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  • Wildlife Conservation Efforts

    Wildlife Smuggling at Kempegowda International Airport (KIA)

    Why in the News?

    Customs officials at Kempegowda International Airport, Bengaluru, intercepted a wildlife smuggling attempt involving endangered primates brought from Bangkok.

    Key Details

    • Two red shanked douc monkeys were recovered from a passenger arriving on flight TG 325 from Bangkok.
    • The animals were concealed inside check in baggage.
    • The passenger was arrested under provisions of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 and the Customs Act, 1962.
    • The rescued primates were handed over to animal welfare authorities for rehabilitation.
    • Further investigation is ongoing.

    About Red Shanked Douc Monkey

    • Scientific name: Pygathrix nemaeus
    • Habitat: Tropical forests of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia
    • IUCN Status: Critically Endangered
    • Listed under CITES Appendix I
    • Known for distinctive red lower limbs and colourful facial markings

    Legal and International Framework

    • Wildlife Protection Act, 1972 provides legal protection to endangered species in India.
    • CITES regulates international trade in endangered species of wild fauna and flora.
    • Appendix I species face the strictest trade restrictions.

    Prelims Pointers

    • Airports are major transit points for wildlife trafficking.
    • Smuggling of CITES listed species is a serious international offence.
    • India is a signatory to CITES and enforces it through domestic laws.
    • Wildlife trafficking is among the top illegal trades globally after drugs and arms.
    In India, if a species of tortoise is declared protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, what does it imply? (2017)

    (a) It enjoys the same level of protection as the tiger. 

    (b) It no longer exists in the wild, a few individuals are under captive protection; and how it is impossible to prevent its extinction. 

    (c) It is endemic to a particular region of India. 

    (d) Both (b) and (c) stated above are correct in this context.

  • Freedom of Speech – Defamation, Sedition, etc.

    [15th December 2025] The Hindu OpED: Courts must protect, not regulate free speech

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] Judicial Legislation is antithetical to the doctrine of separation of powers as envisaged in the Indian Constitution. In this context justify the filing of large number of public interest petitions praying for issuing guidelines to executive authorities.

    Linkage: This question directly aligns with the article’s core concern that recent judicial suggestions on online content regulation risk crossing from constitutional adjudication into judicial legislation, thereby unsettling the separation of powers framework.

    Introduction

    The Supreme Court has historically protected freedom of speech under Article 19(1)(a) through a doctrine of judicial restraint. In Sahara India Real Estate Corp. Ltd. v. SEBI (2012), the Court cautioned against prior restraint and blanket prohibitory orders on the media, permitting restrictions only as a last resort and subject to strict reasonableness. In Ardhish Cooperative Housing Society Ltd. v. Union of India (2018), the Court refused to interfere in film certification, reiterating that content regulation lies with statutory bodies, not courts. More recently, in Kaushal Kishor v. State of Uttar Pradesh (2023), a Constitution Bench reaffirmed that the grounds for restricting speech under Article 19(2) are exhaustive and cannot be expanded judicially.

    Against this settled jurisprudence, Supreme Court observations on November 27, 2025, made while hearing cases relating to obscene and improper online content, suggested that existing laws may be inadequate and proposed the creation of neutral, autonomous regulatory bodies along with draft government guidelines. This signals a shift from judicial restraint to regulatory engagement, raising constitutional concerns that form the core of this debate.

    Why in the News?

    The issue gained prominence after the Supreme Court indicated that self-styled online bodies are insufficient to regulate online content. It invited the government to publish draft regulatory guidelines. This represents a significant departure from earlier judicial positions that confined courts to assessing constitutionality rather than designing regulatory frameworks. The development is critical because it potentially alters the balance between free speech protection and content control at a time when digital expression has become central to democratic participation.

    Existing Legal Framework Governing Speech

    Statutory Regulation of Content

    1. Information Technology Act, 2000: Penalises obscene online content under Section 67, hacking and cyber offences under Section 66, and cyber terrorism under Section 66F.
    2. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023: Sections 294-296 criminalise obscene acts and materials.
    3. IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021: Establish content moderation obligations and grievance redressal mechanisms, though criticised for enabling executive overreach.

    Centralised Oversight

    1. Executive Control: IT Rules empower the Centre to issue directions, raising concerns of prior restraint and chilling effect on speech.
    2. Judicial Caution: Despite existing regulation, courts have traditionally avoided endorsing additional controls.

    Expansion of Judicial Scope in Online Content Cases

    Shift in Case Consideration

    1. Scope Enlargement: The Court extended proceedings beyond the validity of FIRs to examine broader regulatory mechanisms.
    2. Moral Standards Inquiry: Consideration of content offensive to societal morality reflects a regulatory approach.
    3. Constitutional Risk: Such expansion risks judicial entry into legislative policy-making.

    Separation of Powers and Institutional Competence

    Limits of Judicial Function

    1. Legislative Primacy: Content regulation requires democratic deliberation and accountability.
    2. Technical Expertise: Courts lack institutional capacity to design digital media regulation.
    3. Constitutional Restraint: Judicial intervention must remain confined to legality review.

    Judicial Tests on Prior Restraint

    Sahara India Doctrine (2012)

    1. Last-Resort Principle: Pre-publication bans are permissible only in exceptional cases.
    2. High Threshold: Orders must meet strict necessity and proportionality standards.

    Ardhish Cooperative Housing Society (2018)

    1. Statutory Authority: Film certification lies with the Censor Board.
    2. Judicial Non-Interference: Courts rejected content-based directions such as mandatory disclaimers.

    Constitutional Exhaustiveness of Speech Restrictions

    Article 19(2) Framework

    1. Enumerated Grounds: Sovereignty, security of the state, public order, decency, defamation, among others.
    2. Kaushal Kishor (2023): Held that no additional grounds beyond Article 19(2) can justify speech restrictions.
    3. Article 19(1)(a) Protection: Judicially created restrictions undermine constitutional text.

    Role of Courts in Free Speech Governance

    Constitutional Arbiter

    1. Judicial Review: Courts assess reasonableness of restrictions enacted by law.
    2. Non-Regulatory Role: Law-making lies outside judicial mandate.
    3. Democratic Safeguard: Preserves separation of powers and civil liberties.
    4. Legislative Domain: Content regulation requires democratic deliberation.
    5. Institutional Competence: Courts lack technical expertise for media governance.
    6. Precedent Risk: Judicial law-making bypasses parliamentary accountability.
    7. Constitutional Design: Courts act as arbiters, not regulators.

    What lessons emerge from global experiences?

    Democratic Regulation

    1. European Union: Digital Services Act prescribes structured content removal.
    2. Germany: Network Enforcement Act mandates timely takedown of unlawful content.
    3. United Kingdom and Australia: Online Safety laws impose compliance penalties.

    Authoritarian Risks

    1. China and Russia: Surveillance-driven censorship regimes.
    2. Judicial Capture: Courts used to legitimise executive control.
    3. Democratic Erosion: Demonstrates risks of excessive regulation.

    Conclusion

    The constitutional position on free speech has remained clear across decades: restrictions must flow only from Article 19(2), be legislatively enacted, and meet the tests of reasonableness and proportionality. Constitutional propriety requires that courts act as arbiters of legality, not architects of regulation. In a democracy governed by the rule of law, the protection of free speech is best ensured when courts guard constitutional limits rather than expand them.

  • FDI in Indian economy

    New Insurance Bill: Major reforms it seeks to bring

    Introduction

    The Union Cabinet has approved the Insurance Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2025 to amend the Insurance Act, 1938, the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956, and the IRDAI Act, 1999. The Bill seeks to modernise regulation, attract global capital, strengthen insurer solvency, and improve consumer protection. However, dilution or exclusion of critical reforms, such as composite licensing, has limited its transformative potential.

    Why in the News?

    The Bill proposes raising the Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) limit in insurance companies from 74% to 100% for the first time. This represents a decisive shift from partial foreign ownership to full foreign control in a strategically sensitive financial sector. 

    Core Reforms Introduced by the Bill

    Foreign Capital Liberalisation

    1. FDI expansion: Raises foreign ownership limit from 74% to 100%, enabling complete foreign control.
    2. Capital inflow facilitation: Enables insurers to access long-term global capital for solvency strengthening.
    3. Operational impact: Supports advanced underwriting, digital claims processing, and risk analytics.

    Regulatory Powers and Enforcement

    1. Enhanced IRDAI authority: Expands powers to impose penalties, recover illegal gains, and regulate intermediaries.
    2. Punitive alignment: Brings enforcement powers closer to SEBI-style regulatory deterrence.
    3. Market discipline: Ensures compliance through predictable penalty criteria.

    Operational Flexibility for Insurers

    1. LIC expansion: Permits LIC to enter new lines of business without prior government approval.
    2. Administrative efficiency: Reduces approval delays and improves market responsiveness.
    3. Global alignment: Enables LIC to align with regulatory norms of international markets.

    Capital and Solvency Norm Reforms

    1. Reduced capital threshold: Lowers minimum paid-up capital for new insurers.
    2. Risk-based approach: Facilitates entry of niche and region-specific insurers.
    3. Competition enhancement: Encourages diversification in products and pricing.

    Reinsurance and Risk Distribution

    1. Lower retention limits: Reduces compulsory retention of premium within India.
    2. Global reinsurance access: Facilitates risk diversification through international reinsurers.
    3. Market depth: Broadens reinsurance participation in catastrophe and health insurance.

    Key Proposals Missing or Diluted

    Composite Licensing Exclusion

    1. Licensing rigidity: Retains separation between life and general insurance businesses.
    2. Cost inefficiency: Prevents bundled insurance products under a single entity.
    3. Global mismatch: Diverges from international insurance market practices.

    Captive Insurance Silence

    1. Regulatory omission: No provision for captive insurers despite global demand.
    2. Corporate disadvantage: Limits cost optimisation for large firms managing complex risks.
    3. Missed competitiveness: Reduces India’s attractiveness as an insurance domicile.

    Product and Distribution Constraints

    1. Limited cross-selling: Restricts insurers from offering mutual funds, loans, or credit cards.
    2. Revenue limitation: Constrains diversification of income streams.
    3. Consumer integration gap: Prevents one-stop financial service platforms.

    Sectoral Impact Assessment

    Insurance Market Structure

    1. Market expansion: Likely entry of foreign insurers and niche domestic players.
    2. Competitive pressure: Improves product variety and pricing efficiency.

    Policyholder Outcomes

    1. Service quality: Enhances claims efficiency and underwriting sophistication.
    2. Coverage expansion: Supports insurance access for underserved populations.

    Regulatory Architecture

    1. Stronger oversight: Reinforces IRDAI’s supervisory role.
    2. Structural incompleteness: Retains fragmentation in licensing and product design.

    Conclusion

    The Insurance Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2025 advances liberalisation through higher FDI limits, enhanced regulatory powers, and greater operational flexibility, strengthening capital availability and market efficiency in the insurance sector. However, the absence of deeper structural reforms, such as composite licensing and integrated regulation, limits its transformative impact, underscoring the need for a coherent, convergence-oriented regulatory framework to support long-term financial sector stability and inclusion.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2013] The product diversification of financial institutions and insurance companies, resulting in overlapping of products and services strengthens the case for the merger of the two regulatory agencies, namely SEBI and IRDA.

    Linkage: The Insurance Laws (Amendment) Bill, 2025 expands and diversifies insurance products, increasing overlap with capital market instruments regulated by SEBI. This directly aligns with the UPSC question examining whether such product convergence justifies closer coordination or merger of SEBI and IRDAI to address regulatory fragmentation.

  • Climate Change Impact on India and World – International Reports, Key Observations, etc.

    Are methane emissions in India being missed?

    Introduction

    Methane is a short-lived but highly potent greenhouse gas, with 84-86 times the warming impact of CO₂ over 20 years. India is among the world’s largest methane emitters, primarily from waste, agriculture, and fossil fuel systems. However, weak monitoring systems, infrequent data updates, and reliance on modelling assumptions have led to substantial underestimation of actual emissions.

    Why in the News?

    Satellite datasets have, for the first time, revealed that methane emissions from Indian landfills, oil and gas infrastructure, and urban waste sites are significantly underreported, sometimes by a factor of ten. This challenges long-standing inventory-based estimates and highlights a systemic gap between ground reporting and atmospheric reality, making methane a missed but high-impact climate mitigation opportunity.

    Why is methane a critical climate concern for India?

    1. High Global Warming Potential: Methane traps significantly more heat than carbon dioxide in the short term, accelerating near-term warming.
    2. Multi-sectoral Sources: Emissions arise from landfills, wastewater, oil and gas leaks, and organic waste decomposition.
    3. Urban Climate Impact: Large cities generate concentrated methane hotspots due to unmanaged solid waste.
    4. Policy Leverage: Rapid methane reduction delivers faster climate benefits than long-term CO₂ mitigation.

    How have satellite observations changed methane assessment?

    1. Independent Measurement: Satellites measure atmospheric methane directly, bypassing assumptions used in inventories.
    2. High Spatial Resolution: New platforms identify emissions down to individual landfills and infrastructure sites.
    3. First-of-its-Kind Evidence: Indian sites show emissions up to 10x higher than reported estimates.
    4. Comparative Accuracy: Satellite data highlights discrepancies between national inventories and real emissions.

    What gaps exist in India’s current methane inventories?

    1. Model-Based Estimates: Inventories rely on default emission factors and outdated waste generation data.
    2. Infrequent Updates: Sector-wise methane data is updated irregularly at national and state levels.
    3. Source Aggregation: Individual hotspots are masked under regional averages.
    4. Limited Ground Validation: Physical measurement is rare due to cost, logistics, and technical complexity.

    What do case studies from Indian cities reveal?

    1. Delhi (Bhalswa Landfill): Satellite data showed emissions nearly 10 times higher than older estimates.
    2. Mumbai: Emissions from urban waste approached ~0.96 million tonnes, far exceeding theoretical calculations.
    3. Ahmedabad: State estimates at 0.73 million tonnes, with Pirana landfill alone emitting ~0.60 million tonnes.
    4. City-Specific Variability: Differences driven by landfill design, waste composition, and management practices.

    Why is landfill methane particularly underestimated?

    1. Waste Heterogeneity: Indian landfills mix organic, plastic, and industrial waste.
    2. Unengineered Dumps: Most sites lack liners, gas capture systems, or leachate control.
    3. Invisible Emissions: Methane leaks remain undetected without advanced monitoring.
    4. Urban Scale: Mega-cities generate continuous methane flows, not episodic spikes.

    What are the limits of satellite-only monitoring?

    1. Attribution Challenges: Satellites detect plumes but not exact causes.
    2. Complex Urban Signals: Dense cities create overlapping emission sources.
    3. Limited Temporal Coverage: Some emissions remain intermittent or weather-dependent.
    4. Need for Integration: Satellite data requires ground verification for enforcement.

    How does integrated monitoring improve governance outcomes?

    1. Targeted Enforcement: Identifies precise leak points for corrective action.
    2. Policy Feedback Loop: Enables rapid response instead of delayed reporting cycles.
    3. Institutional Coordination: Links urban bodies, pollution boards, and climate agencies.
    4. Cost Efficiency: Directs resources toward highest-impact mitigation sites.

    Conclusion

    Methane emissions in India are not merely underestimated but structurally obscured by outdated inventories and weak monitoring frameworks. Satellite detection has exposed a significant mitigation opportunity, particularly in urban waste systems. Integrating satellite data with ground-level governance can transform methane control into one of India’s fastest climate gains.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022]  Discuss global warming and mention its effects on global climate. Explain the control measures to bring down the level of greenhouse gasses which cause global warming in the light of the Kyoto Protocol 1997. 

    Linkage: This PYQ directly links to methane as a high-impact greenhouse gas and tests understanding of non-CO₂ mitigation, where the article highlights systematic underestimation of methane emissions in India and the need for improved monitoring to achieve climate control commitments.

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

    INAS 335 (Ospreys) and MH-60R Seahawk Helicopters

    Why in the News?

    The Indian Navy will commission its second MH-60R helicopter squadron, INAS 335 (Ospreys), on December 17 at INS Hansa, Goa, marking a major step in naval modernisation.

    MH-60R Seahawk Helicopter

    • It is a US made, advanced multi role maritime helicopter.
      • Equipped with state of the art avionics, sensors and advanced weapon systems.
      • Capable of addressing both conventional and asymmetric threats.
      • Fully integrated with Indian Navy fleet operations.
      • Designed for sustained operations in open seas.

    Strategic Significance

    • Significantly enhances the Indian Navy’s operational readiness.
      • Extends the Navy’s operational reach, supporting blue water navy capabilities.
      • Strengthens India’s maritime presence in the Indian Ocean Region.
      • Acts as a deterrent against potential maritime threats.

    Prelims Pointers

    • INS Hansa is the Indian Navy’s premier naval air station located in Goa.
      • MH-60R helicopters form a key component of India’s maritime aviation modernisation programme.
    Which one of the following is the best description of ‘INS Astradharini’, that was in the news recently? (2016)

    (a) Amphibious warfare ship 

    (b) Nuclear-powered submarine 

    (c) Torpedo launch and recovery vessel 

    (d) Nuclear-powered aircraft carrier

  • Promoting Science and Technology – Missions,Policies & Schemes

    Pyrite

    Why in the News?

    Scientists have discovered the oldest known evidence of fire making by prehistoric humans in England. The findings include heated clay, heat shattered flint handaxes and pieces of iron pyrite, which can generate sparks when struck against flint.

    About Pyrite

    • Pyrite is a brass yellow mineral with a bright metallic lustre.
      • Chemical composition: Iron sulfide (FeS₂).
      • It is the most common sulfide mineral found on Earth.
      • The name is derived from the Greek word pyr meaning fire, as pyrite emits sparks when struck by metal or flint.
      • Nodules of pyrite found in prehistoric burial mounds suggest its early use in fire making.
      • Commonly known as “Fool’s Gold” due to its superficial resemblance to gold.

    Distinguishing Pyrite from Gold

    • Pyrite is much lighter than gold.
      • It is harder than gold and cannot be scratched with a fingernail or a pocket knife.
      • Gold is soft, malleable and can be easily scratched.

    Occurrence

    • Found worldwide in diverse geological settings.
      • Occurs in sedimentary deposits, hydrothermal veins and as a constituent of metamorphic rocks.

    Uses of Pyrite

    • Source of iron and sulfur.
      • Used in the manufacture of sulfuric acid.
      • Used to produce iron sulfate.
      • Iron sulfate applications include nutritional supplements, ink, lawn conditioner, water treatment and flocculation, and moss control.
      • Iron sulfate derived from pyrite is used in the treatment of iron deficiency anemia.
      • Some varieties contain microscopic gold and can be mined as a gold ore.

    Prelims Pointer

    • Pyrite’s ability to produce sparks made it an important material for early human fire technology.
    Ilmenite and rutile, abundantly available in certain coastal tracts of India, are rich sources of which one of the following? (2023)

    (a) Aluminium 

    (b) Copper 

    (c) Iron 

    (d) Titanium

  • Artificial Intelligence (AI) Breakthrough

    Pax Silica Initiative

    Why in the News?

    The Congress party recently criticised the Prime Minister over India’s exclusion from the United States led strategic initiative known as Pax Silica, citing a perceived downturn in India US relations.

    About Pax Silica Initiative

    • Pax Silica is a US led strategic initiative aimed at building a secure, resilient and innovation driven global silicon supply chain.
      • The initiative covers the entire value chain from critical minerals and energy inputs to advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, artificial intelligence infrastructure and logistics.
      • The term Pax is derived from Latin, meaning peace, stability and long term prosperity.
      Silica refers to the compound refined into silicon, a foundational element for computer chips that power AI and advanced digital technologies.
      • The initiative seeks to reduce coercive dependencies, protect critical materials and capabilities essential for AI, and enable trusted nations to develop and deploy emerging technologies at scale.

    Member Countries

    • Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Netherlands, United Kingdom, Israel, United Arab Emirates and Australia

    Core Objectives

    • Jointly address vulnerabilities and opportunities in AI related supply chains.
      • Cooperation in critical minerals, semiconductor design, fabrication and packaging.
      • Strengthen logistics, transportation, compute infrastructure and energy grids.
      • Promote new joint ventures and strategic co investment opportunities.
      • Protect sensitive technologies and critical infrastructure from undue access or control by countries of concern.
      • Build trusted technology ecosystems including ICT systems, fibre optic cables, data centres, foundational AI models and applications.

    Significance for Prelims

    • Focuses on strategic technology security rather than a formal treaty.
      • Closely linked to semiconductor and AI geopolitics.
      • Reflects US efforts to align technology supply chains among trusted partners.
    With the present state of development, Artificial Intelligence can effectively do which of the following? (2020)

    (1) Bring down electricity consumption in industrial units 

    (2) Create meaningful short stories and songs 

    (3) Disease diagnosis 

    (4) Text-to-Speech Conversion 

    (5) Wireless transmission of electrical energy 

    Select the correct answer using the code given below: 

    (a) 1, 2, 3 and 5 only (b) 1, 3 and 4 only (c) 2, 4 and 5 only (d) 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5

  • Wetland Conservation

    New Ramsar Sites in India

    Why in the News?

    Siliserh Lake in Rajasthan and Kopra Jalashay in Chhattisgarh have been designated as Ramsar Sites, recognising their international importance as wetlands.

    Siliserh Lake

    Location: Alwar district, Rajasthan
    Type: Human made lake
    Setting: Located within the buffer zone of Sariska Tiger Reserve
    History: Constructed in 1845 by Maharaja Vinay Singh to supply drinking water to Alwar city
    Climate Zone: Semi arid region
    Ecological Significance:
    • Important water source in a dry landscape
    • Supports diverse wetland and terrestrial biodiversity

    Fauna:

    • Around 149 bird species
    • 17 mammal species
    • Vulnerable species: River tern
    • Endangered species: Tiger
    • Supports more than 1 percent of the biogeographic population of Black Stork (Ciconia nigra)

    Kopra Jalashay

    Location: Bilaspur district, Chhattisgarh
    Type: Reservoir
    River System: Upper catchment of the Mahanadi River
    Hydrological Importance:
    • Strong hydrological and ecological connectivity
    • Creates a mosaic of wetland habitats

    Avifaunal Importance:

    • Supports over 60 migratory bird species
    • Used for nesting, feeding and as a stopover site

    Fauna:

    • Vulnerable species: Greater Spotted Eagle (Aquila clanga)
    • Endangered species: Egyptian Vulture (Neophron percnopterus)

    Ramsar Convention Key Point for Prelims

    • Ramsar Convention is an international treaty for conservation and wise use of wetlands
      • Adopted in 1971 at Ramsar, Iran
      • India is a contracting party since 1982
    If a wetland of international importance is brought under the ‘Montreux Record’, what does it imply? (2014)

    (a) Changes in ecological character have occurred, are occurring or are likely to occur in the wetland as a result of human interference. 

    (b) The country in which the wetland is located should enact a law to prohibit any human activity within five kilometres from the edge of the wetland. 

    (c) The survival of the wetland depends on the cultural practices and traditions of certain communities living in its vicinity and therefore the cultural diversity therein should not be destroyed. 

    (d) It is given the status of ‘World Heritage Site’

  • Festivals, Dances, Theatre, Literature, Art in News

    Delhi Parsi Anjuman Centenary  

    Why in the News?

    Delhi Parsi Anjuman DPA is celebrating its 100 years of establishment in 2025.

    About Parsis in India

    • Parsis migrated to India around 8th century CE from Persia modern day Iran due to religious persecution.
    • They followed sea trade routes and mainly settled in Gujarat and Maharashtra.
    • Known for contributions in trade industry law healthcare and public life.

    Parsis in Delhi

    • First Parsi settlement in Delhi dates to the 19th century.
    • Legend links early Parsi presence to Meherjirana the first Dastur invited by Mughal emperor Akbar during the 16th century.
    • Major influx occurred after British shifted capital from Calcutta to Delhi in 1911.
    • First recorded Parsi migrant to Delhi was Naowroji Kapadia from Bharuch Gujarat.

    Delhi Parsi Anjuman DPA

    • Established in 1925 by 40 trustees.
    • Location Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg New Delhi.
    • First President Naowroji Kapadia.
    • Meaning of Anjuman Persian word meaning congregation.
    • Objective Cultural spiritual and social hub for the Parsi community in Delhi.
    • Current Parsi population in Delhi around 500 in 2023-24.

    Key Institutions under DPA

    Dar-e-Mehr Zoroastrian fire temple established in 1961.
    • Only Zoroastrian fire temple in North India.
    • Dharamshala banquet hall and Katgara Hall newly renovated in 2025.

    Important Facts for Prelims

    • Delhi Parsi Anjuman founded in 1925.
    • Centenary year 2025.
    • Dar-e-Mehr in Delhi is the only fire temple in North India.
    • Parsis played a key role in shaping Delhi’s legal architectural and healthcare institutions.

    Which one of the following was the latest inclusion in the Intangible Cultural Heritage List of UNESCO? (2024)

    (a) Chhau dance 

    (b) Durga Puja 

    (c) Garba dance 

    (d) Kumbh Mela

  • Economic Indicators and Various Reports On It- GDP, FD, EODB, WIR etc

    [13th December 2025] The Hindu OpED: The Indian Ocean as cradle of a new blue economy

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] What are the maritime security challenges in India? Discuss the organizational, technical and procedural initiatives taken to improve the maritime security.

    Linkage: This question aligns with the article’s argument that maritime security now includes ocean governance, ecosystem degradation, and IUU fishing, beyond naval or territorial concerns.It reflects the article’s “security through sustainability” lens.

    Introduction

    The Indian Ocean has historically shaped global trade, civilizations, and maritime norms. India’s early advocacy during the UNCLOS negotiations to treat areas beyond national jurisdiction as the “common heritage of mankind” laid the normative foundation for today’s ocean governance debates. Half a century later, climate change, biodiversity loss, and unregulated exploitation have intensified pressures on marine ecosystems. The article argues that India now carries both opportunity and responsibility to lead a new Blue Economy paradigm rooted in stewardship, resilience, and inclusive growth.

    Why in the News?

    The article gains significance amid the BBNJ Agreement (2023), renewed focus on Blue Economy financing, and India’s expanding role in Indian Ocean governance following UNCLOS negotiations and recent UN Ocean Conferences. For the first time, the Indian Ocean is being projected not merely as a geopolitical theatre but as a laboratory for sustainability, climate resilience, and equitable growth. This marks a shift from security-centric maritime approaches toward ecosystem-based ocean governance

    Reimagining the Indian Ocean Blue Economy

    Normative Foundations of India’s Ocean Vision

    1. Common Heritage Principle: Positions the Indian Ocean as a shared global commons rather than a contested geopolitical space.
    2. Continuity of Leadership: Builds on India’s early UNCLOS advocacy for equity and fairness in ocean governance.
    3. Shift in Maritime Thinking: Reframes oceans from extractive zones to sustainability laboratories.

    What is the Blue Economy?

    1. Sustainable Ocean-Based Economic Model: Integrates economic use of ocean resources with long-term conservation of marine ecosystems.
    2. Human-Ocean Balance: Aligns livelihoods, trade, and development with ecological thresholds and regeneration capacity.
    3. Global Commons Perspective: Treats oceans as shared resources requiring collective governance rather than unilateral exploitation.

    How the Blue Economy Differs from Past Interpretations

    From Extraction to Stewardship

    1. Earlier Approach: Focused on maximum extraction of fisheries, offshore hydrocarbons, and seabed minerals.
    2. Blue Economy Shift: Prioritises ecosystem health, biodiversity protection, and regulated resource use.

    From Sectoral Growth to Integrated Planning

    1. Earlier Approach: Treated shipping, fishing, energy, and tourism as isolated sectors.
    2. Blue Economy Shift: Integrates marine sectors through ecosystem-based and spatial planning frameworks.

    From Security-Centric Oceans to Sustainability-Centric Oceans

    1. Earlier Approach: Viewed oceans primarily as strategic spaces for naval dominance and sea-lane protection.
    2. Blue Economy Shift: Redefines maritime security to include climate resilience, coastal livelihoods, and ocean health.

    From Short-Term Gains to Intergenerational Equity

    1. Earlier Approach: Emphasised immediate economic returns with limited concern for long-term impacts.
    2. Blue Economy Shift: Embeds intergenerational equity and long-term resilience into ocean governance.

    From National Control to Cooperative Governance

    1. Earlier Approach: Prioritised sovereign exploitation within EEZs.
    2. Blue Economy Shift: Strengthens multilateralism through UNCLOS, BBNJ Agreement, and regional cooperation mechanisms.

    Why This Shift Matters for India and the Indian Ocean?

    1. Climate Vulnerability: Indian Ocean region faces disproportionate exposure to sea-level rise and extreme weather.
    2. Livelihood Dependence: Millions depend on marine resources for food security and employment.
    3. Strategic Leadership: Enables India to lead through norms, sustainability, and inclusive regional partnerships rather than power projection.

    Stewardship as the First Pillar

    1. Ecosystem Restoration: Prioritises biodiversity protection, habitat conservation, and sustainable fisheries management.
    2. Regulated Resource Use: Counters illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing undermining livelihoods and food security.
    3. Shared Ocean Ethic: Positions India as a trustee rather than a dominant maritime power.

    Resilience in a Climate-Stressed Ocean Basin

    1. Climate Vulnerability: Indian Ocean houses over one-third of humanity and includes some of the most climate-exposed regions.
    2. Adaptation Imperative: Strengthens preparedness against sea-level rise, extreme weather, and ecosystem collapse.
    3. Regional Cooperation: Supports small island developing states through technology transfer and capacity building.

    Inclusive Growth and the Blue Economy

    1. Equitable Prosperity: Extends economic benefits to all littoral states, not just major powers.
    2. Green Sectors: Advances green shipping, offshore renewable energy, and sustainable marine biotechnology.
    3. Livelihood Protection: Links marine conservation with coastal employment and social stability.

    Financing the Blue Economy Transition

    1. Global Financial Momentum: Finance in Common Ocean Coalition mobilised $8.7 billion in commitments.
    2. Public-Private Synergy: Balances public pledges ($5.7 billion) and private investment ($2.5 billion).
    3. Institutional Architecture: Converts ocean pledges into implementable projects through MDBs and philanthropy.

    Security Through Sustainability

    1. Expanded Security Concept: Redefines maritime security beyond navigation and sea lanes.
    2. Ecosystem-Security Link: Addresses IUU fishing, coral degradation, and coastal erosion as security threats.
    3. SAGAR Doctrine: Anchors India’s maritime strategy in “Security and Growth for All in the Region.”

    Multilateralism and Global Ocean Governance

    1. BBNJ Agreement: Establishes governance for biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction.
    2. UNCLOS Continuity: Reinforces rule-based maritime order.
    3. Equity Focus: Integrates climate finance, technology access, and capacity building for developing states.

    India’s Diplomatic Responsibility in the IOR

    1. Leadership with Restraint: Emphasises stewardship over dominance.
    2. Consultative Approach: Aligns India’s diplomacy with shared prosperity.
    3. Global Messaging: Positions the Indian Ocean as a model for cooperative global commons governance.

    Conclusion

    The Indian Ocean is no longer merely a strategic maritime space but a critical global commons where climate stress, ecological degradation, and development aspirations intersect. India’s approach, grounded in stewardship, sustainability, and inclusive growth, positions the Blue Economy as a pathway to secure oceans through resilient ecosystems and cooperative governance. By aligning UNCLOS principles, the BBNJ framework, and the SAGAR vision, the article underscores that the future stability of the Indian Ocean and its prosperity will depend on security rooted in sustainability rather than dominance.

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