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  • Anthropic’s Mythos AI & India’s Infrastructure Security  

    Why in the News?

    Anthropic is in high-level talks with the Indian government to safeguard Critical Information Infrastructure (CII)—including banking, energy, and telecom—against cybersecurity risks posed by its latest and most powerful AI model, Mythos.

    What is Mythos?

    Mythos is an advanced AI model developed by Anthropic that possesses “unprecedented” capabilities in identifying and exploiting software vulnerabilities.

    • Cyber-Weapon Potential: Unlike standard AI, Mythos can autonomously find deep-seated flaws in widely used operating systems and infrastructure.
    • Controlled Release: Due to its risk profile, Anthropic has withheld public release, opting instead for a “defense-first” strategy.
    • Project Glasswing: A defensive initiative by Anthropic to help major tech firms (Apple, Nvidia, etc.) and governments build AI-native shields before the model is widely deployed.

    India’s Response

    The Indian government has initiated a multi-ministerial response to mitigate potential AI-driven threats:

    • Finance Ministry Action: Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman directed banks to maintain “high-level vigilance” and develop coordination mechanisms against AI-weaponized vulnerabilities.
    • Diplomatic Engagement: The Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) is leading talks with Anthropic’s leadership to secure India’s financial and energy sectors.
    • Vulnerability Assessment: Indian agencies are seeking access to study the system’s risks and prepare defensive measures specifically for the financial sector.
    [2020] With the print state of development, Artificial Intelligence can effectively do which of the following? 
    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
  • Mining Sector Reforms: Special Assistance to States 

    Why in the News?

    The Ministry of Mines has issued operational guidelines for a ₹5,000 crore incentive package under the Scheme for Special Assistance to States for Capital Investment (SASCI) for FY 2026-27. This initiative aims to accelerate mineral production and improve governance across India.

    What is the Scheme Component?

    A dedicated financial incentive mechanism designed to reward States and UTs (with legislatures) for implementing structural reforms in the mining sector.

    • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Mines.
    • Total Outlay: ₹5,000 crore.
    • Core Objective: Expedite mine operationalization, increase mineral production, and enhance state revenue through better governance.
    Reform AreaSpecific RequirementsPotential Incentive
    I. Implementation of Mining Reforms1. Integration with Unified Mining Portal.2. Setup Pre-Auction Committee (land issues).3. Setup State-level Coordination Committee.4. Issue annual auction calendar.5. Adopt tech to prevent grade misclassification.₹100 crore (if all 5 are met by Dec 15, 2026)
    II. Mine OperationalizationA. Pre-embedded Clearances: Auctioning blocks with forest/env clearances already in place.B. Production Kickstart: Operationalizing at least 10% of blocks auctioned prior to March 2026.A. ₹20 crore per block (Max ₹200cr/state).B. ₹250 crore per state.
    III. SMRI-based ReformsRewarding top performers in the State Mining Readiness Index (SMRI) 2026-27 across three categories (A, B, and C).1st: ₹100 crore2nd: ₹75 crore3rd: ₹50 crore
    [2025] Consider the following statements: 
    Statement I: In India, State Governments have no power for making rules for grant of concessions in respect of extraction of minor minerals even though such minerals are located in their territories. 
    Statement II: In India, the Central Government has the power to notify minor minerals under the relevant law. 
    Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements? 
    [A] Both Statement I and Statement II are correct and Statement II explains Statement I 
    [B] Both Statement I and Statement II are correct but Statement II does not explain Statement I 
    [C] Statement I is correct but Statement II is not correct 
    [D] Statement I is not correct but Statement II is correct
  • BRICS-MENA Meeting on West Asia Conflict 

    Why in the News?

    For the first time as the 2026 BRICS Chair, India convened a meeting of Deputy Foreign Ministers and Special Envoys from BRICS and MENA (Middle East and North Africa) countries to address the escalating U.S.-Israel war against Iran.

    What is BRICS-MENA?

    A specialized consultative platform within the BRICS framework that brings together member states and key regional players from the Middle East and North Africa to coordinate on regional security and diplomacy.

    BRICS Member Countries (2026):

    • Founding: Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa.
    • Expanded Members: Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates (UAE), and Indonesia.

    MENA Region Participants:

    Beyond the BRICS members from the region (Iran, Egypt, UAE, Saudi), the MENA delegation includes key regional stakeholders such as:

    • Gulf: Qatar, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain, Iraq.
    • Levant: Jordan, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria.
    • North Africa: Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Libya.
    [2025] Consider the following statements with regard to BRICS; 
    I. 16th BRICS Summit was held under the Chairmanship of Russia in Kazan. 
    II. Indonesia has become a full member of BRICS. 
    III. The theme of the 16th BRICS Summit was Strengthening Multiculturalism for Just Global Development and Security. 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    [A] I and II [B] II and III [C] I and III [D] I only
  • Defection of AAP Rajya Sabha MPs 

    Why in the News?

    In a major political shift, seven out of ten Aam Aadmi Party (Aam Aadmi Party) Rajya Sabha MPs have resigned from the party to merge with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), citing a departure from the party’s founding principles.

    What is the Event?

    • Seven Rajya Sabha MPs, led by Raghav Chadha, have exercised the “merger” provision of the anti-defection law to join the BJP without losing their seats in the Upper House.

    Constitutional & Legal Framework (UPSC Focus)

    The move hinges on the Tenth Schedule of the Indian Constitution (Anti-Defection Law):

    • The Two-Thirds Rule: Under the 91st Constitutional Amendment Act (2003), a split in a party is no longer recognized. However, a merger is valid if at least two-thirds of the members of the legislative party agree to it.
    • Status of AAP MPs: Since 7 out of 10 MPs (70%) have moved together, they meet the two-thirds threshold, potentially exempting them from disqualification.
    • Voluntary Membership Relinquishment: The remaining AAP leadership (Sanjay Singh) has argued for disqualification under Paragraph 2(1)(a) of the Tenth Schedule, claiming the MPs “voluntarily gave up” membership before a formal merger.
    [2025] Consider the following statements: 
    I. If any question arises as to whether a Member of the House of the People has become subject to disqualification under the 10th Schedule, the President’s decision in accordance with the opinion of the Council of Union Ministers shall be final. 
    II. There is no mention of the word ‘political party’ in the Constitution of India. 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    [A] I only [B] II only [C] Both I and II [D] Neither I nor II
  • Sub-classification for SC Quota in Karnataka  

    Why in the News?

    The Karnataka Cabinet has officially approved a new internal reservation matrix for Scheduled Castes (SCs), following the landmark 2024 Supreme Court ruling that permits states to sub-classify reserved categories.

    What is the Decision?

    A strategic redistribution of the 15% SC reservation into three distinct categories to ensure equitable opportunities among 101 different sub-castes.

    The Internal Reservation Matrix

    CategoryTargeted CommunitiesAllocation (%)
    Category 1Madigas and allied castes (Dalit Left)5.25%
    Category 2Holeyas and allied castes (Dalit Right)5.25%
    Category 3Bhovi, Lambani, Korama, Koracha & 59 nomadic groups4.5%

    Note: Dalit Left and Right refer to the internal sub-classification of Scheduled Castes (SCs) in India, particularly in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, categorized for internal reservation purposes.

    Timeline & Legal Context

    • 1992: Indira Sawhney Case – SC caps total reservation at 50%.
    • 2004: E.V. Chinnaiah Case – SC initially rules that states cannot sub-classify SCs.
    • 2024: State of Punjab v. Davinder Singh – SC 7-judge bench overrules Chinnaiah, allowing sub-classification based on empirical data.
    • 2024 (Oct): Karnataka Cabinet approves the new 5.25 : 5.25 : 4.5 formula.

    Objectives & Challenges

    • Social Justice
      • Addresses the long-standing grievance that “advanced” sub-castes within the SC list were cornering most benefits.
      • Focuses on the “creamy layer” principle within SCs to reach the most marginalized.
    • Legal Hurdles
      • Quantifiable Data: The state must prove under-representation with empirical evidence to survive judicial review.
      • 50% Ceiling: The state’s total reservation (including ST and OBC) currently pushes to 56%, which is under challenge in the High Court.
    [2023] Consider the following statements: 
    Statement – I:The Supreme court of India has held in some judgements that the reservation policies made under Article 16 (4) of the constitution of India would be limited Article 335 for maintenance of efficiency of administration. 
    Statement – II:Article 335 of the Constitution of India defines the term ‘efficiency of administration’. 
    Which of the following is correct in respect of the above statements? 
    [A] Both statement – I and Statement – II are correct explanation for statement – I
    [B] Both statement – I and statement – II are correct and statement II is not the correct explanation for statement I
    [C] Statement – I is correct but statement – II is incorrect.
    [D] Statement – I is incorrect but statement – II is correct.
  • Online gaming rules expand compliance, leave room for esports

    Why in the News?

    India’s online gaming sector has entered a decisive regulatory phase with the notification of the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Rules, 2026. This marks the first comprehensive, digital-first national framework for a rapidly expanding industry. 

    How does the new regulatory framework alter India’s approach to online gaming?

    1. Digital-first regulation: Establishes a structured national framework under MeitY, replacing fragmented state-level rules; example: uniform classification norms across India.
    2. Flexible compliance model: Removes mandatory pre-registration for most games, reducing entry barriers; example: only specific categories require formal determination.
    3. Legal clarity: Differentiates between online money games, social games, and esports; example: staking vs non-staking distinction.

    What institutional mechanisms have been introduced to govern the sector?

    Online Gaming Authority of India (OGAI) is a statutory regulatory body. Established under the Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Act, 2025

    1. OGAI establishment: Creates the Online Gaming Authority of India under MeitY to act as sectoral regulator; ensures central oversight.
    2. Wide-ranging powers: Enables classification of games and enforcement actions; example: determining whether a game involves monetary stakes.
      1. Game Classification & Determination: OGAI has the authority to classify games as “online social games,” “e-sports,” or “online money games” based on a 90-day assessment of monetary stakes and winnings.
      2. Mandatory Registration: Online game service providers must register their games and obtain certifications from OGAI for compliance.
      3. Two-Tier Grievance Redressal: Establishes a formal, time-bound mechanism where users can approach the OGAI and subsequently appeal to the Secretary of MeitY.
      4. Enforcement Powers: The OGAI can enforce penalties, block transactions via banks and payment gateways, and regulate advertisements, effective through the PROG Act of 2025. 
      5. Inter-ministerial representation: Includes ministries like Home, Finance, IT, Sports, and Broadcasting; ensures multi-dimensional governance.

    How does the framework balance regulation with industry growth?

    The Promotion and Regulation of Online Gaming Rules, 2026, establish a “regulation-light” framework. This balances industry growth with necessary oversight by targeting specific risks rather than applying universal, restrictive compliance on all gaming platforms. 

    1. Selective Determination System (Risk-Based Oversight): Requires regulatory scrutiny only in specific cases
      1. Example: A 90-day determination process exists, but is primarily triggered when a game seeks registration as an esport or is flagged by the government, rather than for every game update
    2. Non-mandatory registration: The framework distinguishes between online money games (prohibited) and non-monetary games (social/casual). Non-money gaming platforms do not need mandatory registration or prior approval to operate.
      1. Reduces compliance burden for startups; example: companies like Dream11 or Mobile Premier League benefit from flexibility.
    3. Recognition of esports:Esports are formally recognized as legitimate sports, separating them from gambling and giving them a distinct, clear compliance pathway (registration with OGAI).
      1. Once registered, an esports title receives a 10-year validity certificate, allowing for long-term development of professional tournaments and ecosystems.

    What compliance obligations are imposed on intermediaries and financial systems?

    1. Financial verification mandate:
      1. Regulatory Status Check: Banks and payment gateways must verify the regulatory status, specifically looking for a “digital Certificate of Registration” from the Online Gaming Authority of India (OGAI), before processing transactions for any online game.
      2. Blocking Prohibited Transactions: Financial entities are legally obligated to stop transactions linked to platforms classified as “online money games” (games involving a stake with expectation of winnings).
      3. Specific Game Restrictions: Upon direction from the OGAI, banks must immediately suspend, restrict, or discontinue financial facilitation for specific banned games
    2. Payments as enforcement tool: Enables suspension or restriction of financial flows; strengthens compliance without direct bans.
      1. Prohibition of Services: Under Section 7 of the Act, banks and payment facilitators are banned from aiding, abetting, or facilitating transactions or fund authorization for any prohibited gaming service.
    3. Expanded compliance perimeter: Includes intermediaries beyond gaming platforms; example: fintech platforms involved in gaming payments.

    How does the framework address consumer protection and user safety?

    1. Grievance redressal system: Introduces a two-tier mechanism, platform-level and appellate authority; ensures accountability.
    2. Safety features mandate: Requires age verification, time limits, parental controls, and self-reporting tools; example: protection against addiction.
    3. Transparency requirements: Platforms must disclose safety features and grievance systems; ensures informed user participation.

    What role does data governance play in the new rules?

    1. Data localisation requirement: Mandates storage of gaming-related data in India; ensures regulatory access.
    2. Traffic data reporting: Requires platforms to report user activity metrics; enhances monitoring capacity.
    3. Future regulatory flexibility: Allows OGAI to issue directions on emerging areas like advertising and user safety.

    What are the limitations and grey areas in the framework?

    1. Non-universal registration: May create ambiguity in enforcement; example: unregulated segments may persist.
    2. Evolving definitions: Classification between skill and chance remains contentious.
    3. State vs Centre tension: States may continue to legislate independently, causing overlaps.

    Conclusion

    The 2026 rules represent a calibrated shift toward centralised yet adaptive governance, attempting to regulate a high-growth digital sector without stifling innovation. However, the success of this framework will depend on clarity in enforcement, coordination with states, and responsiveness to technological evolution.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] e-governance is not just about the routine application of digital technology in service delivery process. It is as much about multifarious interactions for ensuring transparency and accountability. In this context evaluate the role of the ‘Interactive Service Model’ of e-governance.

    Linkage: The PYQ evaluates governance transformation through digital platforms focusing on transparency, accountability, and multi-stakeholder interaction, a core GS2 theme. The online gaming rules create an interactive digital regulatory ecosystem involving users, platforms, regulators, and financial intermediaries, reflecting this model. The topic is important for Prelims (regulatory bodies, rules) and Mains (e-governance application).

  • BHAVYA Scheme  

    Why in the News

    • The Union Cabinet has approved the Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojana (BHAVYA) with an outlay of ₹33,660 crore to develop 100 plug-and-play industrial parks by 2032.
    • The National Industrial Corridor Development Programme (NICDP) framework is the foundation for the BHAVYA (Bharat Audyogik Vikas Yojna) scheme. Approved on March 18, 2026, with a ₹33,660 crore outlay,

    What is BHAVYA?

    • A government scheme to create future-ready industrial parks across India
    • Designed to provide:
      • Ready infrastructure
      • Seamless connectivity
    • Focus on: Manufacturing competitiveness and investment

    Key Features

    1. Scale and Timeline

    • Total parks: 100
    • Duration: 6 years (starting 2026–27)
    • First phase: 50 parks

    2. Land Requirement

    • Minimum:
      • 100 acres (general)
      • 25 acres (hilly and North Eastern states)
    • Maximum: 1,000 acres

    3. Funding Pattern

    • Central Government:
      • Up to ₹1 crore per acre
    • Implementation:
      • Joint effort of: Central government, State governments, and Private sector

    4. Plug-and-Play Model

    • Industrial units get:
      • Pre-developed land
      • Power, water, roads
      • Logistics connectivity

    5. Integration with National Infrastructure

    • Linked with: PM GatiShakti
    • Benefits:
      • Multimodal connectivity (road, rail, ports)
      • Efficient logistics
      • Last-mile connectivity

    6. Ease of Doing Business

    • Features include:
      • Single-window clearance systems
      • Simplified approvals
      • Investor-friendly policies
      • State-led reforms
    • Primary beneficiaries: Manufacturing units, MSMEs, startups, and global investors seeking ready-to-use industrial infrastructure
    [2016] Recently, India’s first ‘National Investment and Manufacturing Zone’ was proposed to be set up in:
    (a) Andhra Pradesh
    (b) Gujarat
    (c) Maharashtra
    (d) Uttar Pradesh
  • [24th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: Scaling climate adaptation from policy to grassroots

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2017] Climate change is a global problem. How will India be affected by climate change? How will Himalayan and coastal states of India be affected?Linkage: This is a core GS-III question linking climate vulnerability, sectoral impacts, and regional disparities. It directly tests understanding of adaptation and resilience frameworks.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s climate adaptation framework is under scrutiny due to a widening gap between ambitious policy commitments and weak on-ground implementation, especially as the country faces over 430 extreme weather events (1995-2024) costing $180 billion. While adaptation is gaining prominence globally, India’s budgetary tilt towards mitigation over adaptation and fragmented institutional mechanisms make this a critical policy challenge.

    What is climate adaptation?

    1. Climate adaptation is the process of adjusting to the current and expected effects of climate change to minimize harm and take advantage of new opportunities. 
    2. While mitigation focuses on tackling the causes of climate change by reducing greenhouse gas emissions, adaptation focuses on managing its impacts, such as rising sea levels, extreme heatwaves, and erratic rainfall. 
    3. In essence, it is about building resilience to live with a changing climate that is already “in the pipeline” due to historical emissions.

    Why is climate adaptation critical for India’s development trajectory?

    Climate adaptation is critical for India because climate change is no longer just an environmental issue; it is a direct threat to national economic stability and poverty reduction.

    1. Climate Vulnerability: India ranks among the most climate-vulnerable nations with 430 extreme events (1995-2024) causing $180 billion losses; demonstrates systemic risk to growth and livelihoods.
      1. GDP Protection: Heatwaves alone are projected to put 4.5% of India’s GDP at risk by 2030 due to lost labor hours in outdoor sectors like construction and mining.
    2. Policy Recognition: India’s updated NDCs (2022, under Paris Agreement framework) emphasize climate resilience, adaptation mainstreaming, and integration into development planning; align national priorities with evolving global climate commitments.
    3. Sectoral Exposure:Agriculture, infrastructure, biodiversity, water systems face direct climate risks;
      1. Example: National Innovations in Climate Resilient Agriculture (NICRA) targets climate-resilient agriculture in 151 districts.
      2. Water Scarcity: Adaptation involves revitalizing traditional water harvesting (like Amrit Sarovar) to manage the erratic rainfall patterns that currently swing between extreme drought and flash floods.
    4. Livelihood Impact: Vulnerable populations face income instability due to climate shocks; adaptation ensures socio-economic stability.
      1. Preventing Debt Traps: When a climate event (like a crop failure or a destroyed home) occurs, it often pushes families back into poverty. Adaptation measures, like the expansion of climate-indexed insurance, provide a safety net that keeps families socio-economically stable.
      2. Migration Management: Climate adaptation in rural areas reduces “distress migration” to already overcrowded cities, allowing for more planned and sustainable urbanization.

    How effective are India’s existing adaptation initiatives?

    1. Flagship Programme:National Innovations in Climate Resilient Agriculture): By covering 448 villages, it has successfully built a “technology bank” for farmers. Its strength lies in capacity building, teaching farmers to use custom-hiring centres for climate-smart machinery and weather-based crop insurance.
      1. Success Metrics: In the 2024-25 cycle, NICRA’s Technology Demonstration Component (TDC) showed that practices like mulching and zero-tillage increased yields by 13% to 26% even during drought years.
      2. Impact: It has successfully built “climate literacy” for over 3,000 farmers per cluster. It has established local seed banks and community nurseries that allow villages to recover faster after floods or droughts.
    2. Tamil Nadu Climate Resilient Villages (CRV): The Tamil Nadu Climate Resilient Villages (CRV) program is a cornerstone of India’s sub-national climate action. Managed by the Tamil Nadu Green Climate Company (TNGCC), it is often cited as a more holistic model than traditional sector-specific programs because it treats the village as an integrated ecosystem rather than just a farming unit.
      1. Holistic Reach: This model is noted for its community-driven design. By 2025, it helped nearly 2.7 million people across 11 districts by integrating solar energy with practical infrastructure, such as restoring canals to reduce urban/rural flooding.
      2. Outcome: It has shifted from just “agriculture” to “livelihood resilience,” creating green jobs in waste management and coastal restoration (e.g., mangrove touring and hatcheries).
    3. The Integrated “Mitigation-Adaptation” Synergy: India is increasingly using a dual-purpose strategy. For example:
      1. Solar Pumps: These reduce carbon emissions (mitigation) while providing farmers with reliable irrigation during erratic monsoons (adaptation).
      2. Afforestation: Large-scale planting acts as a carbon sink while simultaneously preventing soil erosion and cooling local micro-climates.
    4. Key Shortcomings: The “Scaling” Gap: Despite these successes, the overall effectiveness is hampered by several structural issues:
      1. Fragmented Efforts: Adaptation projects are often spread across different ministries (Agriculture, Water, Environment) with poor inter-departmental coordination, leading to overlapping or conflicting actions.
      2. Lack of Mainstreaming: While 151 districts have NICRA interventions, India has over 700 districts. The transition from pilot projects to national policy is slow.
      3. Funding Constraints: Most initiatives rely on government grants. There is a lack of private sector investment and scalable financial models (like climate bonds) to take these models to every village.
      4. Data Gaps: Real-time monitoring of how these initiatives actually reduce “climate-risk” over a decade is still in its infancy, making it hard to refine strategies.

    What are the financial constraints in scaling adaptation?

    1. Global Finance Gap: Developing countries face $215-387 billion annual gap (UNEP Adaptation Gap Report 2023); indicates structural underfunding.
    2. Domestic Budget Bias: India’s Union Budget prioritizes mitigation over adaptation; reduces resilience-building capacity.
      1. High-visibility projects like Green Hydrogen, solar parks, and EV subsidies receive the bulk of climate-related funding because they have clearer revenue models and private sector appeal.
    3. Return on Investment: According to the World Resources Institute (WRI), every $1 invested in adaptation can yield $2 to $10 in net benefits.
    4. Institutional Financing Gap: Lack of dedicated adaptation financing frameworks at state and district levels.
      1. Grant Dependency: Most adaptation work relies on one-time government grants. There is a critical lack of blended finance (mixing public and private funds) or “Climate Bonds” specifically designed for resilience projects in rural India.

    How can governance and institutional mechanisms be strengthened?

    1. Policy Integration: Aligns adaptation with national and state budgets; ensures institutional accountability.
      1. Climate-Tagged Budgeting: Introducing “Green Budgeting” at the state level ensures that every development rupee spent, whether on roads or schools, accounts for climate resilience.
    2. Revitalizing Planning Frameworks: While National Action Plans (NAP) exist, the real action happens at the sub-national level.
      1. Dynamic SAPCCs: State Action Plans on Climate Change (SAPCCs) must be updated to version 2.0, moving beyond broad goals to specific, actionable, and bankable projects.
      2. Decentralized Implementation: Shifting the focus from state capitals to District and Block-level planning, as climate impacts (like a localized cloudburst) are highly specific to geography.
    3. Precision Data Systems: Promotes climate vulnerability assessments at district/block levels; ensures evidence-based policymaking.
      1. Open-Access Climate Data: Creating a unified national portal for climate data allows local governments, NGOs, and the private sector to use the same scientific baseline for their resilience planning.
    4. Monitoring Mechanisms: Introduces standardized indicators and periodic reviews; ensures outcome tracking.
      1. Standardized Indicators: Introducing a “Resilience Index” for districts to track progress across water security, agricultural yield stability, and disaster recovery times.
      2. Third-Party Audits: Periodic reviews by independent scientific bodies to ensure that “adaptation” projects aren’t just “greenwashed” infrastructure.
    5. Capacity Building: Strengthens institutional and technical capacity; example: climate cells at state/district levels.

    Why is locally led adaptation crucial for climate resilience?

    1. Decentralized Governance: Empowers urban local bodies and Panchayati Raj Institutions; ensures context-specific interventions.
    2. Community Ownership: Enhances participation and accountability; example: CRV consultations with local communities.
    3. Localized Solutions: Adapts interventions to geography; example: flood vs drought-prone regions require different strategies.
    4. Behavioral Change: Builds resilience through awareness and capacity building; ensures long-term sustainability.

    What systemic changes are required to scale adaptation effectively?

    1. Whole-of-System Approach: Integrates governance across sectors and levels; ensures policy coherence.
    2. Cross-Sectoral Coordination: Links agriculture, water, infrastructure, and energy sectors.
    3. Private Sector Role: Encourages investment in adaptation projects; expands financial base.
    4. Continuous Data Collection: Enables real-time monitoring and adaptive policymaking.

    Conclusion

    India’s climate adaptation challenge is not one of policy absence but of execution gaps. Scaling adaptation requires financial prioritization, institutional convergence, and decentralized governance. Integrating local knowledge with national frameworks remains critical for achieving resilience at scale.

  • What are safer fireworks alternatives

    Why in the News?

    There were recent dangerous incidents at Thrissur Pooram, where noise levels reached 122.4 decibels. These exceeded safe limits and triggered animal distress, hospital risks, and infant health concerns. Despite regulations prohibiting firecrackers above 125 dB at 4 metres, enforcement gaps persist. The scale of the problem is significant, noise pollution ranks as the third most hazardous environmental threat, while repeated accidents and fires expose systemic failures in safety management.

    What risks do traditional fireworks pose to health, environment, and safety?

    1. Noise Pollution: Reaches 122.4 dB (Thrissur Pooram), close to legal ceiling of 125 dB; causes hearing damage and stress.
    2. Health Impact: Noise identified as 3rd most hazardous environmental threat; affects cardiovascular health and infant brain development.
    3. Hospital Risk: Proximity to ICUs and neonatal units increases vulnerability due to sudden high-decibel bursts.
    4. Animal Distress: Elephants exhibit disorientation and aggression; example: rampage incidents injuring 42 people.
    5. Fire Hazards: Fireworks units prone to industrial fires; example: April 2025 Mundathikode blaze killing workers.

    What are the existing noise regulations related to firecrackers in India?

    In India, noise standards for firecrackers are primarily governed by Rule 89 of Schedule I of the Environment (Protection) Rules, 1986. These regulations strictly control the manufacture, sale, and use of sound-emitting firecrackers based on specific decibel thresholds and situational bans.

    Permissible Noise Levels: The law categorizes firecrackers into two main types with different noise limits: 

    1. Individual Firecrackers: The maximum noise level must not exceed 125 dB(AI) or 145 dB(C)pk when measured at a distance of 4 metres from the point of bursting.
    2. Joined Firecrackers (Garlands/Laris): The limit for a series of crackers is more stringent. It is calculated using the formula 125 – 5 log10(N) dB. In this formula, N stands for the total number of firecrackers joined together in the series.
    3. Colour & Light Emitting Crackers: These typically have a much lower threshold, with guidelines from the Petroleum and Explosive Safety Organization (PESO) suggesting a limit of 90 dB(AI).

    Why are existing noise regulations insufficient in controlling firecracker hazards?

    1. Regulatory Gap: CPCB norms prohibit >125 dB at 4m, but festival-level bursts exceed ambient limits (45-55 dB). However, the Noise Pollution (Regulation and Control) Rules, 2000, set the ambient residential limit at only 55 dB during the day.
    2. The Failure of “Individual” Metrics: Regulations suffer from a Context Mismatch:
      1. Unit vs. Event: Standards are tested on a single cracker in a controlled environment. They do not account for synchronized bursts (like laris or garlands) or the cumulative noise of thousands of people bursting crackers simultaneously.
      2. Echo Effect: In dense urban “canyons,” sound reflects off buildings, magnifying the decibel level far beyond the 125 dB limit measured in open-field tests.
    3. Enforcement Failure:
      1. Real-Time Absence: Most high-risk zones lack automated, real-time decibel monitoring. Data is often collected manually and analyzed weeks later, rendering it useless for immediate intervention.
    4. The Green Cracker Myth: While Green Crackers are meant to reduce noise by 30%, local testing laboratories often lack the specialized equipment to verify these claims at the point of sale.

    What are ‘cold spark’ or noiseless fireworks and how do they work?

    ‘Cold spark’ fireworks (often called Cold Spark Machines or Sparkulars) are a high-tech, pyrotechnic-free alternative to traditional fireworks. Unlike traditional displays that rely on gunpowder and combustion, these machines use chemistry and physics to create a fountain of sparks that is safe to touch.

    1. Technology Base: Instead of black powder, the machines use a special “granule” or fine alloy powder, typically made of titanium and zirconium.
    2. Mechanism: The machine feeds these granules into a heating chamber. The powder reacts with oxygen as it is blown upward by a fan, creating bright, glowing sparks through incandescence rather than a chemical explosion.
    3. Temperature Control: This is the “cold” part, traditional sparklers burn at a dangerous 1000-1200°C. Cold spark jets operate between 60°C and 100°C. The sparks cool down almost instantly as they hit the air, making them safe for indoor use and proximity to people.

    Key Visual & System Features

    1. Noiseless Performance: Because there is no explosive “boom” or sudden expansion of gases, the only sound produced is the whirring of the internal fan.
    2. Adjustable Displays: Users can control the height (usually 2 to 5 metres) and duration of the sparks via a DMX controller, similar to stage lighting.
    3. Deployment: They are designed to be used in arrays or clusters. By syncing multiple machines, operators can create “waves” or “curtains” of sparks that mimic the look of traditional silver fountains.

    Are noiseless fireworks a viable substitute for traditional pyrotechnics?

    1. Safety Advantage: Eliminates explosion risk, burn injuries, and high-decibel noise.
    2. Environmental Benefit: Reduces smoke and particulate pollution significantly.
    3. Operational Flexibility: Can be used indoors and near sensitive zones like hospitals.
    4. Cost Constraint: High cost-₹400 per cold anar; limits mass adoption.
    5. Import Dependence: Majority manufactured in China, indicating lack of domestic production capacity.

    What challenges hinder large-scale adoption of safer alternatives?

    1. Economic Barrier: High costs discourage use in mass public festivals.
    2. Technological Gap: Limited indigenous R&D and manufacturing ecosystem.
    3. Cultural Resistance: Traditional fireworks linked with heritage festivals like Pooram.
    4. Skill Deficit: Requires professional management and technical expertise.
    5. Policy Vacuum: No clear transition roadmap or incentives for safer alternatives.

    What transition strategy is being proposed for events like Thrissur Pooram?

    1. Incremental Shift: Gradual replacement rather than immediate ban on fireworks.
    2. Pilot Implementation: Testing large-scale spark-based displays in Thrissur.
    3. Hybrid Models: Combining visual spectacle with reduced noise emissions.
    4. Institutional Responsibility: Local bodies like Thrissur Corporation tasked with transition.
    5. Urban Application: Potential expansion to cities like Delhi (post high-noise Diwali concerns).

    Conclusion

    The debate reflects a structural shift from tradition-centric celebration to safety-centric innovation. While cold spark technology offers a viable pathway, its success depends on policy support, cost reduction, and cultural adaptation. The challenge lies not in eliminating fireworks, but in redefining them sustainably.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Industrial pollution of river water is a significant environmental issue in India. Discuss the various mitigation measures to deal with this problem and also the government’s initiatives in this regard.

    Linkage: The PYQ highlights pollution mitigation frameworks, directly applicable to managing noise and air pollution from fireworks. It reinforces need for technological and regulatory interventions (e.g., cold spark alternatives) similar to industrial pollution control strategies.

  • Pathogens without payback: when sharing isn’t caring

    Why in the News?

    Negotiations on the Pathogen Access and Benefit Sharing (PABS) framework under the recent WHO Pandemic Agreement (May 2025) are set to begin again. This highlights a long-standing global inequity: countries that share pathogen data, mainly low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), continue to receive minimal benefits from vaccines and treatments developed using that data.

    What is PABS Framework?

    1. The Pathogen Access and Benefit-Sharing (PABS) System, established under Article 12 of the WHO Pandemic Agreement adopted in May 2025, is a global framework designed to ensure that the sharing of dangerous pathogens is matched by the equitable sharing of the vaccines and treatments derived from them. 
    2. While the core Agreement was adopted in 2025, the PABS Annex containing the specific operational rules is currently being finalized by an Intergovernmental Working Group (IGWG). The IGWG aims to conclude negotiations by May 2026 for presentation at the 79th World Health Assembly.

    Core Pillars of the PABS Framework

    The system operates on a “grand bargain” principle intended to rectify inequities seen during the COVID-19 pandemic: 

    1. Rapid Access: Member States commit to quickly sharing biological materials (pathogens) and their Digital Sequence Information (DSI) with the World Health Organization (WHO) and designated laboratory networks.
    2. Mandatory Benefit-Sharing: In exchange for this data, manufacturers using PABS materials must provide 20% of their real-time production of pandemic-related products (vaccines, diagnostics, etc.) to the WHO for global distribution.
      1. 10% as free donations.
      2. 10% at affordable, not-for-profit prices.

    Why do pathogen-sharing countries fail to receive proportional benefits?

    1. Structural Inequity: Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) share pathogen samples via WHO but lack binding guarantees for access to vaccines or diagnostics.
    2. Innovation Asymmetry: Developed countries control pharmaceutical R&D, enabling them to monopolize end products.
    3. Voluntary Framework Failure: Existing systems rely on goodwill rather than enforceable obligations.
    4. Example: During COVID-19, LMICs contributed samples but faced vaccine hoarding by high-income countries.

    How did COVID-19 expose failures in global health equity?

    1. Vaccine Apartheid: High-income countries hoarded vaccines; LMICs experienced prolonged shortages.
    2. Data Evidence: Africa received only 3-14% of global vaccine supply.
    3. COVAX Limitations: Delivered ~1/5th of WHO’s 2 billion dose target by mid-2021.
    4. Economic Impact: Delayed vaccination caused 1.3 million preventable deaths and $28 trillion global economic loss (IMF).
    5. Drug Inequality: Ebola drug Inmazeb cost ~$6,000 per treatment, unaffordable for poorer nations.

    What does the PABS framework aim to change structurally?

    1. Legal Linkage: Connects sample-sharing with mandatory benefit-sharing obligations.
    2. Access Mandate: Requires pharmaceutical companies to provide 20% of real-time production during pandemics.
    3. Pricing Mechanism: Ensures at least half of allocated doses are free and the rest at reasonable prices.
    4. Capacity Building: Includes provisions for technology transfer and licensing to expand production in LMICs.

    Why is there resistance from developed countries and industry?

    1. Innovation Concerns: Binding mandates may reduce incentives for private pharmaceutical investment.
    2. IP Protection: Firms resist compulsory sharing of intellectual property and technology.
    3. Bureaucratic Burden: Concerns that compliance mechanisms may delay research and innovation.
    4. Example: EU favors voluntary systems like Global Initiative on Sharing All Influenza Data (GISAID) over binding legal frameworks.

    What are the limitations of existing global mechanisms?

    1. Non-binding Agreements: Current frameworks lack enforcement provisions.
      1. Enforcement Void: Current WHO systems (like the PIP Framework) are limited in scope (mostly influenza) and lack the “teeth” to penalise a company that refuses to share its patents during a crisis.
    2. Fragmented Governance: Multiple overlapping systems reduce accountability.
    3. Technological Gaps: LMICs lack manufacturing capacity despite access to data.
    4. Example: WHO’s existing system ensures access to data but not equitable outcomes.
    5. The GISAID Paradox: While GISAID is excellent for surveillance, it provides zero guarantees for equity. A country can upload thousands of sequences to help track a variant but still be the last to receive the vaccine developed from that very data.

    Is there a viable middle path between equity and innovation?

    1. Tiered Obligations: Lower commitments during normal times, stronger during pandemics.
    2. Global Fund Mechanism: Supports LMIC manufacturing without overburdening companies.
    3. Incentive-based Sharing: Rewards companies that share IP rather than coercing compliance.
    4. Balanced Governance: Combines legal enforceability with flexibility in implementation timelines.

    What are the broader implications for global health security?

    1. Future Pandemic Preparedness: Ensures faster and equitable response mechanisms.
    2. Trust Deficit Reduction: Addresses Global South concerns about exploitation.
    3. Geopolitical Stability: Prevents vaccine nationalism and supply chain disruptions.
    4. Emerging Risks: Addresses threats like mpox, engineered pathogens, and AI-driven bio-risks.

    Conclusion

    The PABS debate reflects a deeper structural imbalance in global health governance where risks are shared but rewards are concentrated. Without enforceable equity mechanisms, future pandemics risk repeating COVID-19’s failures. A balanced framework combining legal mandates, incentives, and capacity-building is essential to ensure that global cooperation translates into equitable outcomes.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] Critically examine the role of WHO in providing global health security during the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Linkage: The PYQ covers GS-II (International Institutions, Global Health Governance) by evaluating the effectiveness and limitations of WHO in managing pandemic response. It links to current issues like WHO Pandemic Agreement and PABS, highlighting the need for stronger enforcement, equity, and coordination in global health security.

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