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  • Right to Walk on Footpaths Declared a Fundamental Right

    Why in the news?

    The Supreme Court, in a landmark judgment authored by Justice P. S. Narasimha, held that the right to walk safely on demarcated and well-maintained footpaths is a Fundamental Right, which takes precedence over the privilege of motorized vehicles.

    Right to Walk as a Fundamental Right

    • Derived from Article 19(1)(d): Right to move freely throughout the territory of India.
    • Also linked with:
      • Article 21: Right to life and personal liberty.
      • Article 19(1)(a): Freedom of expression.
      • Article 19(1)(b): Right to assemble peacefully.
      • Article 19(1)(c): Right to form associations.

    Court’s Observations

    • Walking is the most basic form of human movement and is intrinsically connected to life and dignity.
    • Public spaces cannot become monopolies of motorized vehicles.
    • If a road exists, authorities have an enforceable duty to provide and maintain footpaths.
    • Pedestrian rights must override the convenience of motorized traffic.

    Directions to Government

    • Create a statutory framework recognizing the right to walk.
    • Establish a dedicated regulatory body for:
      • Planning pedestrian infrastructure.
      • Enforcement and monitoring.
      • Providing remedies for violations.
    • Judgment sent to Ministries of:
      • Housing & Urban Affairs
      • Rural Development
      • Road Transport & Highways

    Case Background

    • The ruling arose from the death of a five-year-old child who was run over by a truck while walking to school with his father.
    • The Court awarded compensation exceeding ₹11 lakh.

    [2018] Right to Privacy is protected as an intrinsic part of Right to Life and Personal Liberty. Which of the following in the Constitution of India correctly and appropriately imply the above statement?

    (a) Article 14 and the provisions under the 42nd Amendment to the Constitution.

    (b) Article 17 and the Directive Principles of State Policy in Part IV.

    (c) Article 21 and the freedoms guaranteed in Part III.

    (d) Article 24 and the provisions under the 44th Amendment to the Constitution.

  • Fast X-ray Transients (FXTs)

    Why in the news?

    Astronomers from the Indian Institute of Astrophysics have traced the likely origin of a rare Fast X-ray Transient (FXT) event, EP241107a, detected by the Einstein Probe in November 2024.

    Key Findings

    • FXTs are energetic, non-repeating flashes of X-rays lasting from a few minutes to several hours.
    • They are a recently discovered class of transient cosmic events whose origin has remained uncertain.
    • Researchers identified a radio counterpart of FXT EP241107a using the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array.
    • Follow-up observations were conducted using:
      • Himalayan Chandra Telescope
      • GROWTH India Telescope
      • Upgraded Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope

    Likely Origin

    • The event was probably caused by: Collapse of a massive star leading to a supernova and gamma-ray burst (GRB), or Merger of two neutron stars.
    • Researchers concluded that EP241107a is most likely an “orphan afterglow”:
      • A gamma-ray-burst-like explosion whose gamma rays were not directly detected.
      • Represents a lower-energy member of the GRB population.

    Fast X-ray Transients (FXTs)

    • Sudden flashes of low-energy X-rays.
    • Non-repeating and short-lived.
    • Fade rapidly after detection.
    • Associated with highly energetic cosmic explosions.

    Proposed Sources

    • Core-collapse supernovae.
    • Binary neutron star mergers.
    • Magnetars (highly magnetized neutron stars).
    • Tidal disruption events involving white dwarfs and black holes.
    • Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs).

    Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs)

    • Most energetic explosions known in the Universe.
    • Emit intense gamma radiation for a few milliseconds to several minutes.
    • Associated with the collapse of massive stars (Long GRBs) and Neutron star mergers (Short GRBs).
    • Followed by multi-wavelength “afterglows” in X-ray, optical, and radio bands.

    Neutron Star

    • Extremely dense remnant of a massive star after a supernova.
    • Mass ≈ 1.4-2 solar masses compressed into a sphere about 20 km across.
    • Composed mainly of neutrons.

    [2023] Consider the following pairs: Objects in space : Description
    1. Cepheids : Giant clouds of dust and gas in space
    2. Nebulae : Stars which brighten and dim periodically
    3. Pulsars : Neutron stars that are formed when massive stars run out of fuel and collapse
    How many of the above pairs are correctly matched ?

    [A] Only one

    [B] Only two

    [C] All three

    [D] None

  • India’s First Commercial-Scale Coal-to-Ammonium Nitrate Project

    Why in the news?

    The Prime Minister will lay the foundation stone of India’s first commercial-scale Coal-to-Ammonium Nitrate Project at Lakhanpur, Jharsuguda district, Odisha. The project, worth ₹25,016 crore, is a major step towards energy security, import substitution, and industrial self-reliance.

    Coal Gasification

    • A process that converts coal into Synthesis Gas (Syngas), mainly consisting of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H₂).
    • Syngas can be used to produce Methanol, Urea, Ammonia, Ammonium Nitrate, Synthetic Natural Gas (SNG), Other chemical feedstocks

    Lakhanpur Project

    • India’s first commercial-scale Coal-to-Ammonium Nitrate facility.
    • Developed by Bharat Coal Gasification and Chemicals Limited, a joint venture of Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited and Coal India Limited.
    • Located on about 350 acres under Mahanadi Coalfields Limited land.
    • Capacity: 2,000 tonnes/day of Ammonium Nitrate.
    • Uses indigenous coal gasification technology developed by BHEL.
    • Receives ₹1,350 crore support under the Coal Ministry’s incentive scheme.

    Significance

    • Reduces dependence on imported natural gas, ammonia, methanol, and chemicals.
    • Supports Aatmanirbhar Bharat and domestic manufacturing.
    • Enhances value addition to India’s vast coal reserves (>400 billion tonnes).
    • Expected to boost downstream chemical and fertilizer industries.

    [2025] Consider the following substances:
    I. Ethanol
    II. Nitroglycerine
    III. Urea
    Coal gasification technology can be used in the production of how many of them?

    [A] Only one

    [B] Only two

    [C] All the three

    [D] None

  • International Sickle Cell Day 2026

    Why in the news?

    The President of India, Droupadi Murmu, commemorated International Sickle Cell Day at Omkareshwar and highlighted the achievements of the National Sickle Cell Anaemia Elimination Mission (NSCAEM).

    National Sickle Cell Anaemia Elimination Mission (2023)

    • Launched to eliminate Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) as a public health problem by 2047.
    • Targets screening of 7 crore people (0-40 years age group) in affected tribal and high-prevalence areas.
    • One of the world’s largest genetic disease screening programmes.
    • So far: Around 2.5 lakh patients identified. Over 20 lakh carriers detected.

    Sickle Cell Disease (SCD)

    • A hereditary genetic blood disorder caused by mutation in the haemoglobin gene.
    • Red blood cells become sickle-shaped, reducing oxygen supply.
    • Leads to anaemia, pain episodes, infections, organ damage, and reduced life expectancy.
    • Inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern.

    High-Risk Areas in India

    • Predominantly affects tribal populations across Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Gujarat, Jharkhand, and Rajasthan

    Madhya Pradesh Initiatives

    • Sickle Mitra Initiative: Trains volunteers, NCC cadets, and civil society members for awareness and patient support.
    • Swasth Nari, Sashakt Parivar Abhiyan (2025): Screened over 4 lakh women for SCD.

    [2023] Consider the following statements in the context of interventions being undertaken under Anaemia Mukt Bharat Strategy:
    1. It provides prophylactic calcium supplementation for pre-school children, adolescents and pregnant women.
    2. It runs a campaign for delayed cord clamping at the time of child- birth.
    3. It provides for periodic deworming to children and adolescents.
    4. It addresses non-nutritional causes of anaemia in endemic pockets with special focus on malaria, hemoglobinopathies and fluorosis.
    How many of the statements given above are correct?

    [A] Only one

    [B] Only two

    [C] Only three

    [D] All four

  • RBI Temporarily Lifts Interest Rate Ceiling on FCNR(B) & NRE Deposits

    Why in the news?

    The RBI has temporarily removed the interest rate ceiling on fresh FCNR(B) deposits (3-5 years) and NRE deposits (3 years and above) from 17 June 2026 to 30 September 2026 to attract foreign currency inflows, support the rupee, and ease external financing conditions.

    FCNR(B) Deposits

    • Foreign Currency Non-Resident (Bank) Deposits allow NRIs to maintain fixed deposits in designated foreign currencies.
    • Principal and interest are protected from exchange-rate risk.
    • RBI has removed the interest rate cap on fresh and renewed deposits of 3-5 year tenor.
    • Banks have already increased FCNR(B) deposit rates to around 7%.

    NRE Deposits

    • Non-Resident External (NRE) Accounts are rupee-denominated accounts maintained by NRIs.
    • Both principal and interest are fully repatriable.
    • Interest rate ceiling on fresh and renewed deposits of 3 years and above has been removed temporarily.
    • Transfers from NRO to NRE accounts will not qualify for this relaxation.

    RBI’s Objective

    • Attract larger NRI deposits and foreign currency inflows.
    • Strengthen foreign exchange reserves.
    • Support rupee stability.
    • Reduce overseas borrowing costs for banks and public sector entities.
    • Complement RBI’s concessional forex swap facility announced on 5 June 2026.

    Expected Impact

    • Analysts estimate $30-50 billion of inflows by Q3 FY27.
    • Similar FCNR(B) scheme in 2013 attracted nearly $25 billion.
    • Increased foreign currency liquidity may ease external sector pressures.

    [2021] Consider the following:
    1. Foreign currency convertible bonds
    2. Foreign institutional investment with certain conditions
    3. Global depository receipts
    4. Non-resident external deposits
    Which of the above can be included in Foreign Direct Investments?

    [A] 1, 2 and 3

    [B] 3 only

    [C] 2 and 4

    [D] 1 and 4

  • [19th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: NFHS-6 reveals progress amid nutrition challenge

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2018] Appropriate local community-level healthcare intervention is a prerequisite to achieve ‘Health for All’ in India. Explain.
    Linkage: The NFHS-6 findings highlight that achieving better nutrition outcomes requires community-level interventions through ASHAs, AWWs, crèches, behaviour-change communication, local governance participation and preventive counselling, rather than relying solely on institutional healthcare services.

    Mentor’s Comment

    NFHS-6 indicates that India has achieved substantial progress in public health delivery. The central challenge has shifted from expanding access to services toward improving caregiving, feeding behaviour, maternal support, and diet quality.

    What change does NFHS-6 reveal in India’s nutrition landscape?

    1. Decline in Stunting: Stunting among children under five declined from 35.5% to 29.3%.
    2. Better Maternal Care: Around 95% of mothers received antenatal care.
    3. Rise in Institutional Deliveries: Institutional births reached about 90%.
    4. Higher Immunisation Coverage: About 87% of children aged 12–23 months are fully vaccinated.
    5. Improved Public Health Access: Better housing, sanitation, education, and health services have strengthened child health outcomes.

    Why has nutrition progress lagged behind improvements in health indicators?

    1. Poor Breastfeeding Practices: Only about half of newborns are breastfed within the first hour of birth.
    2. Delayed Complementary Feeding: Many children do not receive timely solid and semi-solid foods after six months. In many households, complementary feeding begins only after annaprasana. Delays during this period contribute to growth faltering.
    3. Inadequate Diet Diversity: Only around 15% of children aged 6-23 months receive an adequate diet.
    4. Persistent Wasting: Severe wasting indicators show limited improvement.
    5. Weak Feeding Awareness: Families often lack information regarding age-appropriate nutrition.

    Why is maternal time poverty emerging as a major nutrition challenge?

    1. Double Burden of Work: Women perform paid and unpaid work simultaneously.
    2. Informal Labour Participation: Large numbers of women work in agriculture and informal sectors.
    3. Childcare Deficit: Lack of crèches forces many mothers to leave infants with relatives or older siblings.
    4. Crèches as Nutrition Infrastructure: Community childcare centres improve feeding continuity, support breastfeeding and reduce women’s unpaid care burden.
    5. Disrupted Feeding Practices: Work responsibilities reduce breastfeeding and complementary feeding frequency.
    6. Limited Childcare Infrastructure: Rural areas lack adequate crèches and support systems.

    Why does greater food expenditure not guarantee better nutrition?

    1. Consumer Expenditure Shift: Recent Consumer Expenditure Survey findings show declining spending on cereals and rising expenditure on dairy, processed foods and beverages.
    2. Nutrition-Diversity Gap: Dietary diversity does not necessarily ensure nutritional adequacy.
    3. Affordability Constraints: Pulses, fruits, vegetables, nuts, and animal-source foods remain expensive.
    4. Convenience Advantage: Processed foods are easily available and ready to consume.
    5. Departure from NIN Guidelines: Many household diets diverge from recommended nutritional patterns.

    Why must India’s nutrition strategy move beyond treatment to prevention?

    1. Critical First 1,000 Days: Nutrition from pregnancy to age two determines lifelong outcomes.
    2. Early Growth Faltering: Stunting and growth failure begin well before severe malnutrition becomes visible. Growth faltering often begins before severe malnutrition becomes visible and peaks during the second year of life.
    3. Need for Early Detection: Regular anthropometric monitoring can identify risks sooner.
    4. Preventive Counselling: Timely guidance to mothers can prevent nutrition deficits.
    5. Focus on At-Risk Children: Current interventions remain heavily oriented toward severe cases.
    6. 0-2 Years Data Gap: Lack of disaggregated data for children aged 0-2 years limits targeted interventions during the most critical growth period.
    7. POSHAN Focus Gap: Current identification systems focus on severely malnourished children rather than children beginning to show growth decline

    What implementation gaps weaken frontline nutrition delivery?

    1. Data Quality Challenges: Large volumes of nutrition data remain underutilised.
    2. Limited Analytical Capacity: Local-level analysis and feedback mechanisms remain weak.
    3. Training Deficits: AWWs, ASHAs, and ANMs need stronger nutrition counselling skills.
    4. Human Resource Gaps: District-level nutritionists and data analysts are inadequate.
    5. Limited Digital Support: Technology tools remain underused for counselling and monitoring.

    Why is child malnutrition not merely a health-sector problem?

    1. Water and Sanitation Linkages: Safe drinking water and sanitation directly influence nutrition outcomes.
    2. Local Governance Role: Gram Sabhas and Panchayats can prioritise nutrition interventions.
    3. Need for Convergence: Health, ICDS, education, and local governments must coordinate.
    4. Gender Dimension: Women’s economic participation requires childcare support systems.
    5. Role of Men in Caregiving: Shared domestic responsibilities improve child feeding practices.

    What is the central tension in India’s nutrition transition?

    1. Access vs Outcomes: Health-care access has improved substantially, but nutrition outcomes lag behind.
    2. Health Care vs Nutrition Outcomes: India has largely solved access-related deficits in maternal and child health, but feeding practices, caregiving constraints and diet quality now drive malnutrition.
    3. Treatment vs Prevention: Policy focus remains stronger on rehabilitation than early prevention.
    4. Food Availability vs Nutrition Quality: More food spending does not ensure better diets.
    5. Women’s Work vs Childcare Needs: Economic participation often competes with caregiving responsibilities.
    6. Data Generation vs Data Utilisation: India collects extensive nutrition data but uses it inadequately for corrective action.

    Conclusion

    NFHS-6 shows that India has largely succeeded in expanding health-care access and public service delivery. The next phase of nutrition improvement depends on correcting feeding practices, reducing maternal time poverty, improving diet quality, strengthening frontline counselling, and using nutrition data for preventive action. Better health care alone cannot overcome India’s nutrition challenge.

  • Is India producing more graduates than what the economy can absorb?

    Why in the News?

    India’s higher education system continues to expand rapidly, producing millions of graduates each year. Yet graduate unemployment remains high, exposing a growing disconnect between educational output and labour market absorption, especially in the age of AI, automation, and capital-intensive growth.

    Why is graduate unemployment rising despite expanding economic opportunities?

    1. Rapid Expansion of Higher Education: Engineering colleges and universities have increased graduate output faster than job creation.
    2. Sectoral Transition: IT services no longer absorb engineering graduates at earlier levels. New opportunities are emerging in banking, finance, defence, aerospace, semiconductors and space sectors.
    3. Mismatch in Skills: Employers seek practical and industry-ready skills that many graduates lack.
    4. Changing Nature of Jobs: New opportunities increasingly require specialised and interdisciplinary competencies.
    5. Weak Industry Exposure: Many students graduate without sufficient laboratory, manufacturing, or real-world experience.
    6. Industry-led Training: Companies increasingly run internal training programmes because many graduates lack industry-ready skills.
    7. Additional Training Burden: Firms often need to retrain recruits before deployment.

    Has AI and technological change widened the employability gap?

    1. Changing Skill Requirements: AI increases demand for problem-solving, analytical, and digital skills.
    2. Curriculum Lag: Universities cannot redesign programmes at the pace of technological change.
    3. Mid-Course Labour Market Shift: Many graduates entered college before AI became mainstream. The labour market changed faster than university curricula.
    4. New Competency Requirements: Employers seek AI literacy, data interpretation, and systems thinking.
    5. Transition Shock: Graduates trained under older curricula enter a rapidly evolving labour market.

    Why is economic growth not translating into proportionate job creation?

    1. Capital-Intensive Investments: Semiconductors and advanced manufacturing generate high output with fewer workers.
    2. Automation of Production: Robotics and digital manufacturing reduce labour requirements.
    3. Automation of Manufacturing: Manufacturing previously absorbed engineers in supervisory and operational roles. Robotics and digital production systems have reduced demand for such middle-level positions.
    4. Limited Labour Absorption: Manufacturing expansion no longer guarantees mass employment.
    5. Output-Employment Decoupling: Factory output can rise significantly without a proportional increase in workforce requirements.

    Is India facing a graduate surplus or a skills mismatch?

    1. Not a Numerical Surplus Alone: Several sectors continue to demand skilled professionals.
    2. Quality Gap: Available graduates often do not possess industry-required competencies.
    3. Design and R&D Shortage: Advanced sectors need specialised talent that remains limited.
    4. Employability Deficit: The issue lies more in readiness than in educational attainment.

    Is India’s employment challenge a problem of graduate surplus or skill deficit?

    1. Graduate Expansion: Higher education enrolment has expanded rapidly, producing graduates faster than formal job creation.
    2. Skill Mismatch: Many graduates lack industry-ready, practical and interdisciplinary skills despite holding degrees.
    3. Dual Reality: Graduate unemployment coexists with shortages of specialised talent in sectors such as AI, semiconductors, finance and advanced manufacturing.
    4. Changing Demand Structure: The economy increasingly rewards digital literacy, problem-solving and applied technical competencies over generic credentials.
    5. Underemployment Trap: Many graduates accept jobs below their qualifications or enter informal and gig work due to limited suitable opportunities.
    6. Core Challenge: India’s employment problem is a structural mismatch between educational output and labour market demand rather than a pure shortage of jobs or graduates.

    Why does manufacturing versus innovation present a false choice?

    1. Manufacturing Needs Innovation: Modern industry depends on design, research, and technology.
    2. Innovation Creates High-Value Jobs: R&D and product development generate skilled employment.
    3. Global Value Chains Reward Innovation: Countries capturing design and intellectual property gain more value.
    4. Balanced Strategy Required: Manufacturing and innovation must advance together.

    Has India developed indigenous technological capabilities?

    1. Growing Corporate Capability: Firms such as Mahindra and Tata Motors have strengthened engineering capacity.
    2. Corporate Capability Building: Indian firms have moved beyond assembly and increasingly participate in engineering, design and product development.
    3. Increasing Design Competence: Indian engineers contribute to complex product development.
    4. Progress in Indigenous Systems: Domestic technological capabilities have expanded across sectors.
    5. Capability Gap Persists: Advanced R&D opportunities remain fewer than the number of graduates produced.

    Can entrepreneurship absorb the growing graduate workforce?

    1. Job Creation Beyond Wage Employment: Startups can become major employment generators.
    2. Need for Risk Capital: Venture funding remains critical for innovation-led firms.
    3. Technology Entrepreneurship Opportunity: Deep-tech sectors offer long-term employment potential.
    4. Ecosystem Constraints: Financing and scaling challenges continue to limit startup growth.

    What must change in higher education?

    1. Industry-Academia Integration: Universities and firms must collaborate closely.
    2. Co-created Curricula: Universities should develop programmes jointly with industry instead of designing courses in isolation.
    3. Practical Learning: Greater emphasis on laboratories, internships, and projects.
    4. Skill Development: Education must prioritise employability alongside academic credentials.
    5. Continuous Upgradation: Institutions must adapt faster to technological change.

    Conclusion

    India’s problem is not an excess of graduates but a growing mismatch between educational outcomes and labour market requirements. AI, automation, and capital-intensive growth have altered the nature of employment faster than universities have adapted. The solution lies in aligning education, industry, innovation, and entrepreneurship so that graduate creation and job creation move in the same direction.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Skill development programs have succeeded in increasing human resource supply to various sectors. In the context of the statement, analyze the linkages between education, skill and employment.

    Linkage: The PYQ examines the link between education, skills and employability in India’s labour market. The article highlights how weak alignment between education, skills and industry demand has contributed to rising graduate unemployment despite expanding higher education.

  • Iran gets ‘understanding’, world gets Hormuz, Trump gets his exit 

    Why in the News?

    The United States and Iran signed a 14-clause Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on June 17-18, 2026, opening a 60-day negotiating window for a final agreement. The MoU ends active hostilities, reopens the Strait of Hormuz, creates a pathway for sanctions relief, and revives nuclear diplomacy. It also departs significantly from the 2015 JCPOA by deferring key disputes over enrichment, ballistic missiles, and Iran’s regional network.

    What are the key clauses of the US-Iran MoU?

    1. Ends Hostilities: Clause 1 establishes a formal cessation of military operations involving Iran, Israel, and the United States.
    2. Establishes Non-Interference: Clause 2 commits both sides to refrain from actions aimed at destabilising the other, including regime-change efforts.
    3. Creates a 60-Day Negotiating Window: Clause 3 allows both sides to extend negotiations by mutual consent before a final settlement is reached.
    4. Reopens the Strait of Hormuz: Clauses 4 and 5 remove the US naval blockade and guarantee uninterrupted maritime transit through Hormuz.
    5. Creates an Economic Package: Clauses 6, 7, 10 and 11 provide for reconstruction assistance, sanctions relief, sanctions waivers, and release of more than $100 billion in frozen Iranian assets. At present sanctions waivers will act as interim arrangement before sanctions removal is operationalised
    6. Retains Nuclear Monitoring: Clauses 8 and 12 reaffirm Iran’s commitment not to pursue nuclear weapons and establish a monitoring mechanism.
    7. Seeks International Legitimacy: Clause 14 envisages a binding UN Security Council resolution endorsing the final arrangement.

    Why is the Strait of Hormuz central to the agreement?

    1. Global Energy Chokepoint: Nearly 20% of global oil trade and about 25% of global LNG shipments pass through Hormuz.
    2. Iran’s Principal Leverage: Control over Hormuz provides Iran with significant influence over global energy markets.
    3. Prevention of an Energy Shock: Reopening the Strait removes the immediate risk of disruption to nearly 20% of global oil trade and 25% of global LNG shipments.
    4. Shared Interest: The US, Iran, Gulf states and energy-importing economies all benefit from uninterrupted maritime traffic.
    5. Potential New Governance Framework: A future Iran-Oman arrangement inspired by the Montreux Convention governing the Turkish Straits.

    How does the MoU depart from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) framework?

    1. Broader Than a Nuclear Agreement: The 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) focused on Iran’s nuclear programme. The MoU links nuclear issues, sanctions, reconstruction, maritime security and regional stability.
    2. Different Sequencing: The JCPOA imposed nuclear restrictions before sanctions relief. The MoU prioritises sanctions relief and economic normalisation before addressing several unresolved security questions.
    3. No Requirement to Transfer Enriched Uranium: Unlike the JCPOA framework, the MoU does not require Iran to transfer its enriched nuclear stockpile to a third country.
    4. Ballistic Missiles Excluded: Clause 9 of the MOU contains no commitment regarding Iran’s ballistic missile programme.
    5. Regional Networks Excluded: The agreement contains no provisions on Iran’s relationships with Hezbollah and other regional non-state actors.
    6. Response to the JCPOA Collapse: The framework emerges after the US withdrawal from the JCPOA in 2018 and Iran’s subsequent departure from many of its commitments.

    Does the sanctions package constitute real relief or merely a promise of future relief?

    1. Relief Is Deferred: Clause 7 commits to sanctions relief but leaves implementation to the negotiation period.
    2. Multiple Sanctions Regimes Remain: Nuclear, counter-terrorism and designation-based sanctions remain interconnected and unresolved.
    3. Sanctions Waivers Act as a Bridge: Clause 10 creates temporary relief before full implementation.
    4. Asset Unfreezing Provides Immediate Benefits: More than $100 billion in frozen assets are scheduled to become available to Iran
    5. Large Economic Upside: According to estimates, sanctions easing could generate approximately $60 billion annually in Iranian oil and fuel revenues.

    Has the MoU meaningfully constrained Iran’s nuclear capability?

    1. Clause 8- No Nuclear Weapons Commitment: Iran reiterates that it will not procure or develop nuclear weapons and reaffirms its stated position since 2003.
    2. Clause 12- Monitoring Mechanism: The MoU establishes a mechanism to monitor implementation of the agreement and future commitments.
    3. No Restriction on Enrichment Capacity: The agreement does not require Iran to dismantle or reduce its existing uranium enrichment capability. This is a significant divergence from the original US position and from the 2015 JCPOA, under which the negotiation timeline (roughly 2013-15) required limiting Iran’s 60%-enriched uranium stockpile.
    4. No Transfer of Enriched Uranium Stockpiles: Unlike the JCPOA framework, the MoU does not mandate transfer or reduction of Iran’s accumulated enriched uranium stockpile.
    5. Ballistic Missile Programme Remains Outside the Agreement: None of the 14 clauses contain any reference to negotiations over ballistic missiles or Iran’s relationships with regional non-state actors.
    6. Core Non-Proliferation Questions Remain Deferred: The agreement establishes monitoring and political commitments but postpones decisions on enrichment limits, stockpiles and missile capabilities to future negotiations.

    What gives the MoU more binding force than the JCPOA had, and what remains unresolved on enforcement?

    1. Clause 14- Binding UNSC resolution: This clause provides for a binding UN Security Council resolution endorsing the deal, notable because it proceeds despite the Trump administration’s general disdain for UN mechanisms.
    2. Anchored to existing resolution: The JCPOA was endorsed by UNSC Resolution 2231, whose binding nature was affirmed in the text through Article 25 of the UN Charter.
    3. New resolution’s terms uncertain: The new UNSC resolution will have to be similar to Resolution 2231, but Iran could potentially seek fail-safe arrangements that weaken its binding character.
    4. No enforcement detail in available clauses: Clause 12 provides a monitoring mechanism, but no clause specifies consequences for non-compliance, leaving enforcement design open for the 60-day negotiation.

    Why does the agreement create a strategic dilemma for Israel? 

    1. Iran Gains Before Major Concessions: Sanctions relief, asset access and diplomatic legitimacy arrive before resolution of missile and proxy issues.
    2. Maximum Pressure Weakens: The agreement shifts US policy from coercion to managed engagement.
    3. Military Options Narrow: The de-escalatory framework reduces immediate scope for escalation against Iran.
    4. Hezbollah and Regional Networks Remain: The agreement leaves Israel’s principal security concerns largely untouched.
    5. US and Israeli Priorities Diverge: Washington prioritises stability and conflict management. Israel prioritises long-term constraints on Iranian capabilities.

    Is this MoU a genuine resolution of the US-Iran conflict, or a deferral of its hardest elements?

    1. Visible De-escalation Achieved: Hostilities have paused. The Hormuz blockade has ended. A path to sanctions relief and reconstruction has opened.
    2. Core Disputes Remain Deferred: Iran’s enriched uranium stockpile, ballistic missile programme and regional proxies remain outside the agreement.
    3. Implementation Is the Real Challenge: The JCPOA provides a negotiating template. The challenge is securing compliance during the 60-day window.
    4. Strategic Questions Remain Open: The MoU does not restrict Iran’s existing enrichment stockpile. The core non-proliferation debate has been postponed to future negotiations.

    Conclusion

    The US-Iran MoU is not a non-proliferation settlement; it is a crisis-management framework. It secures Hormuz, pauses hostilities, unlocks a pathway to sanctions relief, and creates political space for further negotiations. The agreement’s success rests on postponing the issues that have historically prevented compromise, enrichment stockpiles, ballistic missiles, and Iran’s regional network. Whether those deferred questions can be resolved within the 60-day window will determine whether the MoU becomes a durable successor to the JCPOA or merely a temporary pause in a longer confrontation.

    PYQ Relevance

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

    Linkage: The PYQ examines the strategic implications of US-Iran engagement for regional stability and national interests. The article analyses how the US-Iran MoU manages tensions through diplomacy while leaving key strategic issues unresolved.

  • Advancing Electrolyte Engineering for Durable and Affordable Aqueous Batteries

    Why in the news?

    Scientists at the Institute of Nano Science and Technology (INST), Mohali, under the Department of Science and Technology (DST), have developed a novel electrolyte additive (BDIM) that significantly improves the performance and lifespan of Aqueous Zinc-Ion Batteries (AZIBs).

    Key Highlights

    • AZIBs are emerging as safer, cheaper, and more sustainable alternatives to lithium-ion batteries.
    • Major challenges:
      • Zinc dendrite formation
      • Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (HER)
      • Corrosion of zinc anode
      • Poor cycling stability
    • Researchers developed BDIM (1,3-bis(1,3-dicarboxypropyl)-1H-imidazole-3-ium chloride) as an electrolyte additive.
    • BDIM selectively adsorbs on the zinc surface and occupies the Inner Helmholtz Plane (IHP).
    • It displaces water molecules, thereby:
      • Suppressing hydrogen evolution
      • Reducing corrosion
      • Preventing dendrite growth
      • Enhancing battery life and safety
    • Researchers used: Ultramicroelectrode (UME) and Fast-Scan Cyclic Voltammetry (FSCV)
      to study zinc deposition mechanisms.

    Significance

    • Extends battery lifespan without costly material redesign.
    • Improves safety and reliability of rechargeable batteries.
    • Supports large-scale renewable energy and grid-storage applications.
    • Can reduce maintenance costs of energy-storage infrastructure.

    Prelims Facts

    • AZIB Electrolyte: Water-based, making it non-flammable and safer than lithium-ion batteries.
    • Inner Helmholtz Plane (IHP): Region near the electrode surface where electrochemical reactions occur.
    • Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (HER): Undesirable side reaction that reduces battery efficiency.