:
Safety and Convenience: PNG vs. LPG
| Aspect | PNG (Piped Natural Gas) | LPG (Cylinder) |
|---|---|---|
| Safety | Safer: Natural gas is lighter than air, disperses quickly in a leak. | Riskier: LPG is heavier than air, accumulates near the ground, increasing fire/explosion risk. |
| Convenience | More convenient: Uninterrupted supply, metered like electricity; no booking/refilling hassle. | Less convenient: Requires booking, cylinder handling, and manual replacement. |
| Infrastructure | Requires pipeline network at doorstep. | No pipeline needed; reaches any area via road transport. |
UPSC-Oriented Analysis
Static Linkages:
Dynamic Linkages:
Possible Prelims Angles:
UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper II – Social Justice (Vulnerable Sections) | GS Paper I – Society
Sub-topic: Mechanisms for Protection of Vulnerable Sections; Issues Relating to Marginalized Communities
Introduction
The Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Amendment Bill, 2026, aims to fix gaps in the 2019 law but has drawn criticism for conflating diverse identities, restricting the definition of transgender persons, and replacing self-identification with medical certification.
By overlooking key concerns like civil rights, internal exploitation, and non-consensual intersex surgeries, it risks reinforcing structural inequalities while raising concerns about dignity, privacy, and equality.
Constitutional & Legal Framework
| Provision | Relevance |
|---|---|
| Article 14 | Right to equality—non-discrimination on grounds of gender identity |
| Article 15 | Prohibition of discrimination—extends to gender identity (NAZ Foundation v. Govt. of NCT, 2009) |
| Article 21 | Right to life and personal dignity—includes right to self-perceived gender identity (NALSA v. Union of India, 2014) |
| Transgender Persons Act, 2019 | Original framework recognizing transgender identity; faced implementation gaps |
| Amendment Bill, 2026 | Seeks to fix vagueness but introduces new contradictions |
The Supreme Court in NALSA (2014) recognized transgender persons as a third gender and affirmed the right to self-identification without medical intervention—a principle the 2026 Bill explicitly undermines.
Key Changes Introduced by the Amendment Bill
| Provision | 2019 Act | 2026 Amendment |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Inclusive, based on self-perceived gender identity | Narrowed to specific identities (kinner, hijra, aravani, intersex variations) |
| Self-Identification | Right to self-perceived gender identity | Removed; replaced with medical board certification |
| Certifying Authority | District Magistrate | Medical board headed by Chief Medical Officer |
| Intersex Inclusion | Included under transgender umbrella | Retained conflation; no separate recognition |
| Exploitation Penalties | General provisions | Rigorous imprisonment (5–14 years) for forced begging/servitude |
| Civil Rights | Not addressed | Still absent (marriage, adoption, inheritance, divorce) |
Structural Flaws: Conflation of Distinct Identities
| Identity | Nature | Distinct Needs |
|---|---|---|
| Transgender | Psychological and social construct; gender identity distinct from sex assigned at birth | Self-identification, gender-affirming care, anti-discrimination |
| Intersex | Biological spectrum of sex characteristics (1–2% globally) | Ban on non-consensual surgeries, medical ethics, separate recognition |
Critical Issue: The Bill continues to lump intersex persons under “transgender,” erasing intersex-specific needs. Intersex infants face non-consensual “normalizing” surgeries causing lifelong trauma—yet the Bill contains no ban on such procedures, violating Article 21 (bodily integrity) and privacy.
International Standards Violated:
Erosion of Self-Identification & Medicalization of Identity
NALSA (2014) affirmed: “Self-identified gender is a fundamental right.”
The Bill replaces this with:
This medicalization recreates the very barriers the 2019 Act sought to dismantle and contradicts global best practices moving toward self-declaration models (as seen in countries like Argentina, Ireland, and Norway).
Entrenchment of Exploitative Structures
| Issue | Analysis |
|---|---|
| Hijra Jamath-Gharana System | Colonial-era structure where chief nayaks control chelas’ earnings from begging and prostitution; traps gender-nonconforming children in bonded labour |
| Amendment’s Effect | Penalizes external perpetrators but leaves internal hierarchies untouched; effectively legitimizes and codifies exploitative structures |
| Children’s Vulnerability | Gender-nonconforming children abandoned by families are thrust into these systems; police often refuse to register missing complaints; no rehabilitation framework |
Historical Context: Earlier Indic frameworks were more inclusive and affirming of diverse identities, free from colonial distortions—a heritage the Bill ignores.
Omissions: Civil Rights & Intersectionality
Absent Provisions:
Impact: Transgender and intersex persons remain excluded from the very institutions—family, marriage, inheritance—that define citizenship and dignity in Indian society.
Critical Analysis: Strengths & Weaknesses
| Strengths | Weaknesses |
|---|---|
| Increased penalties for forced exploitation | Undermines NALSA’s self-identification principle |
| Acknowledges implementation gaps of 2019 Act | Conflates distinct identities; erases intersex-specific needs |
| Medicalizes identity; violates privacy and bodily autonomy | |
| Leaves hijra exploitative structures intact | |
| No civil rights; no intersectionality |
Way Forward
Conclusion
The Transgender Persons Amendment Bill, 2026, seeks reform but deepens flaws by narrowing definitions, medicalizing identity, and ignoring civil rights. It undermines the constitutional vision of dignity, equality, and privacy in NALSA, highlighting the need for an inclusive, rights-based framework.
UPSC Mains Practice Question
UPSC Mains Subject: GS Paper III – Environment & Ecology (Climate Change) | GS Paper II – International Relations
Sub-topic: Climate Change Policies; International Treaties & Agreements; Energy Security
Introduction
India’s updated NDCs under the Paris Agreement raise its non-fossil power target to 60% by 2035, cut emissions intensity by 47%, and expand carbon sinks, reaffirming climate commitment while balancing development and CBDR-RC principles.
Background: India’s Climate Commitment Framework
| Instrument | Key Features |
|---|---|
| Paris Agreement (2015) | Requires signatories to submit NDCs every five years, reflecting progressively higher ambition |
| First NDC (2022) | 2030 targets: 50% non-fossil installed capacity; 44% emissions intensity reduction; 2.5–3 billion tonne carbon sink |
| Updated NDC (2026) | 2035 targets: 60% non-fossil installed capacity; 47% emissions intensity reduction; 3.5–4 billion tonne carbon sink |
India was among the last G-20 nations to submit its 2035 NDC, with 128 parties (78% of global emissions) having already submitted theirs by December 2025.
Current Status: Achievements & Gaps
| Indicator | Current Status | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Non-fossil installed capacity | ~52% (achieved ahead of 2030 deadline) | 60% by 2035 |
| Non-fossil power generation | ~25% (due to intermittency of renewables) | – |
| Emissions intensity reduction | 36% achieved (2005–2020) | 47% by 2035 |
| Carbon sink | 1.97 billion tonnes (2005–2019) | 3.5–4 billion tonnes by 2035 |
| Forest cover | 24.6% of geographical area (2021) | National policy goal: 33% |
Key Observation: While installed capacity targets are being met ahead of schedule, the share of non-fossil power generation lags significantly due to the intermittent nature of solar and wind energy, highlighting the need for storage solutions and grid modernization.
Significance: Why These Targets Matter
Challenges & Implementation Gaps
| Challenge | Implication |
|---|---|
| Intermittency of Renewables | 52% installed capacity yields only 25% generation; requires massive investment in battery storage and pumped hydro |
| Transmission Infrastructure | Renewable-rich states (Rajasthan, Gujarat) require robust inter-state transmission corridors |
| Land Availability | Large-scale solar and wind projects face land acquisition hurdles |
| Forest Cover Gap | Current 24.6% forest cover falls short of 33% national policy goal; carbon sink target demands accelerated afforestation |
| Finance & Technology | Transition requires significant investment; developed countries’ commitment of $100 billion annually remains unfulfilled |
| Energy Security vs. Transition | Coal remains dominant in generation mix; balancing just transition with energy demand growth is critical |
Critical Analysis: Strengths & Limitations
Strengths:
Limitations:
Way Forward
Conclusion
India’s updated NDC for 2035 reflects higher ambition balanced with development needs and CBDR-RC principles. While reinforcing its global leadership, achieving targets will require addressing challenges in transmission, storage, and finance, showing climate action and development can be mutually reinforcing.
UPSC Mains Practice Question