Category: Science and Technology
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About Bioremediation:
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Category: International Conventions
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About Biological Weapons Convention (BWC):
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Category: Miscellaneous
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About Darjeeling Mandarin Orange:
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Category: Defence and Security
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About INS Taragiri:
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Category: International Relations
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About Operation Sagar Bandhu:
About Cyclone Ditwah:
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(GS Paper II – “Role of Judiciary; Centre–State Relations; Federalism; Coordination Mechanisms” & GS Paper III – “Cybersecurity; Internal Security; Technology Challenges”)
Context (Introduction)
The Supreme Court has directed the CBI to lead a nationwide probe into “digital arrest” scams—cybercrimes costing Indians over ₹3,000 crore—overriding State consent and highlighting the growing threat of behavioural exploitation, weak cyber policing, and transnational criminal networks.
Main Arguments
Challenges / Criticisms
Way Forward
Conclusion
The Supreme Court’s intervention reflects a shift from viewing cybercrime as a technical violation to understanding its deeper cognitive, behavioural, and transnational dimensions. Protecting citizens demands not only law enforcement coordination but a whole-of-society response combining technology, regulation, behavioural science, and international cooperation.
Mains Question
Source: The Hindu
(UPSC GS Paper III – “Environment; Pollution Control; Biotechnology; Government Policies & Interventions”)
Context (Introduction)
India’s rapid industrialisation has intensified soil, water, and air contamination. With traditional remediation methods proving costly and unsustainable, bioremediation offers a low-cost, scalable, and eco-friendly alternative, especially vital for cleaning polluted rivers, land, and industrial sites.
Main Arguments
Types of Bioremediation
How Traditional Microbiology Combines with Cutting-edge Biotechnology
Government Initiatives Supporting Bioremediation
Challenges to Adoption in India
Conclusion
Bioremediation offers India a powerful pathway to restore polluted ecosystems using indigenous biological resources. However, responsible scaling requires national standards, biosafety frameworks, localised research hubs, and public engagement to ensure that biotechnology strengthens — rather than jeopardises — ecological recovery.
Mains Question
Source: The Hindu
(UPSC GS Paper III – “Indian Economy: Growth, Development, Employment; External Sector; Foreign Exchange Management”)
Context (Introduction)
The rupee has depreciated by 5.6% against the USD over the past year, with the REER falling from 108.1 (Nov 2024) to 97.5 (Oct 2025). This shift from overvaluation to undervaluation has revived debate about the economic implications of a weaker rupee.
Main Arguments
Challenges / Risks Associated
Way forward
Conclusion
Rupee depreciation today reflects global headwinds rather than domestic weakness. A mildly undervalued rupee is economically rational given India’s trade deficit and geopolitical shocks. Yet depreciation alone cannot substitute for structural reforms; stability, competitiveness, and import diversification must accompany a flexible exchange-rate regime.
Mains Question
Source: Indian Express