Category: Science and Technology
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About Solar Cycles:
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Category: Defence and Security
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About Pechora Missile System:
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Category: Government Schemes
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About PAIMANA Portal:
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Category: Polity and Governance
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About National Legal Services Authority (NALSA):
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Category: Environment and Ecology
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About Sunabeda Wildlife Sanctuary:
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GS-III: “Conservation, environmental pollution and degradation.”.
Context (Introduction)
At COP30 in Belém (2025), India committed to submitting a revised, more ambitious Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC). Achieving this commitment requires economy-wide decarbonisation, especially in hard-to-abate sectors—with steel being the most critical.
India’s steel sector:
This places steel at the centre of India’s climate–growth dilemma.
Core Idea
Green steel is not optional—it is a strategic necessity. Without rapid transition to low-carbon steelmaking, India risks:
Key Challenges
Investment signals remain weak; incentives have not yet shifted capital away from coal-based routes.
Global Context & External Pressure
Why It Matters
Way Forward
Conclusion
Steel is India’s next climate frontier. What renewable energy was to India a decade ago, green steel is today—a test of policy credibility, industrial vision and climate leadership. By combining: Decisive corporate action, Robust, market-aligned policy frameworks, Early investment signals, India can decarbonise steel, safeguard growth, and shape the future of global sustainable industrialisation.
Mains Question
India’s climate goals cannot be achieved without decarbonizing its steel sector. Examine the challenges and policy imperatives of green steel in shaping India’s climate transition. (15 marks) (250 words)
GS-III: “Indian Economy and issues relating to planning, mobilisation of resources, growth, development and employment.”
Context (Introduction)
India’s manufacturing sector has regained momentum amid:
As highlighted in the Economic Survey, the next phase of India’s industrial growth will depend not on how much India manufactures, but what it manufactures and how strategically indispensable it becomes in global production networks.
Core Idea
India’s manufacturing transition must shift from: Broad-based volume expansion → to Strategically important, technology-intensive and export-competitive production
This requires:
Key Arguments
India is witnessing early gains in sectors combining:
Examples:
These sectors demonstrate:
While industrial clusters have been central to policy:
There should be a shift towards:
The next generation of industrial clusters is likely to be anchored in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities
Advantages highlighted:
However, competitiveness here depends critically on:
India has made notable progress:
Yet:
Purpose:
However, success depends on:
MSMEs contribute significantly to:
Recent gains:
Yet challenges persist:
Their integration into strategic value chains is critical for sustained manufacturing growth.
Why It Matters
Manufacturing is no longer about scale alone—it is about strategic indispensability.
Way Forward
. MSME Integration
Conclusion
India’s next manufacturing leap will not be measured by output alone, but by strategic relevance, technological depth and ecosystem strength. As global production networks fragment and reconfigure, India has a historic opportunity to position itself not just as a manufacturing location, but as a manufacturing anchor in global value chains.
The challenge is clear: scale with strategy, infrastructure with intent, and growth with resilience.
Mains Question