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  • Wildlife Conservation Efforts

    Karuna Abhiyan 2026

    Why in the News?

    The Chief Minister of Gujarat Bhupendra Patel visited the Wildlife Care Centre at Bodakdev, Ahmedabad to review rescue and treatment operations under Karuna Abhiyan 2026, a statewide initiative to rescue birds injured by kite strings during the Uttarayan festival.

    About Karuna Abhiyan

    • Karuna Abhiyan is a state led compassionate wildlife rescue campaign aimed at saving birds and animals injured during festivals, especially Uttarayan.
    • It focuses on rescue, treatment, rehabilitation and release of injured wildlife.
    • Launched in 2017
    • First state driven initiative of its kind in India
    • Implementing Departments: Forest Department, Animal Husbandry Department, Municipal bodies and Voluntary organisations and NGOs

    Special Features

    • Water Birds Unit for specialised avian care
    • 24×7 WhatsApp helpline: 8320002000
      • Sending “Hi” provides district wise treatment centre details
    • Emergency helpline: 1926
    • Animal Husbandry helpline: 1962

    Prelims Pointers

    • Karuna Abhiyan was launched in 2017 by Gujarat
    • Conducted mainly during Uttarayan
    • Focuses on bird and animal rescue
    • Uses WhatsApp based grievance and rescue reporting
    • Considered the first state driven wildlife rescue campaign in India
    [2014] Every year, a month-long ecologically important campaign/festival is held during which certain communities/tribes plant saplings of fruit-bearing trees. Which of the following are such communities/tribes? 

    (a) Bhutia and Lepcha 

    (b) Gond and Korku 

    (c) Irula and Toda 

    (d) Sahariya and Agariya

  • Foreign Policy Watch: India-Iran

    [14th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Decisive new factors in the Iran conundrum

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] In what ways would the ongoing US-Iran Nuclear Pact Controversy affect the national interest of India? How should India respond to its situation?

    Linkage: This question directly examines how great-power sanctions, nuclear diplomacy, and West Asian instability affect India’s energy security, strategic autonomy, and regional interests. It links India’s foreign policy choices with sanctions diplomacy, balance of power politics, and national interest formulation in a volatile geopolitical environment.

    Mentor’s Comment

    Iran has seen many phases of unrest in the past, and the government usually managed them in a predictable way. However, recent developments show deep structural changes in Iran’s society, economy, and geopolitics, which are weakening the regime’s old methods of handling crises. This article explains what is different this time, why it is important, and how it affects the region and the world, including India’s strategic interests.

    Why in the News?

    Iran is facing a new wave of protests across the country, driven mainly by economic collapse rather than ideological issues, unlike earlier movements. The unrest began with the Tehran Bazaar strike in December 2025, which was unusual because traders have traditionally supported the regime. In 2025, the Iranian rial lost about 45% of its value, falling to 1.45 million per dollar, making even basic imports like rice, sugar, and edible oil too expensive despite government price controls.

    Although protests have spread nationwide and over 2,000 deaths have been reported, key pillars of the state, the oil sector, ruling elite, Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps

    (IRGC), and the military, remain loyal, stopping any immediate regime collapse. This crisis is important because it reveals new weaknesses in Iran’s system, while also showing the regime’s ability to survive strong internal unrest and external pressure.

    How did the current Iranian crisis originate?

    1. Currency Collapse: Reflects macroeconomic breakdown, with the rial depreciating nearly 35 times since 1979.
    2. Bazaar Shutdown: Signals rupture in state-merchant symbiosis; bazaaris historically functioned as regime stabilisers.
    3. Import Compression: Renders essential goods unaffordable despite subsidies and controlled prices.
    4. Social Spillover: Mobilises unemployed youth and low-paid workers into a nationwide protest movement.

    Why is the Bazaar strike a decisive structural break?

    1. Elite Defection: Demonstrates withdrawal of support from an influential economic pressure group.
    2. Historical Parallel: Mirrors the 1979 episode when bazaar support withdrawal accelerated Shah’s fall.
    3. Economic Squeeze: Caused by sanctions, IRGC dominance, and Bonyads (powerful, quasi-governmental charitable trusts in Iran) crowding private enterprise.
    4. Policy Uncertainty: Lack of clarity on whether IRGC-linked economic capture will be reversed.

    Why has Iran’s traditional protest-management strategy worked so far?

    1. Four-Stage Playbook: Combines policing, controlled concessions, attrition tactics, and exemplary punishment.
    2. Institutional Loyalty: IRGC and army remain unified, preventing elite fragmentation.
    3. Economic Continuity: Oil sector remains operational, sustaining regime finances.
    4. Leadership Vacuum: Absence of an alternative political leadership among protesters.

    What new vulnerabilities have emerged despite regime resilience?

    1. Economic Exhaustion: Nuclear and missile prioritisation diverts scarce resources from welfare.
    2. Demographic Shift: Over two-thirds of Iranians born post-Revolution reject clerical gerontocracy.
    3. Governance Alienation: Women and non-Shia minorities feel excluded due to clerical dominance.
    4. Kleptocracy Perception: Visible corruption at top echelons erodes regime legitimacy.

    How have foreign threats altered the internal dynamics of unrest?

    1. External Encouragement: U.S. and Israeli rhetoric emboldens agitators but lacks viable regime-change pathways.
    2. Deterrence Capacity: Iran retains retaliation capability despite losses in June 2025 conflict with Israel.
    3. Martyrdom Ethos: Cultural acceptance of sacrifice reduces deterrence effectiveness.
    4. Strategic Escalation: Closure threats to the Strait of Hormuz elevate global energy risks.

    Why are non-kinetic tools now preferred against Iran?

    1. Cyber Operations: Capitalises on Iran’s vulnerability to digital disruptions.
    2. Secondary Sanctions: Targets trade partners rather than direct military engagement.
    3. Financial Policing: Uses crypto-tracking to disrupt sanctions evasion networks.
    4. Limited Impact: China and UAE continue as top trading partners, accounting for over $70 billion in trade.

    Why does Iran’s crisis matter for India?

    1. Gulf Stability: Disruption affects India’s oil supplies, remittances, and diaspora security.
    2. Regional Balance: Enables Pakistan to project itself as an alternative security interlocutor.
    3. Domestic Linkages: India hosts around 25 million Shias, creating social and diplomatic sensitivities.
    4. Economic Opportunity: Post-sanctions revival could reopen strategic projects aligned with India’s connectivity vision.

    Conclusion

    The Iranian conundrum is no longer defined solely by regime-versus-protester dynamics. It reflects a complex interplay of economic collapse, elite consolidation, demographic alienation, and calibrated external pressure. While immediate regime collapse appears unlikely, the erosion of traditional stabilising pillars introduces long-term uncertainty with direct regional and global consequences.

  • Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough

    India must focus on AI and its environmental impact

    Why in the News?

    Artificial Intelligence is expanding rapidly across sectors. However, its environmental costs remain largely ignored in policy discussions. The global ICT sector contributes 1.8-2.8% of global greenhouse gas emissions, with estimates rising to 2.1-3.9%. For the first time, clear data is available on the energy, water, and carbon footprint of AI systems, including Large Language Models (LLMs).

    A clear gap exists between perceived digital efficiency and actual environmental impact. A single ChatGPT query consumes 10 times more energy than a Google search. Training one LLM can emit up to 3,00,000 kg of carbon dioxide. Despite these costs, India has no formal system to measure or disclose AI’s environmental impact. This contrasts with the EU and the US, highlighting a major governance gap.

    What is the scale of AI’s environmental footprint?

    1. Global ICT emissions: Accounts for 1.8-2.8% of global GHG emissions, with upper estimates reaching 3.9%.
    2. Carbon-intensive training: Training a single LLM can emit ~3,00,000 kg of carbon dioxide.
    3. Comparative impact: Emissions from one deep learning model equal emissions from five cars over their lifetime.
    4. Data gap: Carbon footprint data of AI models and users remains fragmented and inconsistent.

    How does AI affect energy consumption patterns?

    1. High energy intensity: Each ChatGPT query consumes 10× more energy than a Google search.
    2. Hidden electricity demand: AI workloads rely on energy-intensive data centres and specialised hardware.
    3. Misleading averages: Claims such as 0.24 watt-hours per AI query underestimate system-wide consumption.

    Why is water consumption emerging as a major concern?

    1. UNEP projection: AI data centres may consume 4.2-6.6 billion cubic metres of water by 2027.
    2. Cooling requirements: Water is extensively used to cool AI servers.
    3. Water security risks: High freshwater withdrawal threatens water-stressed regions.

    What global governance responses are emerging?

    1. UNESCO framework (2021): Recognises negative environmental impacts of AI; adopted by ~190 countries.
    2. European Union leadership:
      1. AI Act, 2024: Introduces environmental accountability in AI governance.
      2. Harmonised AI rules: Address sustainability alongside ethics and safety.
    3. United States approach: Sector-specific regulations addressing AI’s environmental externalities.

    Why does India need a regulatory shift?

    1. Unaccounted externalities: Environmental costs of AI development remain outside policy evaluation.
    2. Regulatory vacuum: No mandatory assessment of AI’s environmental impact.
    3. Climate obligations: AI expansion risks undermining India’s climate mitigation commitments.
    4. Policy imbalance: Focus on innovation without parallel sustainability safeguards.

    How can Environmental Impact Assessment be extended to AI?

    1. EIA framework: India’s EIA Notification, 2006 mandates environmental assessment for infrastructure projects.
    2. Proposed extension: Inclusion of AI development and deployment within EIA scope.
    3. Lifecycle evaluation: Assessment of energy use, water consumption, and emissions across AI lifespans.

    What role can disclosure standards play?

    1. ESG integration: Environmental impact of AI included under ESG disclosure norms.
    2. SEBI alignment: Disclosure of emissions from data centres and computing activities.
    3. EU precedent: Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) mandates emission disclosure, including AI training.
    4. Transparency outcome: Enables informed policymaking and accountability.

    Which sustainable practices can mitigate AI’s impact?

    1. Pre-trained models: Reduces repeated energy-intensive training.
    2. Renewable energy: Powering data centres through clean energy sources.
    3. Efficiency reporting: Disclosure of AI-specific environmental metrics.
    4. Resource optimisation: Minimising water and energy intensity of AI infrastructure.

    Conclusion

    India’s AI ambitions must align with environmental sustainability. Institutionalising environmental assessment, disclosure norms, and sustainable practices is essential to prevent AI-driven ecological externalities. A regulatory framework that integrates innovation with environmental accountability will ensure AI remains a tool for inclusive and sustainable development.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] How can Artificial Intelligence help clinical diagnosis? Do you perceive any threat to privacy of the individual in the use of AI in healthcare?

    Linkage: Earlier, UPSC focused on how AI helps healthcare and affects patient privacy. Now, as AI use expands, questions are likely to include its environmental impact, especially energy- and data-intensive AI systems.

  • Urban Transformation – Smart Cities, AMRUT, etc.

    Are India’s small towns being increasingly urbanised?

    Why in the News?

    India still focuses its urban future on megacities, even though only about 500 towns are large cities, while nearly 9,000 are small towns, most with populations below one lakh. Earlier, urbanisation was led mainly by metros, but this pattern is now changing. Small towns are increasingly absorbing surplus labour, migrant workers, and consumption activities as metros face high land prices, stressed infrastructure, and rising living costs. This shift reflects not inclusive growth, but the spread of urban crisis to smaller towns, with serious economic and social consequences.

    How have India’s small towns proliferated since the 1970s?

    1. Metropolitan Concentration: Organised capital accumulation during the 1970s-1990s prioritised large cities as centres of industry, infrastructure, and state investment.
    2. Labour Absorption: Cities like Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, and later Bengaluru and Hyderabad absorbed surplus labour and expanded consumption.
    3. Spatial Fix: Metros functioned as spatial fixes for capitalism by enabling accumulation through land, infrastructure, and labour concentration.

    Why are India’s metros facing a crisis of over-accumulation today?

    1. Land Detachment: Land prices have become disconnected from productive economic use.
    2. Infrastructure Stress: Urban systems are stretched beyond functional limits.
    3. Cost Escalation: Rising housing and living costs have become unaffordable for working groups.
    4. Accumulation Limits: Metros have exhausted their capacity to absorb surplus capital and labour efficiently.

    Why have small towns emerged as new sites of urbanisation?

    1. Capital Redirection: Small towns offer cheaper land and lower entry barriers for capital.
    2. Labour Availability: They absorb migrants displaced from metros and rural youth exiting agrarian livelihoods.
    3. Functional Integration: Towns such as Sattenapalle (Andhra Pradesh), Dhamtari (Chhattisgarh), Barabanki (Uttar Pradesh), Hassan (Karnataka), Bongaigaon (Assam), and Una (Himachal Pradesh) now act as logistics nodes, agro-processing hubs, warehouse towns, service centres, and consumption markets.

    How are small towns embedded within the urban process?

    1. Urban Continuum: Small towns operate fully within urban capitalist systems rather than existing as rural-urban intermediaries.
    2. Regulatory Gaps: Weaker regulation and minimal political scrutiny facilitate capital expansion.
    3. Cost Arbitrage: Lower land prices and pliable labour make small towns attractive for accumulation under stress conditions.

    Are small towns a better alternative to metropolitan urbanisation?

    1. No Emancipatory Promise: The article rejects the notion that small towns ensure inclusive or equitable growth.
    2. Urbanisation of Poverty: What unfolds is the relocation of rural deprivation into urban spaces.
    3. Informal Labour Dominance: Construction workers without contracts, women in home-based work, and youth in platform economies face insecurity and lack of social protection.
    4. Emerging Hierarchies: Towns such as Bhadol (Madhya Pradesh) and Raichur (Karnataka) show consolidation of power among real estate brokers, contractors, micro-financiers, and local intermediaries controlling land and labour.

    What does this reveal about India’s urban policy framework?

    1. Metro-Centric Bias: Flagship urban missions remain focused on large cities.
    2. Policy Failure: Small towns remain under-governed despite being central to contemporary urbanisation.
    3. Political Neglect: Absence of adequate scrutiny deepens informalisation and inequality.

    Conclusion

    India’s small towns are not emerging as alternatives to the metropolitan crisis but as its extension. They represent a new spatial frontier for capitalist accumulation under stress, marked by informal labour, weak regulation, and entrenched local hierarchies. Without policy recalibration, small-town urbanisation risks reproducing the very inequalities it was expected to resolve.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Why do large cities tend to attract more migrants than smaller towns? Discuss in the light of conditions in developing countries.

    Linkage: The question examines structural drivers of rural-urban migration in developing countries. It connects with debates on metro-centric growth, over-accumulation, and the emerging role of small towns as secondary but constrained urban destinations.

  • Forest Conservation Efforts – NFP, Western Ghats, etc.

    CEC Recommends Restoring Original ESZ Around Bannerghatta National Park

    Why in the News?

    In January 2026, the Central Empowered Committee (CEC) recommended restoring the original 2016 Ecologically Sensitive Zone (ESZ) around Bannerghatta National Park, reversing the reduced ESZ notified in 2020.

    About Bannerghatta National Park (BNP)

    • A protected wildlife reserve and biodiversity hotspot
    • Acts as the southern green lung of Bengaluru
    • Crucial for conserving forests, elephants, and wildlife corridors
    • Located in the Anekal hill range, Karnataka

    Geological and Physical Features

    • Granite hill ranges: Ancient granite formations of the Anekal Hills
    • Moist deciduous valleys: Support elephants, deer and predators
    • Dry scrub uplands: Important grazing habitats
    • Wildlife corridors: Links BR Hills and Sathyamangalam forests, forming a key elephant corridor
    • Water system: Suvarnamukhi stream flows through the park, sustaining wildlife

    What is the ESZ Issue

    • 2016 draft ESZ: 268.9 sq km
    • 2020 notification: Reduced to 168.64 sq km
    • Reduction excluded:
      • Key elephant corridors
      • Critical forest buffer zones
    • Resulted in increased pressure from:
      • Real estate expansion
      • Quarrying
      • Industrial activities
    • Heightened human animal conflict near rapidly expanding Bengaluru

    Prelims Pointers

    • Bannerghatta National Park lies in Karnataka near Bengaluru
    • Forms a vital elephant corridor in southern India
    • ESZ reduction occurred in 2020
    • CEC functions under the Supreme Court of India
    • ESZs regulate activities like mining, industries and construction near protected areas
    [2014] With reference to ‘Eco-Sensitive Zones’, which of the following statements is/are correct? 

    1. Eco-Sensitive Zones are the areas that are declared under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972

    2. The purpose of the declaration of Eco-Sensitive Zones is to prohibit all kinds of human activities in those zones except agriculture

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2

  • Nuclear Energy

    Greenwald Limit in Fusion Research

    Why in the News?

    China’s Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) fusion reactor has achieved stable plasma densities 30 to 65 percent higher than the Greenwald limit, overcoming a decades old constraint in nuclear fusion research.

    About Greenwald Limit

    • The Greenwald limit is a theoretical upper limit on plasma density in a tokamak fusion reactor.
    • It links the maximum stable plasma density to:
      • Plasma current
      • Size of the tokamak
    • Crossing this limit usually causes plasma instability and sudden collapse.

    Why the Greenwald Limit Matters?

    • Nuclear fusion requires:
      • Very high temperature
      • High plasma density
      • Sufficient confinement time
    • The Greenwald limit restricted how much fuel plasma could be packed into a tokamak.
    • It has been a major bottleneck to achieving self sustaining fusion or ignition.

    Prelims Pointers

    • Greenwald limit applies to tokamak fusion reactors
    • Exceeding it traditionally causes plasma instability
    • EAST achieved stable plasma beyond this limit
    • Breakthrough achieved by plasma wall interaction control
    • Important for progress towards fusion ignition and clean energy
    [2016] India is an important member of the ‘International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor’. If this experiment succeeds, what is the immediate advantage for India? 

    (a) It can use thorium in place of uranium for power generation

    (b) It attains a global role in satellite-navigation

    (c) It can drastically improve the efficiency of its fission reactors in power generation

    (d) It can build fusion reactors for power generation

  • Air Pollution

    Air Pollution Aerosols Intensify and Prolong Winter Fog Over North India: IIT Madras Study

    Why in the News

    A Indian Institute of Technology Madras led study published in Science Advances shows that air pollution aerosols are making winter fog over north India denser and longer lasting, worsening visibility and health impacts.

    About Aerosols

    • Aerosols are tiny solid or liquid particles suspended in the atmosphere.
    • They strongly influence air quality, weather and climate.
    • Natural sources: desert dust, sea spray, volcanic ash, forest fires
    • Human sources: vehicle emissions, industrial pollution, biomass burning, coal and diesel use
    • Primary aerosols are emitted directly.
    • Secondary aerosols form in the air from gases like sulphur dioxide and nitrogen oxides.

    Key Features

    • Extremely small size: penetrate deep into lungs and remain airborne easily
    • Persistence: stay suspended for days to weeks, travel long distances
    • Condensation nuclei: provide surfaces for water vapour to condense, aiding fog and cloud formation
    • Radiative effects:
      • Scatter sunlight: reflective aerosols cool the surface
      • Absorb heat: black carbon warms the atmosphere

    How Aerosols Affect Winter Fog

    • Increase number of fog droplets, making fog thicker
    • Reduce sunlight reaching the surface, causing cooling that sustains fog
    • Slow fog dissipation, leading to prolonged low visibility episodes

    Prelims Pointers

    • Aerosols act as condensation nuclei for fog and clouds
    • Black carbon absorbs heat while sulphate aerosols reflect sunlight
    • Human sources significantly amplify winter fog over north India
    • Aerosols influence health, visibility, weather and climate simultaneously
    [2019] In the context of which of the following do some scientists suggest the use of cirrus cloud thinning technique and the injection of sulphate aerosol into stratosphere? 

    (a) Creating the artificial rains in some regions 

    (b) Reducing the frequency and intensity of tropical cyclones 

    (c) Reducing the adverse effects of solar wind on the Earth 

    (d) Reducing the global warming

  • ISRO Missions and Discoveries

    PSLV-C62 Mission Failure

    Why in the News

    The Indian Space Research Organisation’s first launch of 2026, the PSLV-C62 mission, failed to place 16 satellites into the intended orbit on 12 January 2026. This marks the second consecutive failure of the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), ISRO’s most reliable launch vehicle for over three decades.

    About PSLV-C62 Mission

    • Launch Vehicle: Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle
    • Payload: 16 satellites
      • Includes 7 foreign satellites
    • Mission outcome: Failed to reach intended orbit
    • Failure stage: Third stage (after successful completion of first two stages)

    Why the Failure Matters

    • PSLV is known as ISRO’s workhorse, with a long record of success since the 1990s.
    • This is the second straight PSLV failure, the first occurring in May 2025.
    • Consecutive failures raise concerns about reliability in the third stage, a critical phase of orbital insertion.

    Possible Cause of Failure

    • Exact cause not yet identified.
    • Based on the May 2025 failure, issues may relate to:
      • Drop in combustion chamber pressure in the third stage motor
      • Reduced thrust leads to insufficient acceleration needed to stabilise orbit
    • The Failure Analysis Committee report of the previous mission has not been made public.

    Why the Third Stage is Critical

    • The third stage provides high acceleration required to:
      • Maintain orbital velocity
      • Prevent premature orbital decay
    • Any pressure or thrust instability at this stage directly impacts mission success.

    PSLV: Four-Stage Configuration (Prelims Focus)

    1. First Stage
      • Solid propellant
      • Provides lift-off and overcomes gravity and atmospheric drag
      • Carries rocket to ~50–60 km altitude
    2. Second Stage
      • Liquid propellant
      • Improves velocity and stabilisation
    3. Third Stage
      • Solid motor
      • Provides rapid acceleration for orbital insertion
      • Most failure-prone stage in recent missions
    4. Fourth Stage
      • Liquid engines
      • Fine-tunes orbit and deploys satellites

    Prelims Pointers

    • PSLV is a four-stage launch vehicle.
    • Recent PSLV failures occurred during the third stage.
    • Combustion chamber pressure is critical for orbital velocity.
    • PSLV has been operational for over 30 years.
    • ISRO has not yet released the Failure Analysis Committee report for the 2025 failure.
    [2018] With reference to India’s satellite launch vehicles, consider the following statements: 

    1. PSLVs launch the satellites useful for Earth resources monitoring whereas GSLVs are designed mainly to launch communication satellites

    2. Satellites launched by PSLV appear to remain permanently fixed in the same position in the sky, as viewed from a particular location on Earth

    3. GSLV Mk III is a four-stage launch vehicle with the first and third stages using solid rocket motors, and the second and fourth stages using liquid rocket engines. 

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 (c) 1 and 2 (d) 3 only

  • Defence Sector – DPP, Missions, Schemes, Security Forces, etc.

    DRDO Successfully Flight Tests Man Portable Anti Tank Guided Missile (MPATGM)

    Why in the News?

    The Defence Research and Development Organisation successfully conducted the flight test of the third generation Man Portable Anti Tank Guided Missile (MPATGM) with top attack capability against a moving target on 11 January 2026 at KK Ranges, Ahilya Nagar, Maharashtra.

    About Man Portable Anti Tank Guided Missile (MPATGM)

    • Type: Third generation Fire and Forget Anti Tank Guided Missile
    • Indigenous status: Fully indigenously developed
    • Intended user: Indian Army
    • Launch modes:
      • Tripod based launcher
      • Military Vehicle Mounted launcher

    Key Technological Features

    • Imaging Infrared (IIR) Homing Seeker
      • Enables day and night combat capability
      • Ensures high accuracy after launch without operator guidance
    • Top Attack Capability: Missile strikes the top of enemy tanks, the most vulnerable section
    • Tandem Warhead: Designed to defeat modern Main Battle Tanks (MBTs) with explosive reactive armour
    • All Electric Control Actuation System
    • Advanced Fire Control System
    • High Performance Sighting System
    • Indigenous Propulsion System

    Prelims Pointers

    • MPATGM is a third generation Fire and Forget missile
    • Uses Imaging Infrared (IIR) seeker
    • Has top attack and tandem warhead capability
    • Successfully tested in January 2026
    • Developed by DRDO with BDL and BEL as production partners
    [2024] Consider the following statements: 

    1. Ballistic missiles are jet-propelled at subsonic speeds throughout their flights, while cruise missiles are rocket-powered only in the initial phase of flight

    2. Agni-V is a medium-range supersonic cruise missile, while BrahMos is a solid-fuelled intercontinental ballistic missile

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 

    (a) 1 only (b) 2 only (c) Both 1 and 2 (d) Neither 1 nor 2

  • Child Rights – POSCO, Child Labour Laws, NAPC, etc.

    [13th January 2026] The Hindu OpED: Early investment in children, the key to India’s future

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] “Besides being a moral imperative of a Welfare State, primary health structure is a necessary precondition for sustainable development.” Analyse.

    Linkage: This PYQ links primary health systems to sustainable development through preventive care, nutrition, maternal and child health, and human capital formation.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India aims to become a developed economy by 2047. Most discussions focus on infrastructure, manufacturing, and digital growth. This article shifts attention to early childhood development (ECD), a less visible but critical area. It argues that without strong investment in the first 3,000 days of life, economic goals remain weak. The article reviews existing child-focused policies and calls for a universal, integrated, mission-mode approach.

    Why in the News?

    India lacks a clear national roadmap for early childhood development, even though early years shape health, learning, and future productivity. Despite success in reducing child mortality, fragmented and survival-focused policies fail to ensure full development, making early investment a high-return national priority, not just welfare.

    What is Early Childhood Care and Development (ECCD)?

    1. It is not a social sector expenditure but a strategic economic investment
    2. Scientific evidence confirms that the period from conception to eight years, especially the first 3,000 days, determines physical health, cognitive ability, emotional regulation, and social skills.

    Why are the first 3,000 days critical for national development?

    1. Brain Architecture: Forms rapidly during early childhood, with 80–85% neural development occurring in the first few years, shaping lifelong learning capacity.
    2. Human Capital Formation: Early capabilities determine educational attainment, workforce participation, and earning potential in adulthood.
    3. Irreversibility: Deprivation, neglect, or poor nutrition during this phase leads to developmental losses that are difficult or impossible to reverse later.

    What progress has India achieved in early childhood outcomes?

    1. Child Survival: Reduced infant and under-five mortality through consolidation under the National Health Mission.
    2. Nutrition and Immunisation: Expanded coverage addressing severe malnutrition and vaccine-preventable diseases.
    3. Institutional Framework: ICDS (1975) and its restructuring under Mission Saksham Anganwadi and POSHAN 2.0 laid foundations for early nutrition and care, particularly among poorer households.

    Where does India’s current ECCD approach fall short?

    1. Fragmentation: Interventions remain siloed across health, nutrition, and education without an integrated developmental framework.
    2. Survival Bias: Policy focus prioritises keeping children alive rather than enabling optimal cognitive, emotional, and social development.
    3. Limited Coverage: ECCD initiatives largely target government safety-net beneficiaries, excluding large sections of middle- and upper-income households facing obesity, screen addiction, delayed skills, and behavioural issues.
    4. Late Intervention: Formal developmental support typically begins at 30-36 months, missing the most critical early window.

    What does scientific evidence reveal about early interventions?

    1. Epigenetics: Early-life nutrition, stress, and environmental exposure influence gene expression and long-term health outcomes.
    2. Health Risks: Parental obesity, substance use, poor maternal nutrition, and chronic stress increase risks of non-communicable diseases and developmental delays.
    3. Time Use Paradox: Children spend most early years at home, yet structured guidance on stimulation, play, and emotional nurturing remains scarce.

    Why must ECCD be universal rather than poverty-targeted?

    1. Developmental Challenges: Obesity, physical inactivity, excessive screen exposure, and emotional difficulties affect children across income groups.
    2. Equity and Inclusion: Universal ECCD prevents exclusion errors and ensures national-level human capital strengthening.
    3. Productivity Link: Broad-based developmental deficits undermine workforce quality and long-term competitiveness.

    What early interventions need to be prioritized?

    1. Preconception Counselling: Focuses on nutrition, mental health, lifestyle, and intergenerational impacts, benefiting two generations simultaneously.
    2. Parental Empowerment: Encourages early stimulation through talking, reading, singing, playing, and emotional engagement from infancy.
    3. Growth Monitoring: Enables early detection of delays through periodic, simple assessments.
    4. Quality Early Learning: Addresses undernutrition, obesity, emotional regulation, and life-long health habits for children aged 2-5 years.
    5. Integrated Service Delivery: Breaks silos between health, nutrition, and education, transforming schools into integrated child development hubs.
    6. Social Outreach: Extends ECCD conversations beyond clinics into homes, workplaces, and communities.

    Why is a national mission-mode approach necessary?

    1. Policy Coordination: Requires functional convergence between Ministries of Health, Education, and Women & Child Development.
    2. Teacher Capacity: Necessitates training educators in child development beyond academic instruction.
    3. Ecosystem Building: Engages parents, non-profits, philanthropic institutions, and CSR initiatives to create a supportive ECCD environment.

    Conclusion

    Early childhood care and development is the most cost-effective and high-impact investment India can make to secure its long-term economic, social, and democratic future. While India has succeeded in improving child survival, the absence of a universal, integrated, and development-focused ECCD framework risks locking future generations into avoidable health, learning, and productivity deficits. Treating the first 3,000 days as a national mission, rather than a welfare add-on, will determine whether India’s demographic potential translates into a resilient, skilled, and globally competitive workforce by 2047.

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