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  • [13th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: Equality of treatment for Persons with Disabilities 

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2022] The Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 remains only a legal document without intense sensitisation of government functionaries and citizens regarding disability. Comment.Linkage: The PYQ examines the gap between statutory rights and actual social, administrative and economic inclusion of Persons with Disabilities. The proposed Minimum Universal Disability Pension Floor Rate (MUDPFR) represents the next step in translating legal rights into meaningful social protection and economic security for PwDs.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s welfare architecture has achieved remarkable success in digital inclusion and benefit delivery, yet disability pensions remain fragmented and dependent on State-level discretion. A Minimum Universal Disability Pension Floor Rate (MUDPFR) would establish a nationally guaranteed minimum social security entitlement for Persons with Disabilities, ensuring equality, dignity and portability of benefits while strengthening India’s transition towards a rights-based welfare state.

    Why does India’s disability pension system remain inadequate despite a rights-based legal framework?

    1. Large Beneficiary Base: Census 2011 recorded 2.68 crore PwDs; current estimates place the number at around 4.5-6 crore due to population growth and changing disease profiles.
    2. Constitutional Recognition: Supreme Court has recognized the right to live with dignity as a fundamental right.
    3. Legal Protection: Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 provides statutory protection and mandates social security support.
    4. Fragmented Pension System: Disability benefits vary significantly across States.
    5. Low Pension Amounts: Most States provide pensions ranging between ₹300 and ₹500 per month.
    6. Limited Coverage: Indira Gandhi National Disability Pension Scheme covers only a small fraction of eligible beneficiaries.
    7. Domicile-Based Inequality: Pension support often depends on place of residence rather than disability status.

    How does India’s spending on disability welfare compare internationally?

    1. Low Public Spending: India spends only about 0.02% of GDP on disability welfare, including pensions.
    2. South Africa Comparison: Allocates approximately 0.12-0.15% of GDP.
    3. Brazil Comparison: Allocates around 0.45-0.50% of GDP.
    4. OECD Countries: Average spending around 2.2% of GDP.
    5. Australia Comparison: Allocates approximately 0.35-0.40% of GDP.
    6. Resource Gap: India’s spending remains multiple times lower than comparable welfare systems.

    What are the economic and social costs of inadequate disability support?

    1. GDP Loss: World Bank and UNDP estimates indicate low- and middle-income countries lose 3-7% of GDP from exclusion of PwDs.
    2. Educational Exclusion: Limited support reduces access to education.
    3. Employment Barriers: Inadequate social security weakens labour force participation.
    4. Household Vulnerability: Disability income support improves household stability.
    5. Consumption Multiplier: Studies indicate multipliers ranging between 1.4 and 1.6.
      1. Disability pensions have a consumption multiplier of 1.4-1.6, meaning every ₹100 transferred to beneficiaries can generate approximately ₹140-₹160 in economic activity through increased spending on food, healthcare, transport and local services.
    6. Economic Returns: Pro Bono Economics (2025) found socio-economic returns from disability pensions exceed costs by nearly 48%.
    7. Investment Perspective: Disability pensions function as economic investments rather than welfare expenditures alone.

    Why is a Minimum Universal Disability Pension Floor Rate (MUDPFR) being proposed?

    1. Constitutional Obligation: Supports Article 41 directing public assistance in cases of disability.
    2. Implementation of RPwD Act: Operationalises Section 24 guaranteeing social security measures.
    3. Universal Minimum Guarantee: Ensures a baseline pension irrespective of State of residence.
    4. Rights-Based Welfare: Shifts support from charity-based approaches to citizenship-based entitlements.
    5. Portability: Ensures continuity of benefits across States.
    6. Equity: Reduces interstate disparities in pension access and quantum.

    Proposed Design

    1. National Floor Rate: Central government guarantees a minimum pension.
    2. State Top-Ups: States remain free to provide higher benefits.
    3. Uniform Eligibility: Common eligibility standards across India.
    4. Portability: Benefits remain accessible across State boundaries.

    Is a universal disability pension financially feasible?

    1. ₹8,000 Monthly Pension Scenario: Cost estimated at approximately ₹38,400 crore annually.
    2. GDP Share: Around 0.08% of GDP.
    3. 10 Lakh Beneficiaries Scenario: Cost around ₹65 lakh crore? (Article indicates cost projections for larger coverage; emphasis remains below 0.2% GDP even under expanded coverage assumptions.)
    4. ₹15,000 Monthly Pension Scenario: Public expenditure would still remain below 0.2% of GDP.
    5. Comparative Fiscal Context:
      1. Food Subsidy: ₹2.05 lakh crore.
      2. Rural Development: ₹1.80 lakh crore.
      3. Tax Concessions and Revenue Foregone: ₹1.72 lakh crore.
      4. Infrastructure: ₹11.11 lakh crore.

    How can India move from fragmented welfare to integrated disability support?

    1. Institutional Fragmentation: Pension administration is divided between the Ministry of Rural Development and the Department of Empowerment of Persons with Disabilities.
    2. Administrative Delays: Multiple authorities create duplication and accountability gaps.
    3. International Practice: Several countries operate through unified disability-support institutions.

    Proposed Institutional Reforms

    1. National Disability Pension Authority: Oversees eligibility, portability and grievance redress.
    2. National Registry: Creates integrated beneficiary database.
    3. Digital Integration: Links welfare databases through interoperable platforms.
    4. Performance Monitoring: Enables State-wise accountability and benchmarking.
    5. Single Governance Framework: One standard, one system, one nation.

    What lessons can India learn from international experience?

    South Africa

    1. National Disability Grant: Uniform eligibility and nationwide coverage.
    2. Centralized Standards: Ensures portability and consistency.

    Brazil

    1. BPC Programme: Guarantees a national minimum income for persons with disabilities.

    Australia

    1. Nationwide Disability Pension: Central administration with State coordination.
    2. Employment Incentives: Combines social security with labour participation.

    New Zealand

    1. Universal Framework: Nationwide disability support system.

    Other Developing Countries

    1. Kenya, Rwanda, Thailand and Indonesia: National disability income support mechanisms demonstrate feasibility even in developing economies.

    Why should disability pensions be linked with employment and economic participation?

    1. Inclusive Growth: Moves beneficiaries from survival support to productive participation.
    2. MUDPFR Advantage: Creates financial security necessary for skill development and employment.
    3. Employer Incentives: Encourages hiring of persons with disabilities.
      1. Singapore: Integrates disability support with skills training and workforce participation programmes.
      2. South Korea: Combines income support with vocational rehabilitation and employment assistance.
      3. South Africa: Provides a nationwide Disability Grant ensuring minimum income security for PwDs.
      4. Brazil: Guarantees income support through the Benefício de Prestação Continuada (BPC) programme.
      5. Nigeria: Offers tax incentives to employers hiring persons with disabilities, encouraging workplace inclusion.
      6. United Kingdom (Access to Work): Provides financial assistance for workplace accommodations and support services.
      7. Australia (Wage Subsidies): Offers wage subsidies to employers to improve employment opportunities for persons with disabilities.
    4. Existing Indian Base: PM-DAKSH, NAPS and State-level incentives provide foundations for expansion.

    How does a universal disability pension strengthen constitutional morality?

    1. Equality: Reduces domicile-based discrimination.
    2. Dignity: Recognises persons with disabilities as rights-bearing citizens.
    3. Citizenship: Moves welfare from discretionary charity to guaranteed entitlement.
    4. Article 14: Advances equality before law.
    5. Article 21: Supports dignified living.
    6. Social Justice: Aligns welfare architecture with constitutional commitments.
    7. Federal Balance: Preserves State flexibility while guaranteeing minimum national standards.

    Conclusion

    A Minimum Universal Disability Pension Floor Rate (MUDPFR) would mark a shift from fragmented welfare to rights-based social protection by ensuring that disability support is determined by citizenship and need rather than geography. As India aspires to become a developed nation, guaranteeing a minimum income floor for Persons with Disabilities is not merely a welfare measure but a constitutional imperative that advances equality, dignity, inclusion and human capital development.

  • Long overdue: On coal exchanges 

    Why in the News?

    India has unveiled the Coal Exchange Rules, 2026, marking a major structural reform in the coal sector. For the first time, coal will be traded through regulated exchange platforms similar to power exchanges

    What are the Coal Exchange Rules, 2026?

    The Coal Exchange Rules, 2026, notified by the Ministry of Coal, establish a legally binding framework for transparent, electronic “many-to-many” spot mineral trading. Regulated by the Coal Controller Organisation, the rules aim to improve price discovery and market access for consumers.

    Key Features of the Rules

    1. Electronic Trading: The system transitions coal marketing from the traditional “one-to-many” bilateral model to an efficient, competitive digital trading platform where multiple buyers and sellers can transact.
    2. Mandatory Physical Delivery: All transactions must culminate in physical delivery of the coal. These are supported by independent quality verification to ensure contractual compliance.
    3. Regulatory Oversight: The Coal Controller Organisation acts as the central market regulator, handling the registration, supervision, and auditing of exchanges, as well as enforcing safeguards against market manipulation.
    4. Registration Validity: Eligible entities (incorporated as companies under the Companies Act, 2013) are granted authorizations to establish and operate exchanges for 25 years.
    5. Financial Obligations: Operators pay a ₹50 Lakh one-time registration fee, a ₹3 Lakh application fee, and an annual fee calculated as either ₹30 Lakh or 0.02% of the total trading volume, capped at ₹5 Crore.

    How can coal exchanges transform India’s coal market structure?

    1. Market-Based Trading: Establishes regulated platforms for buying and selling coal through transparent mechanisms.
    2. Price Discovery: Creates market-driven price signals instead of relying primarily on bilateral negotiations.
    3. Transparency: Reduces opacity associated with traditional contractual arrangements.
    4. Competition: Enables broader participation by producers and consumers.
    5. Secondary Markets: Facilitates development of coal trading beyond primary allocation channels.

    Why is the existing coal allocation mechanism considered inadequate?

    1. Long-Term Contracts: Most coal transactions currently occur through long-duration agreements, particularly for the power sector.
    2. Auction Dependence: Significant volumes are allocated through auctions where prices may rise substantially.
    3. Coal India Dominance: Non-regulated consumers often depend on Coal India auctions.
    4. Premium Pricing: Coal is frequently sold at premiums to the highest bidder.
    5. Limited Market Signals: Existing mechanisms provide inadequate real-time information regarding shortages and surpluses.

    What lessons can be drawn from India’s power exchange experience?

    1. Market Signalling: Power exchanges evolved into indicators of scarcity and surplus conditions.
    2. Balancing Function: Initially addressed short-term shortages before becoming broader market institutions.
    3. Reference Prices: Spot prices emerged as benchmarks for the wider power market.
    4. Enhanced Efficiency: Improved resource allocation without replacing long-term Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs).
    5. System Stress Indicator: Exchange prices increasingly reflected grid conditions and demand-supply imbalances.

    Can coal exchanges help balance regional shortages and surpluses?

    1. Inventory Utilisation: Enables idle or surplus coal stocks to be traded efficiently.
    2. Regional Balancing: Allows coal-deficit regions to access supplies from surplus areas.
    3. Supply Optimization: Improves allocation without requiring additional production.
    4. Resource Efficiency: Maximizes utilization of existing inventories.
    5. Market Liquidity: Encourages continuous trading and availability.

    What challenges could limit the success of coal exchanges?

    1. Quality Variation: Coal quality differs significantly across grades and mines.
    2. Non-Fungibility: Unlike electricity, coal is not a uniform commodity.
    3. Standardisation Requirement: Requires robust quality certification mechanisms.
    4. Contract Enforcement: Strong dispute resolution and enforcement systems are necessary.
    5. Liquidity Constraints: Exchanges require adequate trading volume to remain viable.

    What logistical challenges could constrain coal exchanges?

    1. Railway Dependence: Coal transportation relies heavily on railway infrastructure.
    2. Last-Mile Connectivity: Mine-to-consumer logistics remain uneven across regions.
    3. Freight Costs: Transportation costs can significantly influence final coal prices.
    4. Delivery Delays: Physical delivery constraints may reduce exchange efficiency.
    5. Infrastructure Gaps: Inadequate evacuation infrastructure may limit market integration.

    Why Coal is Different from Electricity

    ParameterElectricityCoal
    FungibilityHighly fungibleQuality varies
    StorageDifficultPossible
    TransportationGrid-basedPhysical movement required
    StandardisationUniform standardsMultiple grades
    DeliveryInstantaneousLogistics-dependent

    Why are quality standards and assurance mechanisms crucial?

    1. Quality Assurance: Ensures confidence among buyers and sellers.
    2. Standard Contracts: Reduces transaction disputes.
    3. Grade Verification: Facilitates accurate valuation.
    4. Market Integrity: Prevents information asymmetry.
    5. Consumer Protection: Enhances trust in exchange transactions.

    How important is Coal India’s participation in exchange-based trading?

    1. Market Depth: Coal India’s involvement ensures sufficient trading volumes.
    2. Liquidity Creation: Encourages active participation by consumers.
    3. Price Benchmarking: Helps establish credible market reference prices.
    4. Supply Assurance: Supports reliability of exchange operations.
    5. Institutional Confidence: Enhances acceptance of the platform.

    Why should retail and smaller consumers be integrated into coal exchanges?

    1. Accessibility: Expands coal access beyond large industrial consumers.
    2. Competition: Reduces concentration of market power.
    3. Inclusiveness: Facilitates participation of smaller industries.
    4. Price Transparency: Provides equal access to market information.
    5. Market Expansion: Increases overall trading activity.

    What institutional safeguards are required for successful implementation?

    1. Volatility Management: Ensures protection against excessive price fluctuations.
    2. Dispute Resolution: Provides mechanisms for conflict settlement.
    3. Logistics Integration: Strengthens transportation and delivery systems.
    4. Regulatory Oversight: Ensures compliance and market integrity.
    5. Settlement Systems: Facilitates efficient trading and delivery.

    Conclusion

    The Coal Exchange Rules, 2026 represent a shift from administrative allocation towards market-based coal governance. Their success will depend on quality standardisation, liquidity creation, Coal India’s participation, efficient logistics, and strong regulatory oversight. If implemented effectively, coal exchanges can become an important mechanism for balancing regional shortages, improving transparency, and strengthening India’s energy security.

    Value Addition

    Coal Sector at a Glance

    1. Coal accounts for around 70% of India’s electricity generation.
    2. India is the second-largest coal producer globally.
    3. Coal India Limited produces roughly 80% of India’s domestic coal output.
    4. Major coal-producing states: Odisha, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Madhya Pradesh and Telangana.

    About the Coal Controller Organisation (CCO)

    1. The Coal Controller Organisation (CCO) is a subordinate office under the Ministry of Coal. Established in 1916 during World War I, it is one of the oldest regulatory bodies in India’s energy sector.
    2. Headquartered in Kolkata, the CCO operates field offices across major mining hubs including Delhi, Dhanbad, Ranchi, Bilaspur, Nagpur, Sambalpur, and Kothagudem.

    Core Regulatory Functions: The CCO derives its executive powers from various statutes, including the Colliery Control Rules, 2004, the Collection of Statistics Act, 2008, and the Coal Bearing Areas Act, 1957. Its primary responsibilities include:

    1. Production and Grade Surveillance: The CCO inspects collieries to verify the correctness of declared coal classes, grades, and sizes. It establishes and enforces strict coal grading and quality standards.
    2. Dispute Resolution: It serves as the official appellate authority to resolve quality and grade conflicts between coal producers and consumers.
    3. Mine Approvals: No coal mine, seam, or section can be opened, reopened, or sub-divided without formal opening/reopening permissions from the CCO. It also approves Mining and Mine Closure Plans.
    4. Captive Mine Monitoring: The organization tracks and monitors the development and progress of captive coal and lignite blocks allocated to various companies.
    5. Statistical Authority: The CCO acts as the primary source for national coal statistics. It collects monthly production data and publishes the Provisional Coal Statistics and Coal Directory of India.
    6. Land Acquisition Hearing Authority: Under the Coal Bearing Areas (Acquisition & Development) Act, the Coal Controller hears legal objections regarding the government’s acquisition of coal-bearing land.

    New Role Under the Coal Exchange Rules, 2026: Following the notification of the Coal Exchange Rules, 2026, the CCO’s regulatory footprint has significantly expanded:

    1. Central Market Regulator: The government designated the CCO as the apex statutory body to register, regulate, and audit electronic Coal Exchanges in India.
    2. Platform Authorization: The CCO processes registrations for eligible entities, granting them 25-year operational licenses to run digital spot trading platforms.
    3. Market Surveillance: It monitors exchange activities to prevent market manipulation, ensure fair price discovery, and resolve stakeholder grievances.

    Coal India Limited (CIL)

    1. Coal India Limited (CIL) is a Maharatna Public Sector Undertaking (PSU) that serves as the backbone of India’s energy security infrastructure.
    2. Production Volume: World’s largest coal-producing company, accounting for roughly 80% of India’s total domestic coal output.
    3. Operates under the Ministry of Coal.
    4. Plays a central role in India’s energy security architecture.
  • How trust has underpinned India-France ties

    Why in the News?

    Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited France in June 2026 for a bilateral visit and participation in the G7 Summit, marking his seventh visit to France since 2014. The relationship has evolved from a traditional diplomatic partnership into a Special Global Strategic Partnership, spanning defence, nuclear energy, space cooperation, emerging technologies, and Indo-Pacific security.

    Timeline of India-France Relations

    YearDevelopment
    1947Establishment of diplomatic relations
    1998Strategic Partnership launched
    1998France refrains from sanctions after Pokhran-II
    2018International Solar Alliance deepened cooperation
    2023Special Global Strategic Partnership announced
    2024Macron attends Republic Day as Chief Guest
    2026PM Modi’s seventh visit to France

    Why Is India-France Partnership Considered Unique in Contemporary Diplomacy?

    1. Strategic Trust
      1. Consistency: Maintains stable engagement irrespective of changes in domestic political leadership.
      2. Reliability: Supports long-term cooperation without transactional conditions.
      3. Strategic Autonomy: Respects each other’s independent foreign policy choices.
    2. Political Continuity
      1. Leadership Engagement: PM Modi’s June 2026 visit marks his seventh visit to France since 2014.
      2. Reciprocity: French President Emmanuel Macron attended India’s Republic Day celebrations in January 2024.
      3. High-Level Contacts: Frequent summit-level interactions sustain momentum.
    3. Special Global Strategic Partnership
      1. Institutionalisation: Upgraded from Strategic Partnership to Special Global Strategic Partnership.
      2. Comprehensive Scope: Extends beyond traditional diplomacy to technology, innovation, defence and global governance.

    How Has History Shaped the Durability of India-France Relations?

    1. Support During Strategic Challenges
      1. Nuclear Tests (1998): France avoided imposing sanctions after India’s Pokhran-II tests.
      2. Diplomatic Engagement: French President Jacques Chirac visited India in 1998 despite international criticism.
    2. Recognition of India’s Global Role
      1. UNSC Aspirations: France has consistently supported India’s permanent membership in the UN Security Council.
      2. Global Governance Reform: Supports greater representation of emerging powers in international institutions.
    3. Strategic Independence
      1. Non-Alignment Respect: France understood India’s strategic autonomy even during the Cold War era.
      2. Pragmatic Diplomacy: Prioritised long-term partnership over temporary geopolitical disagreements.

    How Has France Supported India’s Growing Global Role?

    1. G7 Outreach: France invited India to the G7 Summit in 2019 at Biarritz and again in 2026.
    2. Continued Inclusion: India has participated in the last six G7 summits under PM Modi.
    3. Global Recognition: Reflects acceptance of India as a major stakeholder in global economic and security governance.
    4. Strategic Convergence: Enables coordination on global challenges such as supply chains, energy security and geopolitical stability.

    Why Is Defence Cooperation the Cornerstone of the Partnership?

    1. Defence Industrial Cooperation
      1. Aircraft Engines: Collaboration on advanced aero-engine technologies.
      2. Missile Systems: Joint work on missile development and integration.
      3. Technology Sharing: Facilitates transfer of critical defence technologies.
    2. Major Defence Platforms
      1. Rafale Aircraft: Strengthens India’s air power capabilities.
      2. Scorpene Submarines: Enhances maritime deterrence and underwater warfare capacity.
      3. Naval Cooperation: Expands interoperability and maritime security cooperation.
    3. Indo-Pacific Security
      1. Maritime Stability: Supports a free, open and inclusive Indo-Pacific.
      2. Indian Ocean Cooperation: Enhances surveillance and maritime domain awareness.

    How Has Space Cooperation Emerged as a Strategic Multiplier?

    1. Long-Term Collaboration
      1. Six-Decade Partnership: One of India’s oldest international space partnerships.
      2. Institutional Cooperation: Collaboration between ISRO and France’s CNES.
    2. Launch Vehicle Cooperation through PSLV Missions: French satellites launched through Indian launch vehicles.
    3. Joint Satellite Missions
      1. Megha-Tropiques: Strengthens climate and weather monitoring.
      2. SARAL: Enhances oceanographic and altimetry studies.
      3. TRISHNA: Proposed mission focusing on thermal infrared observations.
    4. Future Collaboration
      1. Advanced Satellite Systems: Expands earth observation and climate monitoring capabilities.
      2. Space Applications: Supports disaster management and environmental monitoring.

    What Is the Significance of Civil Nuclear Cooperation?

    1. Jaitapur Nuclear Power Project: Expected to be among the world’s largest nuclear power plants.
    2. Small Modular Reactors (SMRs)
      1. Emerging Cooperation: Expands collaboration into next-generation nuclear technologies.
      2. Energy Diversification: Strengthens future energy resilience.
    3. Climate Commitments
      1. Net-Zero Transition: Supports long-term decarbonisation goals.
      2. Reliable Baseload Power: Ensures stable electricity generation.

    How Are Innovation and Emerging Technologies Deepening Bilateral Ties?

    1. India-France Year of Innovation: The India-France Year of Innovation is designated for 2026.
      1. Core Goal: To accelerate cooperation across deep tech, artificial intelligence, cyberspace, sustainable development, and advanced research networks.
      2. Flagship Event: The landmark event “Bharat Innovates 2026” is hosted in Nice, France, connecting prominent Indian deep tech startups with global investors.
      3. Strategic Roadmap: The program aligns with the Horizon 2047 Roadmap, which outlines the future of the India-France strategic partnership.
    2. AI Cooperation: The global AI Action Summit hosted in Paris took place in 2025
      1. Co-Chairs: The high-level summit was jointly co-chaired by Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron.
      2. India-France Declaration on AI: The two nations signed a comprehensive India-France Declaration on Artificial Intelligence to advance sovereign computing capacity, open-source language models, and digital public infrastructure.
      3. Responsible Governance: Ahead of the summit, India and France co-led an international working group on AI governance consisting of 29 states to establish frameworks for trustworthy and ethical AI deployment.
    3. Startup Linkages
      1. VivaTech Summit: PM Modi’s participation highlights growing innovation cooperation.
      2. Official AI Country Partner: India serves as the official AI Country Partner under the theme “Tech for Humanity,” establishing one of the largest national pavilions in the event’s history to showcase over 80 Indian deep tech startups.
      3. Entrepreneurship Networks: Facilitates startup investments and technology transfer. Active entrepreneurship pipelines include the ongoing Station F-HEC Paris International Launchpad programme, which regularly scales cohorts of Indian startups into the European market.
      4. Bilateral Incubation hubs: The launch of dedicated platforms like the Indo-French Centre for AI in Health and the Indo-French Centre for Digital Science and Technology continues to facilitate technology transfers and research networks.
    4. Digital Collaboration: Joint research partnerships include, Indo-French Centre for Digital Science and Technology, Indo-French Centre for AI in Health and Joint Ph.D. & Exchange Frameworks
      1. Emerging Technologies: Cooperation in AI, quantum technologies, digital infrastructure and cybersecurity.
      2. Research Partnerships: Encourages joint innovation projects.

    How Do India and France Cooperate in the Indo-Pacific?

    Maritime Security

    1. Indian Ocean Presence: France’s territories give it a direct stake in the region, allowing India and France to act as mutual logistical hubs to monitor crucial sea lanes.
    2. Naval Coordination: The two navies conduct highly complex joint maneuvers like the annual Varuna naval exercise to improve interoperability.
    3. Logistics Sharing: A reciprocal logistics support agreement allows Indian warships to access French naval bases in Djibouti, Réunion, and the UAE, and vice versa.

    Regional Stability

    1. Rules-Based Order: Supports freedom of navigation and international law.
    2. Strategic Balancing: Contributes to regional stability amid rising geopolitical competition.
    3. Information Fusion: India’s Information Fusion Centre for the Indian Ocean Region (IFC-IOR) hosts a permanent French liaison officer to coordinate maritime domain awareness and counter piracy, smuggling, and illegal fishing.

    Connectivity and Blue Economy

    1. Infrastructure Cooperation: They partner through initiatives like the Indo-Pacific Triangular Development Cooperation Fund to bankroll sustainable, green infrastructure projects in Pacific and Indian Ocean island nations.
    2. Blue Economy: The two countries work together under the Indo-French Roadmap on the Blue Economy and Ocean Governance to scientifically map marine biodiversity, manage fisheries, and prevent ocean pollution.
    3. Resilient Networks: They cooperate under the International Solar Alliance (ISA) and the Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI) to help vulnerable coastal states adapt to climate change and rising sea levels.

    What Opportunities Exist for Future Expansion?

    1. Defence Manufacturing
      1. Co-Production: Supports Make in India objectives.
      2. Supply Chains: Integrates Indian MSMEs and aerospace vendors into the global supply chains of French giants like Safran, Dassault, and Thales, strengthening domestic defence industrial ecosystems.
    2. Green Transition
      1. Renewable Energy: Expands the scope of the co-founded International Solar Alliance (ISA) to roll out large-scale grid storage solutions and cross-border solar networks.
      2. Climate Technology: Facilitates clean technology deployment through joint ventures in carbon capture, smart grid management, and climate-resilient urban infrastructure.
    3. Critical Technologies
      1. Semiconductors: Supports technological resilience.
      2. Quantum Technologies: Enhances future technological competitiveness.
    4. Global Governance
      1. Multilateral Coordination: Aligns positions on major international issues.
      2. Strategic Dialogue: Deepens coordination in G20, UN and Indo-Pacific forums.
      3. Energy Security Concerns: India seeks international cooperation to ensure stability of critical sea lanes such as the Strait of Hormuz.
      4. Maritime Trade Protection: Disruptions affect India’s energy imports and trade flows.

    Conclusion

    India-France relations demonstrate how strategic partnerships endure when built on trust, strategic autonomy, and long-term convergence rather than short-term geopolitical calculations. From France’s support during the 1998 nuclear tests to cooperation in defence, space, nuclear energy, innovation, and the Indo-Pacific, the partnership has steadily expanded into a comprehensive and future-oriented relationship. As global uncertainties deepen, the India-France partnership is increasingly emerging as a model of reliable diplomacy, capable of advancing not only bilateral interests but also a stable, multipolar, and rules-based international order.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2019] “The time has come for India and Japan to build a strong contemporary relationship, one involving global and strategic partnership that will have a great significance for Asia and the world as a whole.” Comment.

    Linkage: The question examines the significance of strategic partnerships in advancing India’s geopolitical, economic, and security interests in an evolving global order. Similar to India-Japan relations, the India-France partnership has evolved into a comprehensive strategic partnership based on trust, strategic autonomy, defence cooperation, technology collaboration, and Indo-Pacific convergence.

  • ‘Super El Niño’ forms in Pacific: Why 2027 is likely to be the hottest year on record

    Why in the News?

    The emergence of Super El Niño conditions in the equatorial Pacific Ocean has become a major concern because it coincides with India’s crucial southwest monsoon season. The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has officially confirmed the development of El Niño and warned that it is expected to strengthen further during the monsoon months. This

    How Has El Niño Developed During the Current Monsoon Season?

    1. IMD Confirmation: El Niño conditions have officially emerged in the equatorial Pacific Ocean.
    2. Strengthening Trend: IMD expects the phenomenon to intensify further during the ongoing southwest monsoon season.
    3. NOAA Assessment: The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) earlier confirmed El Niño emergence.
    4. Peak Projection: NOAA projects the event to peak during November-January.
    5. Intensity Forecast: The event may approach the “very strong” category.

    ENSO Threshold

    1. Niño 3.4 Region: El Niño is declared when sea surface temperature anomalies exceed +0.5°C in the Niño 3.4 region.
      1. The Niño 3.4 region (5°N-5°S, 170°W-120°W) is the primary equatorial Pacific area used by scientists to monitor, define, and predict the El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO). 
    2. Current Reading: Weekly Niño 3.4 Index reached +0.7°C.
    3. Eastern Pacific Warming: Temperature anomalies reached +2.1°C in the easternmost Pacific region.

    What Makes the Current El Niño Different from Previous Events?

    Emerging “Super El Niño” Concerns

    1. NOAA Forecast: El Niño has officially formed in the tropical Pacific Ocean and is likely to strengthen significantly in the coming months.
    2. Historical Significance: Scientists have projected that the current event could rank among the strongest El Niño episodes recorded since 1950.
    3. Probability Estimate: NOAA estimates a 63% probability that the event will intensify into one of the largest El Niño events in the historical record.
    4. Transition Phase: The current event follows the end of La Niña conditions earlier in 2026.
    5. Global Warning: The UN Secretary-General António Guterres has described the phenomenon as an “urgent climate warning.”

    Why is it Being Called a “Super El Niño”?

    1. Exceptional Ocean Warming: Unusually warm Pacific Ocean temperatures are accelerating ENSO development.
    2. Early Intensification: Forecast models indicate stronger warming developing earlier than normally expected.
    3. Historical Comparison: Scientists have compared the event to major El Niño episodes such as 1982-83, 1997-98 and 2015-16.
    4. Global Temperature Impact: Multiple climate models suggest that 2027 could become the hottest year ever recorded globally.

    What is ENSO and How Does It Operate?

    El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO)

    1. Climate Oscillation: Naturally occurring ocean-atmosphere phenomenon over the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean.
    2. Recurrence: Appears every 2-7 years.
    3. Phases: El Niño, Neutral, and La Niña.

    El Niño

    1. Oceanic Condition: The abnormal warming of surface waters in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean.
    2. Mechanism: Trade winds weaken, allowing warm water to push east toward South America.
    3. Indian Impact: Usually suppresses monsoon rainfall.

    La Niña

    1. Oceanic Condition: The abnormal cooling of surface waters in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean.
    2. Mechanism: Trade winds strengthen, pushing warm water toward Asia and pulling cold water up to the surface off South America.
    3. Indian Impact: Generally supports stronger monsoon rainfall.

    Why Could 2027 Become the Hottest Year on Record?

    Interaction Between El Niño and Global Warming

    1. Natural Climate Driver: El Niño releases large amounts of heat from the Pacific Ocean into the atmosphere.
    2. Anthropogenic Warming: Human-induced greenhouse gas emissions have already raised baseline global temperatures.
    3. Compounding Effect: El Niño adds temporary warming on top of long-term climate change trends.
    4. WMO Forecast: Above-average global temperatures are expected between June and August, with effects continuing through November.

    Climate Consequences

    1. Temperature Extremes: Higher likelihood of record-breaking temperatures globally.
    2. Heatwaves: Increased frequency and intensity across multiple continents.
    3. Hydrological Extremes: Simultaneous occurrence of droughts and floods in different regions.
    4. Wildfire Risk: Elevated probability of large-scale forest fires in drought-prone regions.

    Why Does the Impact of El Niño Differ Across Regions?

    Not Every El Niño Produces the Same Outcomes

    1. Climate Variability: Every El Niño develops differently in terms of intensity, timing and ocean-atmosphere interaction.
    2. NOAA Observation: Each El Niño leaves a unique climatic imprint on global weather systems.
    3. Regional Factors: Local ocean temperatures, atmospheric circulation and other climate oscillations influence outcomes.

    Importance of Forecasting

    1. Advanced Monitoring: Improved ocean observation systems enhance prediction capabilities.
    2. Early Warning Systems: Better forecasting enables governments to prepare for disasters and agricultural losses.
    3. Climate Preparedness: Supports adaptation planning and resource allocation.

    How Could Super El Niño Reshape Global Weather Patterns?

    North America

    1. Atlantic Hurricane Suppression: Reduced hurricane activity in the Atlantic Ocean.
    2. Pacific Hurricane Intensification: Increased cyclone activity over the Pacific.
    3. US Winter Impact: Southern United States may experience wetter conditions and flooding.
    4. Pacific Northwest: Warmer and drier weather expected.

    South America

    1. Flood Risk: Northern Peru and southern Ecuador face heightened flooding threats.
    2. Heavy Rainfall: Western South America may experience excessive precipitation.
    3. Temperature Rise: Greater likelihood of unusually warm summers.

    East and Northeast Africa

    1. Weather Whiplash: Rapid shifts between drought and extreme rainfall.
    2. Flood Hazards: Increased flood risk in vulnerable regions.
    3. Agricultural Stress: High uncertainty for rain-fed agriculture.

    India

    1. Monsoon Deficit: Higher probability of below-normal rainfall.
    2. Heatwaves: Greater frequency and intensity.
    3. Agricultural Losses: Increased stress on kharif crops and water resources.

    Indonesia and Vietnam

    1. Drought Risk: Rainfall shortages may affect major rice-producing regions.
    2. Food Security Concerns: Potential reduction in agricultural output.

    Australia

    1. Heatwaves: Higher temperature anomalies.
    2. Wildfires: Elevated bushfire risk.
    3. Drought Conditions: Reduced precipitation in several regions.

    Why Does El Niño Affect India’s Southwest Monsoon?

    1. Walker Circulation Shift: Alters atmospheric circulation responsible for moisture transport.
    2. Reduced Moisture Transport: Weakens monsoon winds reaching the Indian subcontinent.
    3. Rainfall Deficiency: Leads to below-normal precipitation across large parts of India.
    4. Temperature Rise: Reduced cloud cover increases surface temperatures.

    IMD Forecast

    1. Seasonal Deficit: Rainfall expected to be 10% below normal.
    2. Spatial Distribution: Most regions likely to receive below-normal rainfall.
    3. Exception: Northeastern India expected to receive relatively normal rainfall.

    How Do Rainfall Patterns Change During El Niño Years?

    Regional Variability

    1. Northeastern India: Often receives normal rainfall.
    2. Extreme Southern India: May receive near-normal rainfall.
    3. Rest of India: Usually experiences rainfall deficits.

    Temperature Effects

    1. Heat Intensification: Reduced rainfall contributes to rising temperatures.
    2. Extended Heat Conditions: Higher risk of heatwaves and moisture stress.

    What Role Does the Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) Play?

    Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD)

    1. Definition: Difference in sea surface temperatures between western and eastern Indian Ocean.
    2. Phases: Positive, Neutral, Negative.

    Current Status

    1. Neutral Phase: Expected to remain neutral during the southwest monsoon.
    2. 2026 Outlook: Neutral conditions expected to continue for most of the year.

    Significance

    1. Monsoon Modulator: Positive IOD can sometimes offset El Niño-induced monsoon weakness.
    2. Current Concern: Neutral IOD may not provide compensatory support.

    What Oceanic Changes Are Being Observed Around India?

    Bay of Bengal Warming

    1. Temperature Increase: Significant positive sea surface temperature anomalies observed.
    2. Impact: Supports atmospheric instability and temperature rise.

    Arabian Sea Warming

    1. Above-Normal Temperatures: Positive SST anomalies recorded.
    2. Climate Consequence: Enhances extreme weather variability.

    Eastern Indian Ocean

    1. Widespread Warming: Above-normal SST conditions observed during May

    How Could Super El Niño Trigger a Global Food Security Crisis?

    Agricultural Disruptions

    1. Crop Vulnerability: Maize, rice and several staple crops are highly sensitive to drought conditions.
    2. Production Risks: Major agricultural regions may experience reduced productivity.
    3. Market Volatility: Supply shocks can increase global food prices.

    Countries at Risk

    1. India: Rainfed agriculture vulnerable to monsoon deficits.
    2. South Africa: Drought threatens maize production.
    3. Indonesia: Rice production risks increase.
    4. Vietnam: Potential impacts on rice exports.
    5. Brazil: Rainfall variability may affect agricultural output.

    Global Consequences

    1. Food Inflation: Rising prices of cereals and food commodities.
    2. Supply Chain Disruptions: Agricultural trade flows may be affected.
    3. Livelihood Risks: Farmers and vulnerable populations face income losses.

    Why Is El Niño a Concern for India’s Economy and Agriculture?

    1. Agriculture
      1. Crop Stress: Reduces soil moisture availability.
      2. Rainfed Farming: Increases vulnerability of kharif crops.
      3. Yield Losses: Impacts rice, pulses, oilseeds, and coarse cereals.
    2. Water Security
      1. Reservoir Recharge: Limits replenishment of water bodies.
      2. Groundwater Stress: Increases extraction pressures.
    3. Inflation
      1. Food Prices: Reduced agricultural output may trigger food inflation.
      2. Supply Constraints: Affect agricultural supply chains.
    4. Energy
      1. Power Demand: Rising temperatures increase cooling requirements.
      2. Hydropower: Lower reservoir levels affect generation capacity.

    What Lessons Can Be Drawn from the 2015-16 Super El Niño?

    India’s Experience

    1. Rainfall Deficit: India received only 86% of Long Period Average (LPA) rainfall.
    2. Agricultural Stress: Several states experienced drought-like conditions.
    3. Water Scarcity: Reservoir levels and groundwater recharge declined.

    Key Lesson

    1. ENSO Alone is Not Deterministic: Strong El Niño events do not always produce identical outcomes.
    2. Role of Other Drivers: Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD), Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO), Eurasian snow cover and regional ocean temperatures also influence monsoon performance.

    Conclusion

    The emerging El Niño highlights the growing interaction between natural climate variability and global warming. With risks of weaker monsoons, heatwaves, food insecurity and extreme weather events, India must strengthen climate-resilient agriculture, early warning systems, water management and disaster preparedness to reduce vulnerability and build long-term resilience.

    Value Addition

    YearCharacteristicsGlobal Impact
    1982-83One of strongest recordedDroughts, floods, crop losses
    1997-98Extreme warmingMajor global weather disruptions
    2015-16Strongest of recent decadesGlobal temperature records broken
    2026-27*Potential Super El NiñoRisk of hottest year in recorded history

    Positive vs Negative IOD

    Positive IODNegative IOD
    Warmer western Indian OceanWarmer eastern Indian Ocean
    Supports Indian monsoonWeakens monsoon
    Can offset El Niño impactCan worsen El Niño impact

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2015] How far do you agree that the behavior of the Indian monsoon has been changing due to humanizing landscapes? Discuss.

    Linkage: The PYQ examines changing monsoon patterns and the factors affecting rainfall variability in India. The article discusses how the emerging Super El Niño could weaken the southwest monsoon, alter rainfall distribution, intensify heatwaves and interact with climate change to reshape India’s monsoon behaviour.

  • Project Kusha: India’s Indigenous Long-Range Air Defence System

    Why in the news?

    Defence Minister Rajnath Singh described Project Kusha as a “game changer” for India’s security architecture and stated that its significance had been demonstrated during Operation Sindoor.

    What is Project Kusha?

    • An indigenous long-range air defence missile system being developed by the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO).
    • Intended to provide a multi-layered air defence shield against diverse aerial threats.
    • Often viewed as India’s indigenous counterpart to advanced systems like the Russian S-400 Triumf.

    Objectives

    • Protect military assets and strategic installations.
    • Defend critical infrastructure and civilian areas.
    • Enhance India’s indigenous air defence capabilities.
    • Strengthen strategic autonomy under the Aatmanirbhar Bharat initiative.

    Threats It Is Expected to Counter

    • Fighter aircraft, Cruise missiles, Ballistic missiles, Drones and UAVs, Precision-guided munitions, and Stand-off weapons

    Mission Sudarshan Chakra

    • Announced by Prime Minister Narendra Modi during the 2025 Independence Day address.
    • Envisages a nationwide multi-layered missile defence shield.
    • Aims to protect: Military establishments, Critical infrastructure, and Civilian population centres.
    • Project Kusha is expected to be an important component of this vision.

    [2018] What is “Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD)”, sometimes seen in the news?

    [A] An Israeli radar system

    [B] India’s indigenous anti-missile programme

    [C] An American anti-missile system

    [D] A defence collaboration between Japan and South Korea.

    1. Mumbai-Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail (MAHSR)

      Why in News?

      The Mumbai-Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail (MAHSR) Project, India’s first bullet train corridor, has achieved major construction milestones in 2026 and is expected to commence operations from August 2027.

      About MAHSR

      • India’s first High-Speed Rail (HSR) corridor.
      • Foundation stone laid in September 2017.
      • Corridor Length: 508 km.
      • Connects: Maharashtra, Gujarat, and Dadra & Nagar Haveli
      • Implemented by the National High Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL).
      • The corridor comprises 12 stations
      • Sabarmati Station: Planned as a multimodal transport hub.
      • Integrates: Bullet Train, Metro, BRTS, and Conventional Railways.

      Speed and Travel Time

      • Design Speed: 350 km/h
      • Operational Speed: 320 km/h
      • Mumbai-Ahmedabad journey time: Around 1 hour 58 minutes
      • High-Speed Rail refers to rail systems operating at more than 250 km/h.

      Technology Used

      • Developed using Japanese Shinkansen technology.
      • Introduces India’s first domestic high-speed rail ecosystem.

      Major Technical Features

      • J-Slab ballastless track technology.
      • 2×25 kV overhead traction system.
      • More than 20,000 OHE masts (Overhead Equipment Mast) is a vital vertical steel support used in railway electrification
      • 12 traction substations (electrical substation that converts power from the public electricity grid into the specific voltage, current, and frequency required to power railways, trams, or trolleybuses)
      • 16 distribution substations (electrical facility that receives high-voltage power from transmission or sub-transmission systems and “steps down” the voltage to medium levels).
      • Rolling stock depots at: Sabarmati, Surat, and Thane.

      Engineering Highlights

      Elevated Corridor

      • Around 90% of the corridor is elevated.
      • Uses Full Span Launching Method (FSLM).
      • FSLM is about 10 times faster than conventional segmental construction.
      • River Bridges: Total: 25 river bridges: Gujarat: 21. Maharashtra: 4.
      • Steel Bridges: 28 steel bridges over highways, canals, rivers and railway lines.

      India’s First Undersea Rail Tunnel

      • Located beneath Thane Creek.
      • Tunnel Length: 21 km.
      • Undersea Stretch: 7 km.
      • Uses: Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) and New Austrian Tunnelling Method (NATM).
      • TBM cutter head diameter: 13.6 metres (largest in an Indian railway project).

      Safety Systems

      • Early Earthquake Detection System: 28 seismometers. Detects primary waves and triggers automatic power shutdown.
      • Rainfall Monitoring System: 6 rain gauge stations. Provides real-time rainfall data to the Operation Control Centre (OCC).
      • Wind Speed Monitoring System: 14 anemometer stations. Monitors wind speed and direction. Speed restrictions imposed when wind speeds exceed prescribed thresholds.

      Economic Significance

      • Expected to generate: Around 4,000 direct jobs. 35,000 to 40,000 indirect jobs.
      • Supports Make in India through technology transfer and domestic manufacturing.
      • Dedicated High-Speed Rail Training Institute established at Vadodara.

      Union Budget 2026-27: Proposed High-Speed Rail Corridors

      • Delhi-Varanasi, Varanasi-Patna-Siliguri, Chennai-Bengaluru, Bengaluru-Hyderabad, Chennai-Hyderabad, Mumbai-Pune, and Pune-Hyderabad

      [2023] Consider the following statements :
      1. In a seismograph, P waves are recorded earlier than S waves.
      2. In P waves, the individual particles vibrate to and fro in the direction of wave propagation, whereas in S waves, the particles vibrate up and down at right angles to the direction of wave propagation.
      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

    2. Antyodaya in Action

      Why in the news?

      The Government highlighted the progress of welfare initiatives implemented under the Antyodaya approach aimed at ensuring inclusive development of deprived communities.

      Antyodaya

      • Means “rise of the last person”.
      • Inspired by the philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi.
      • Focuses on bringing the poorest and most marginalised sections to the forefront of development.

      Key Schemes and Initiatives

      PM JANMAN (Pradhan Mantri Janjati Adivasi Nyaya Maha Abhiyan)

      • Launched: November 2023
      • Targets 75 Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) across 18 States and 1 UT.
      • Budget Outlay: ₹24,104 crore.
      • Implemented through 11 interventions by 9 Ministries.
      • Interventions include: Housing, Road connectivity, Piped water supply, Mobile medical units, Anganwadi centres, Hostels, Electrification, Mobile towers, Multipurpose centres, Van Dhan Vikas Kendras, and Vocational skilling

      Van Dhan Vikas Kendras (VDVKs)

      • Promote value addition and marketing of forest produce.
      • Implemented with support from TRIFED.
      • 491 VDVKs operationalised out of 500 targeted.
      • 38,391 PVTG members trained.

      PM-JUGA (Dharti Aaba Janjatiya Gram Utkarsh Abhiyan)

      • Launched in October 2024.
      • Convergence of 17 Ministries.
      • Focuses on tribal-majority villages and PVTG habitations.

      Eklavya Model Residential Schools (EMRS)

      • Residential schools for Scheduled Tribe students from Classes VI-XII.
      • Established in tribal-dominated areas.
      • 499 schools operational.
      • 323 schools under construction.
      • Over 1.56 lakh students enrolled.

      Tribal Research Institutes (TRIs)

      • Function in 29 States/UTs.
      • Document and preserve tribal languages, traditions, and indigenous knowledge.
      • Supported under the TRI-ECE Scheme.

      Tribal Freedom Fighter Museums

      • 11 museums sanctioned across 10 States.
      • 4 inaugurated and 7 under construction.
      • Honour tribal leaders who fought colonial rule.

      Janjatiya Gaurav Divas

      • Observed on 15 November. Marks the birth anniversary of Birsa Munda.

      Scheduled Caste Initiatives

      PM-AJAY (Pradhan Mantri Anusuchit Jaati Abhyuday Yojana)

      • Launched in 2021.
      • Develops SC-majority villages.
      • Covers: 47,334 villages, 597 districts, and 26 States Over 4 crore beneficiaries.

      DAPSC (Development Action Plan for Scheduled Castes)

      • Framework for SC-targeted expenditure.
      • Covers: 38 Ministries/Departments and 239 schemes.

      SHREYAS (Scholarships for Higher Education for Young Achievers Scheme)

      • Launched in 2019.
      • Benefits SC, OBC and EBC students.
      • Includes: Top Class Education, Free Coaching, National Overseas Scholarship, and Fellowships.

      SHRESHTA (Scheme for Residential Education for Students in High Schools in Targeted Areas)

      • Launched in 2022.
      • Residential education support for SC students (Classes IX-XII).
      • Admission through NETS.

      OBC, DNT (De-notified, Nomadic, and Semi-Nomadic Tribes) and EBC (Economically Backward Classes) Schemes

      PM-YASASVI (PM Young Achievers Scholarship Award Scheme for Vibrant India)

      • Launched in 2021-22.
      • Covers OBC, EBC and DNT students.
      • Includes scholarships and hostel facilities.
      • At least 30% seats reserved for girls.

      PM-DAKSH (Pradhan Mantri Dakshata Aur Kushalta Sampann Hitgrahi Yojana)

      • Launched in 2020-21.
      • Provides free skill training.
      • Covers SCs, OBCs, EBCs, DNTs, sanitation workers and waste pickers.
      • Over 2.08 lakh beneficiaries trained.

      VISVAS(Vanchit Ikai Samooh aur Vargon ko Aarthik Sahaita)Yojana

      • Provides interest subsidy up to 5% on loans.
      • Promotes entrepreneurship and self-employment.

      SEED (Scheme for Economic Empowerment of DNTs)

      • Launched in February 2022.
      • Components: Free coaching, Health insurance, Livelihood assistance, and Housing support.

      Minority Welfare

      PM VIKAS (Pradhan Mantri Virasat Ka Samvardhan)

      • Launched in 2025.
      • Integrates five previous minority welfare schemes.
      • Focuses on skill development and entrepreneurship.

      Sanitation Workers

      NAMASTE (National Action for Mechanised Sanitation Ecosystem) Scheme

      • Launched in FY 2023-24.
      • Replaces hazardous manual cleaning with mechanised sanitation.
      • Since June 2024, also covers waste pickers.

      Regional Development

      Aspirational Districts Programme

      • Launched in 2018.
      • Covers 112 districts.
      • Focuses on: Health and Nutrition, Education, Agriculture, Financial Inclusion, and Basic Infrastructure

      Aspirational Blocks Programme

      • Launched in 2023.
      • Covers 500 blocks across 329 districts.

      [2019] Consider the following statements about Particularly Vulnerable Tribal Groups (PVTGs) in India:
      1. PVTGs reside in 18 States and one Union Territory.
      2. A stagnant or declining population is one of the criteria for determining PVTG status.
      3. There are 95 PVTGs officially notified in the country so far.
      4. Irular and Konda Reddi tribes are included in the list of PVTGs.
      Which of the statements given above are correct?

      [A] 1, 2 and 3

      [B] 2, 3 and 4

      [C] 1, 2 and 4

      [D] 1, 3 and 4

    3. Supreme Court Dismisses Meenakshi Natarajan’s Plea Against Rejection of Rajya Sabha Nomination

      Why in the news?

      The Supreme Court dismissed Congress leader Meenakshi Natarajan’s plea challenging the rejection of her Rajya Sabha nomination from Madhya Pradesh, reiterating that courts should not ordinarily interfere in an ongoing electoral process.

      Background

      • Congress leader Meenakshi Natarajan was the party’s sole candidate for one of the three Rajya Sabha seats from Madhya Pradesh.
      • The Returning Officer (RO) rejected her nomination on 9 June 2026 for allegedly failing to disclose a pending criminal proceeding in Hyderabad in Form 26 (election affidavit).
      • Subsequently, BJP candidates Tarun Chugh, Rajneesh Agrawal, and Mahesh Kewat were elected unopposed.

      Key Constitutional Principle

      • Article 329(b) of the Constitution: Bars judicial interference in electoral matters during the election process.
      • Provides that elections to Parliament or State Legislatures can be challenged only through an election petition in the manner prescribed by law.

      Supreme Court’s Ruling

      • The Court held that it had no jurisdiction under Articles 32 or 226 to interfere with the RO’s decision during an ongoing election.
      • Recognising exceptions for “patent” or “glaring” errors would amount to adding principles not envisaged under Article 329(b).
      • The appropriate remedy available to Ms. Natarajan is to file an election petition before the competent High Court.

      Reliance on Precedent

      • N.P. Ponnuswami v. Returning Officer: Established the principle of non-interference during the electoral process.
      • Election-related disputes arising before completion of elections must ordinarily be resolved through election petitions.

      Arguments by Meenakshi Natarajan

      • Senior Advocate A.M. Singhvi argued that: The RO committed a “patent error”.
        • Under Section 33A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, disclosure is required only in cases where charges have been framed.
        • Allowing her candidature would facilitate, rather than obstruct, free and fair elections.

      Counter Arguments

      • Senior Advocate Mukul Rohatgi argued that:
        • The right to contest elections is a statutory right, not a fundamental right.
        • Therefore, an Article 32 petition is not maintainable.
      • The Election Commission of India contended that:
        • All pending criminal proceedings must be disclosed, irrespective of the stage of the case.
        • The proper remedy is an election petition.

      Court’s Clarification

      • The dismissal of the writ petition will not prejudice any election petition that Ms. Natarajan may file before the concerned High Court.

      Prelims Pointers

      • Article 329(b): Election disputes can be challenged only through election petitions.
      • Article 32: Remedy for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
      • Article 226: High Courts’ writ jurisdiction.
      • Section 33A, Representation of the People Act, 1951: Disclosure of criminal antecedents by candidates.
      • Form 26: Affidavit containing details relating to assets, liabilities, educational qualifications, and criminal cases.
      • Returning Officer (RO): Scrutinises nomination papers and conducts the election process.
    4. [12th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: FCRA Bill-expanding state control over civil society 

      PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] Public charitable trusts have the potential to make India’s development more inclusive as they relate to certain vital public issues. Comment.
      Linkage: The PYQ examines the role of charitable institutions and NGOs in welfare delivery and inclusive development. The FCRA Amendment Bill directly affects charitable trusts, NGOs, educational and welfare institutions that rely on foreign contributions, raising questions about their autonomy, functioning and developmental role.

      Mentor’s Comment

      The proposed Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026 marks one of the most consequential changes to India’s regulatory framework governing civil society organisations since the FCRA amendments of 2020. The Bill shifts the FCRA regime from regulatory oversight towards direct state control over the assets, administration and functioning of NGOs, charitable institutions, educational bodies and religious organisations receiving foreign contributions.

      What is the Foreign Contribution Regulation Act (FCRA), 2010?

      1. It regulates the acceptance and utilisation of foreign contributions by individuals, associations and organisations in India. 
      2. The Act seeks to ensure that foreign funding does not adversely affect national interests, public order, sovereignty or democratic processes.
      3. The proposed FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026 introduces new provisions relating to cancellation of registration, asset management, investigations and government control over institutions receiving foreign contributions.

      How Does the FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026 Expand Executive Powers?

      1. Removal of Existing Safeguards
        1. Deletion of Section 15: Removes the existing mechanism governing management of assets after cancellation of FCRA registration.
        2. Expanded Executive Authority: Enables greater government discretion over organisational assets and administration.
      2. Introduction of New Chapter IIIA
        1. Asset Vesting Framework: Creates a mechanism through which organisational assets may come under government-appointed authorities.
        2. State-Controlled Administration: Facilitates direct intervention in institutional management.
      3. Broader Regulatory Reach
        1. Affected Institutions: Covers NGOs, charitable trusts, educational institutions, hospitals, orphanages and religious bodies receiving foreign contributions.

      Why Is Proposed Section 14B Considered Controversial?

      It outlines the automatic “deemed cessation” of an organization’s FCRA registration.

      1. Automatic Cessation of Registration: Under this provision, an organization’s FCRA registration automatically ceases and becomes invalid under the following three circumstances:
        1. Failure to apply: No renewal application has been submitted before the expiration of the certificate’s validity.
        2. Rejection: The organization applied for renewal, but the Central Government formally refused or rejected it.
        3. Pending or lapsed status: The certificate is not renewed prior to the end of its designated validity period, regardless of whether a renewal application is pending.
      2. Administrative Paralysis
        1. Operational Disruption: Delays in processing renewals can affect institutional functioning.
        2. Reduced Due Process Protection: Procedural issues may trigger severe penalties.
      3. Increased Executive Discretion
        1. Broader State Powers: Expands government authority without requiring substantive findings of wrongdoing.

      How Does Section 16A Alter Control over NGO Assets?

      Proposed Section 16A of the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Amendment Bill, 2026, creates a statutory framework that allows a government-appointed Designated Authority to seize and manage all foreign funds and physical assets of an organization whose registration is lost. It functions as the direct enforcement mechanism for the automatic “deemed cessation” mentioned in Section 14B.

      1. Automatic Asset Transfer
        1. Asset Vesting: Assets may automatically transfer to a government-designated authority when registration is cancelled, surrendered, lapses or is deemed cancelled.
        2. No Prior Judicial Review: Transfer can occur before independent adjudication.
      2. Provisional Vesting
        1. Temporary State Control: Designated authority may assume management before final resolution of disputes.
        2. Expanded Government Reach: Enables intervention in institutional properties and finances.
      3. Scope of Assets Covered
        1. Physical Assets: Includes land, buildings, vehicles and equipment.
        2. Financial Assets: Includes unspent foreign contribution funds.
      4. Consolidated Fund Transfer
        1. Sale Proceeds: Disposal proceeds may be credited to the Consolidated Fund of India.
      5. The “Mixed Funding” Trap: Under Section 16A(2), if a physical asset (like a school or hospital building) was built using pooled funds, partly from foreign donations and partly from local Indian donations, the government takes over the entire asset. The burden of proof shifts completely to the NGO to legally isolate and claim back the exact “distinct or ascertainable portion” funded locally.

      What Could Be the Impact on Welfare and Community Institutions?

      1. Service Delivery Risks
        1. Healthcare Services: Hospitals dependent on foreign contributions may face operational uncertainty.
        2. Educational Services: Schools and colleges may face disruption.
      2. Impact on Social Welfare
        1. Child Welfare: Affects orphanages and child protection initiatives.
        2. Community Development: Influences tribal welfare, nutrition and youth development programmes.
      3. Religious and Charitable Institutions
        1. Places of Worship: Churches, mosques and temples built through foreign donations may be affected.
        2. Charitable Trusts: Institutions serving vulnerable groups may face uncertainty regarding property and funds.

      How Does the Bill Affect Minority Institutions?

      1. Disproportionate Exposure
        1. Christian Institutions: Many schools, colleges, hospitals and welfare bodies rely on foreign contributions from churches, diaspora groups and humanitarian agencies.
        2. Regional Concentration: Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Nagaland, Mizoram and Meghalaya contain large numbers of such institutions.
      2. Property Control Concerns
        1. Institutional Assets: Educational and welfare institutions may face government control if registrations lapse or are cancelled.
        2. Continuity of Services: Long-established institutions may experience administrative disruptions.
      3. Community Impact
        1. Minority Welfare: Concerns arise regarding implications for community-run social service infrastructure.

      How Does the Bill Strengthen Government Control During Investigations?

      1. Asset Management Limits: Amended Section 13 restricts organisations from managing assets without prior approval during suspension.
      2. Centralisation of Enforcement/Union Government Approval: State agencies require approval before initiating action on FCRA violations.
      3. Expanded Liability of office Bearers: Broader definitions increase accountability and legal exposure of functionaries.
      4. Deterrent Effect due to fear of Enforcement: Increased regulatory scrutiny may discourage voluntary participation.

      Does the Bill Reduce Transparency and Accountability?

      1. Abolition of Section 22 and Removal of Disposal Mechanism: Eliminates the existing framework governing assets of defunct organisations.
      2. Absence of Timelines leading to administrative Delays: No clear deadlines for approval or rejection of licences, permissions, registrations or renewals.
      3. Limited Disclosure of cancellation Reasons: Grounds for cancellation may not be publicly disclosed due to national security considerations.
      4. Restricted Legal Remedies: Organisations may find it difficult to contest cancellations or suspensions.

      What Are the Economic and Social Implications?

      1. Employment Impact
        1. Civil Society Employment: Sector generates approximately 27 lakh jobs.
        2. Volunteer Participation: Around 34 lakh full-time volunteers contribute to service delivery.
      2. Contribution to Economy: Civil society organisations contribute nearly 2% of GDP.
      3. Local Dependence/Primary Employer Role: Survey of 515 NGOs found that 47% are the principal source of employment in more than half of their operational localities.
      4. Service Disruption Risks: Revocation of licences may affect nutrition, education, immunisation, healthcare and skill-development initiatives.

      What Constitutional Concerns Does the Bill Raise?

      1. Freedom of Association(Article 19(1)(c)): Raises concerns regarding autonomy of associations and voluntary organisations.
      2. Religious Freedom (Articles 25-28): May affect religious institutions dependent on foreign contributions.
      3. Minority Rights (Article 30): Concerns regarding administration of minority educational institutions.
      4. Property Rights (Article 300A): Questions arise regarding deprivation of property without adequate safeguards.
      5. Public Interest Standard: Vague definition may permit extensive administrative discretion.

      Conclusion

      The FCRA Amendment Bill, 2026 marks a shift from regulating foreign funding to expanding state oversight over civil society institutions. While strengthening accountability and national security objectives, the Bill raises concerns regarding due process, institutional autonomy and constitutional freedoms. A balanced framework must ensure transparency without undermining the democratic role of civil society organisations.

    5. Why is Nicobar debating elections

      Why in the News?

      The Andaman and Nicobar Administration has released the Andaman and Nicobar Islands Tribal Councils (Preparation of Electoral Rolls and Conduct of Elections) Rules, 2026, proposing formal elections for Nicobarese Village Councils and Tribal Councils. This is a major development because, for the first time, the administration seeks to replace a predominantly consensus-based indigenous governance model with a structured electoral system involving constituencies, electoral rolls, nominations, withdrawals, reserved seats for women, and fixed election procedures. 

      How does the traditional Nicobarese governance system function?

      The Nicobarese community inhabiting the Nicobar Islands has historically governed itself through Village Councils and Tribal Councils rooted in customary traditions. While the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Protection of Aboriginal Tribes) Regulation, 1956 (ANPATR) and the Nicobar Islands Tribal Council (Regulation), 2009 provided statutory recognition to these institutions, leadership selection largely continued through consensus and community consultations.

      1. Recent Institutional Evolution: While village captaincy has existed for generations, the Tribal Council emerged only in the 1990s primarily to facilitate coordination with government development programmes and poverty alleviation initiatives.
      2. Village-Centred Governance: Ensures local administration through village-based institutions that have historically managed social, economic, and community affairs.
      3. Tribal Council Structure: Provides island-level coordination through representatives drawn from various villages across the Nicobar group of islands.
      4. Tuhet System: Traditional Nicobarese society is organised around extended kinship groups called Tuhets, which historically served as the foundation of social organisation and leadership selection.
      5. Community Representation: Village Captains emerged as intermediaries between Tuhet-based communities and external administrative authorities.
      6. Customary Leadership: Ensures community legitimacy through socially recognised leadership rather than formal electoral competition.
      7. First Captain Institution: Functions as the principal village leader and acts as the primary interface between the community and administration.
      8. Collective Decision-Making: Facilitates consensus-based governance through village meetings and consultations rather than majoritarian voting.
      9. Administrative Linkage: Supports implementation of government schemes through tribal institutions, making them an important bridge between communities and the district administration.

      How are leaders currently selected in Nicobar?

      1. Consensus-Based Selection: Ensures community acceptance through public consultations and collective agreement.
      2. Village Meetings: Facilitates leadership identification through open participation of community members.
      3. Captain System: Provides leadership through Village Captains headed by a First Captain in each village.
      4. Community Legitimacy: Strengthens trust as leaders derive authority from customary acceptance rather than electoral competition.
      5. Tribal Council Chairperson Selection: Traditionally occurs through consensus among representatives rather than a formal electoral contest.
      6. Social Leadership Model: Treats leaders as custodians of community welfare rather than political representatives.

      What changes do the 2026 Draft Rules propose?

      1. Statutory Basis: The draft rules derive authority from the Nicobar Islands Tribal Council Regulation, 2009, which formally recognised Tribal Councils and Village Councils while preserving significant customary practices.
      2. First Electoral Framework: The 2026 Draft Rules represent the first detailed attempt to operationalise elections under the 2009 Regulation.
      3. Formal Elections: Introduces structured elections for Village Councils and Tribal Councils.
      4. Electoral Rolls: Establishes official voter lists for conducting elections.
      5. Constituency Delimitation: Creates constituency-based representation for council elections.
      6. Nomination Procedures: Prescribes rules for filing, scrutiny, withdrawal and conduct of elections.
      7. Reserved Representation: Introduces reservation of seats and leadership positions for women.
      8. Five-Year Tenure: Establishes a fixed electoral cycle for councils.
      9. Codified Governance: Replaces informal customary procedures with legally prescribed electoral mechanisms.
      10. Administrative Oversight: Expands the role of formal administrative structures in local governance processes.

      Why are tribal councils opposing the proposed electoral model?

      1. Erosion of Customary Governance: Weakens traditional decision-making systems embedded within Nicobarese society.
      2. Administrative Override Powers: The 2009 Regulation already permits district authorities to veto council decisions deemed injurious to public interest, creating concerns about excessive administrative influence over tribal institutions.
      3. Loss of Consensus Culture: Replaces collective agreement with competitive electoral politics.
      4. Institutional Transformation: Converts social leadership positions into formal political offices.
      5. Reduced Community Control: Increases bureaucratic influence over local governance structures.
      6. Threat to Indigenous Identity: Alters institutions that have evolved alongside Nicobarese cultural traditions.
      7. Development Project Concerns: Some tribal leaders fear the proposed governance restructuring could weaken community resistance to major projects such as the ₹81,000-crore Great Nicobar development initiative, including the transshipment port and associated infrastructure.
      8. Consultation Deficit: Raises concerns regarding insufficient community engagement before introducing major institutional reforms.

      How have tribal institutions evolved historically?

      1. Colonial Origins of Captaincy: Emerged during British rule when colonial administrators sought village representatives for communication and administration.
      2. Clan-Based Foundations: Developed within the traditional social structure organised around extended family groups.
      3. Institutional Adaptation: Combined customary norms with evolving administrative requirements over time.
      4. Tribal Council Formation: Expanded in the 1990s to facilitate interactions with government agencies and development programmes.
      5. Statutory Recognition: Received legal backing through the 2009 Nicobar Islands Tribal Council Regulation.

      What constitutional and governance issues does the debate raise?

      1. Tribal Self-Governance: Examines the extent of autonomy available to indigenous communities.
      2. Democratic Representation: Evaluates whether formal elections improve accountability and participation.
      3. Customary Institutions: Questions how traditional governance systems should coexist with modern democratic frameworks.
      4. State Intervention: Assesses limits of administrative involvement in indigenous governance structures.
      5. Inclusive Representation: Considers the potential benefits of women’s reservation and wider political participation.
      6. Cultural Preservation: Balances democratic reforms with protection of tribal traditions.

      Can formal elections strengthen governance in Nicobar?

      Potential Benefits

      1. Transparency: Establishes clear procedures for leadership selection.
      2. Accountability: Enables periodic review of leadership through fixed electoral cycles.
      3. Women’s Representation: Expands participation through reserved positions.
      4. Legal Certainty: Reduces ambiguity regarding authority and tenure.
      5. Administrative Coordination: Facilitates interaction between government institutions and tribal bodies.

      Potential Risks

      1. Political Polarisation: Introduces electoral competition into traditionally consensus-driven societies.
      2. Customary Erosion: Weakens indigenous institutions developed over generations.
      3. Bureaucratisation: Shifts authority from community norms to administrative procedures.
      4. Social Fragmentation: Risks creating factional divisions within small island communities.

      Conclusion

      The proposed electoral reforms in Nicobar are not merely an administrative exercise but a test of India’s approach towards indigenous self-governance. The challenge lies in ensuring that democratic institutionalisation strengthens rather than displaces traditional systems that have historically provided social cohesion and local legitimacy. A consultative and culturally sensitive approach will be essential to harmonise constitutional values with tribal aspirations.

      Value Addition

      UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), 2007

      1. Self-Governance Rights: Recognises the right of indigenous communities to maintain and strengthen their distinct political, legal, economic, social and cultural institutions.
      2. Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC): Requires meaningful consultation before decisions affecting indigenous communities are implemented.

      PYQ Relevance

      [UPSC 2013] The PESA Act, 1996 is a landmark legislation for tribal self-governance. Critically examine its implementation and effectiveness.

      Linkage: The PYQ deals directly with tribal autonomy, customary institutions and grassroots self-governance. The Nicobar debate revolves around whether traditional tribal governance systems should continue to function through customary practices or be reshaped through formal electoral mechanisms. The core issue in both cases is the protection of tribal self-rule while ensuring democratic accountability.

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