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  • [21st May 2026] The Hindu OpED: Preparing India for a credible digital census

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2023] e-governance, as a critical tool of governance, has ushered in effectiveness, transparency and accountability in governments. What inadequacies hamper the enhancement of these features?
    Linkage: This PYQ directly examines the limitations of digital governance, including implementation bottlenecks, accessibility, and administrative capacity. The article on the digital Census similarly highlights concerns of digital illiteracy, enumerator preparedness, omission errors, and data credibility.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s transition to a digital Census in 2027 marks a major institutional shift in governance and data collection. While digitisation can improve efficiency, the credibility of Census outcomes depends on questionnaire design, field testing, enumerator preparedness, and safeguards against exclusion and fraud. Since the 2027 Census will influence delimitation of Lok Sabha and Assembly constituencies, any enumeration error can have significant political and administrative consequences.

    How does the inclusion of caste enumeration alter the Census framework?

    1. Historic Shift: Introduces caste-related questions for the first time since Independence, making it a major methodological change.
    2. Political Sensitivity: Bihar and Karnataka caste surveys revealed that many communities may resist official numerical representation, making social acceptance a challenge.
    3. Pre-testing Requirement: Necessitates extensive field testing of definitions and schedules to ensure enumerators and respondents interpret caste categories uniformly.
    4. Administrative Implication: Influences future affirmative action debates, welfare targeting, and political mobilisation.

    Why does the Census method matter for political representation?

    1. Delimitation Linkage: Census population figures will be used for the next delimitation of Lok Sabha and State Legislative Assembly constituencies.
    2. Methodological Concern: India follows an extended de facto method, where people are counted at their usual residence during enumeration.
    3. Household Definition: Includes persons who share food from a common kitchen, including paying guests staying throughout the Census period.
    4. Electoral Implication: Variations in enumeration affect the distribution of political representation across States.
    5. Resident Qualification: A six-month residence requirement applies for voter registration, but Census coverage differs from electoral rolls.

    How can migration and NRIs distort Census outcomes?

    1. Large Migrant Population: India has around 1.58 crore NRIs, constituting over 1% of India’s population.
    2. Representation Impact: If all NRIs were grouped into one State, they could potentially influence around five Lok Sabha seats in future delimitation.
    3. Regional Disparity: States such as Kerala, Gujarat, Punjab, Telangana, and Tamil Nadu have disproportionately high migrant populations.
    4. Kerala Migration Survey 2023: Estimated nearly 22 lakh people from Kerala living or working abroad, indicating potential undercount risks.
    5. Seat Allocation Risk: Excluding migrant-heavy populations may result in loss of parliamentary representation for affected States.
    6. Possible Administrative Response: Considers collecting information on non-resident family members during enumeration to improve delimitation accuracy.

    Can a fully digital Census improve data quality?

    1. Digital Enumeration: Plans complete data collection using mobile electronic devices, mainly smartphones and tablets.
    2. Efficiency Gains: Enables faster processing, reduced manual tabulation, and greater response consistency.
    3. Enumerator Constraints: A large share of enumerators may lack digital familiarity, increasing implementation risks.
    4. Operational Evidence: During Karnataka’s Socio-Economic and Caste Survey, enumerators reportedly faced difficulties operating digital systems.
    5. Hybrid Alternative: Earlier planning for the 2021 Census proposed paper schedules later digitised from home, which could reduce operational disruptions.
    6. Confidentiality Concern: Assistance by family members or students to enumerators may create privacy and accountability issues.
    7. Quality Assurance: Requires mechanisms for detecting data-entry errors and validating responses.
    8. Self-Enumeration: Allows respondents to complete forms through smartphones or computers, increasing convenience but requiring safeguards.

    Why are questionnaire design and definitions central to Census credibility?

    1. Conceptual Complexity: Population enumeration questions are more complex than house-listing questions.
    2. Instruction Burden: Earlier Census exercises required extensive explanatory material, including around six printed pages explaining disability categories in the 2011 Census.
    3. Comprehension Challenge: Even seemingly simple questions, such as employment status during the last year, require nuanced understanding.
    4. Enumerator Variation: Over 30 lakh enumerators may interpret definitions inconsistently without standardised training.
    5. Embedded Clarification: Requires simplified wording and in-question explanations, instead of separate instruction manuals.

    How can respondent fatigue undermine Census reliability?

    1. Questionnaire Overload: Excessive questions can produce fatigue, incomplete responses, or inaccurate reporting.
    2. Household Burden: The form must be completed for every household member, increasing response complexity.
    3. Intentional Misreporting: Respondents may deliberately provide incorrect information to avoid follow-up questions.
    4. Self-Enumeration Risk: Digital self-reporting increases chances of skipping difficult or sensitive questions.

    Which categories of people are most vulnerable to omission?

    1. Domestic Workers: Persons such as servants, helpers, nurses, and unrelated dependents living within households face higher exclusion risks.
    2. Children in Hostels: Children temporarily residing away from home may be missed from household enumeration.
    3. Post-Enumeration Surveys: Previous surveys reported higher omission rates among distant relatives and unrelated household members.
    4. Questionnaire Design Solution: Questions on temporary absence and likelihood of return can reduce omission errors.
    5. Expanded Household Inquiry: Asking about non-relatives sharing meals and accommodation improves coverage.

    Can fraudulent enumeration compromise Census credibility?

    1. Manipulation Risk: Possibility of fraudulent enumeration by groups attempting demographic inflation cannot be ruled out.
    2. Historical Example: The 2001 Census cancellation in certain areas remains an institutional warning.
    3. Need for Vigilance: Requires field testing, monitoring systems, and verification mechanisms.

    Conclusion

    India’s first digital Census in 2027 can strengthen the quality, speed, and usability of demographic data, but technology alone cannot ensure credibility. Accurate enumeration will depend on well-tested questionnaires, trained enumerators, safeguards against exclusion, and robust verification mechanisms. Since Census outcomes will shape delimitation, welfare planning, and governance, India’s priority must be to ensure that digitisation enhances accuracy, inclusiveness, and public trust, rather than merely administrative efficiency.

  • Rising night-time heat an urgent health hazard

    Why in the News?

    India’s heat crisis is increasingly becoming a night-time public health emergency, as evidence shows that night temperatures are rising faster than daytime temperatures. This reduces the body’s ability to recover from daytime heat. The concern is significant because mortality sharply increases when night temperatures remain above 28-30°C, while existing heat action plans remain largely focused on daytime heatwaves.

    Why Are Rising Night-Time Temperatures Emerging as a Major Public Health Threat?

    1. Physiological Recovery: Cooler nights allow the human body to recover from daytime heat. Persistently warm nights prevent recovery, resulting in prolonged heat exposure and cumulative stress.
    2. Sustained Heat Burden: Continuous exposure transforms heat stress from a daytime phenomenon into a prolonged condition, increasing health risks without adequate relief.
    3. Vulnerable Populations: Low-income groups living in densely packed houses without natural ventilation or cooling systems face disproportionate exposure.
    4. Public Health Blind Spot: Heat action plans largely focus on daytime heatwaves, while night-time thermal stress remains under-recognised.
    5. Extreme Night Heat: Climate Trends data across 200 Indian cities (1986-2018) found that in cities such as Delhi, minimum night temperatures frequently exceeded 32°C and sometimes crossed 35°C. This indicates that nights are increasingly failing to provide thermal relief.

    How Are Night-Time Temperatures Rising Faster Than Daytime Temperatures in India?

    1. Urban Heat Retention: Concrete, asphalt, and built surfaces absorb heat during the day and slowly release it at night, preventing cooling.
    2. Declining Green Cover: Reduced vegetation lowers evapotranspiration, weakening natural night-time cooling.
    3. Urban Heat Island Effect: Dense urban settlements trap heat and restrict airflow, keeping cities warmer after sunset.
    4. Anthropogenic Heat Emissions: Air conditioners, vehicles, industries, and energy use release residual heat into urban environments.
    5. Climate Change: Rising baseline temperatures are increasing both daytime and night-time heat, with warmer nights showing faster escalation in several regions.

    What Trends Indicate the Rise of Night-Time Temperatures in India?

    1. Long-Term Trend: A Climate Trends analysis using IMD data found that night-time temperatures increased faster than daytime temperatures between 1986 and 2015.
    2. Temperature Rise: Mean annual temperatures increased by ~0.63°C, while coldest night temperatures increased by ~0.4°C, indicating warming even during recovery periods.
    3. Future Projection: By the 2070s, night temperatures during the warmest day may rise by 4.7°C, alongside a 5.5°C rise in daytime maximum temperatures.
    4. Regional Variation: Metropolitan cities are projected to witness stronger warming due to urbanisation and dense built-up surfaces.

    Why Does Urbanisation Intensify Night-Time Heat Exposure?

    1. Urban Heat Island Effect: Urban surfaces such as concrete, roads, bricks, and metal infrastructure absorb heat during the day and radiate it at night, preventing cooling.
    2. Loss of Green Spaces: Reduced vegetation lowers natural cooling and evapotranspiration, increasing retained heat.
    3. Water Body Degradation: Shrinking lakes and wetlands reduce local cooling capacity.
    4. Built Environment: Dense construction blocks airflow and traps heat in residential clusters.
    5. Air Conditioner Heat Emissions: Cooling devices release waste heat outdoors, increasing ambient night-time temperatures in urban neighbourhoods.

    What Evidence Links Night-Time Heat with Mortality Risks?

    1. Ahmedabad Case Study: The Indian Institute of Public Health, Gandhinagar analysed mortality data in Ahmedabad and found a strong correlation between night-time heat and all-cause mortality.
    2. Critical Threshold: Mortality rises sharply when maximum night-time temperature exceeds 28°C.
    3. Mortality Spike: If night-time temperature remains below 28°C, all-cause mortality averages around 145 deaths/day. When temperatures rise above 30°C, mortality increases to approximately 265 deaths/day.
    4. Significance: Findings indicate that night temperatures may be as important as daytime heat in determining heat-related deaths.

    Why Are Existing Heat Action Plans Inadequate in Addressing Night-Time Heat?

    1. Daytime Bias: Most heat action plans focus on extreme daytime temperature warnings, overlooking night-time risks.
    2. Intermittent Heatwave Focus: Current interventions primarily target short-duration heatwaves rather than persistent elevated temperatures throughout summer.
    3. Housing Deficit: Existing policies inadequately address thermal discomfort in informal settlements and overcrowded housing.
    4. Limited Preparedness: Long-term urban planning for cooling remains insufficient despite recurring summer heat extremes.

    What Immediate and Long-Term Measures Can Reduce Night-Time Heat Stress?

    Immediate Measures

    1. Passive Cooling: Reflective coatings, whitewashed roofs, and cool roofs reduce heat absorption and indoor temperatures.
    2. Ventilation Enhancement: Natural ventilation and airflow management improve indoor cooling in cramped households.
    3. Community Awareness: Public advisories on hydration, cooling practices, and vulnerable population protection reduce exposure risks.

    Long-Term Measures

    1. Urban Greening: Expanding green spaces and tree cover improves cooling through evapotranspiration.
    2. Blue Infrastructure: Restoration of urban lakes and water bodies moderates local temperature rise.
    3. Climate-Responsive Urban Design: Heat-resilient housing, ventilation corridors, and reflective materials reduce heat retention.
    4. Inclusive Heat Governance: Heat Action Plans must incorporate night-time temperature indicators and vulnerable settlements.

    Conclusion

    India’s heat crisis can no longer be assessed through daytime temperatures alone. Recognising night-time heat as a major climate-health risk is essential for building effective Heat Action Plans, resilient cities, and equitable protection for vulnerable populations.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2017] “Climate change” is a global problem. How India will be affected by climate change? How Himalayan and coastal states of India will be affected by climate change?

    Linkage: The PYQ examines impacts of climate change on ecosystems, economy, disasters, and human systems including health. The article provides a specific case study of climate change impact in India, rising night-time heat causing increased mortality and urban heat stress.

  • Oral remarks and institutional limits 

    Why in the News?

    Recent oral remarks by the Chief Justice of India during a court hearing, and the clarification that followed, have revived debate on the limits of judicial remarks from the bench. The issue is important because oral observations now spread quickly through media and social platforms, often influencing public opinion before a final court judgment is delivered.

    Why Does the Distinction Between Oral Remarks and Judicial Orders Matter?

    Oral remarks are observations, questions, or comments made by judges during court hearings to test arguments and clarify issues. Judicial orders/judgments are formal, reasoned, and legally binding decisions issued by the court after due consideration.

    1. Institutional Discipline: Ensures judicial legitimacy rests on reasoned orders rather than spontaneous courtroom observations.
    2. Due Process: Prevents prejudicial comments from influencing ongoing proceedings before facts are fully adjudicated.
    3. Judicial Neutrality: Protects courts from appearing partisan, emotional, or personally opinionated.
    4. Public Trust: Prevents informal comments from shaping public perception in ways inconsistent with final judicial reasoning.
    5. Digital Amplification: Makes oral remarks consequential because media circulation often precedes written judgments.

    What Constitutional and Ethical Standards Govern Judicial Speech from the Bench?

    Restatement of Values of Judicial Life (1997)

    1. Institutional Restraint: The Full Court adopted the Restatement of Values of Judicial Life on 7 May 1997, directing judges not to enter public debate or express views on matters likely to arise for judicial determination.
    2. Judicial Discipline: Item 8 restrains judges from public commentary on political or controversial issues affecting impartiality.

    Benjamin Cardozo’s Judicial Standard

    1. Reasoned Adjudication: Judges must derive inspiration from “consecrated principles,” not personal emotions or impulsive sentiment.
    2. Institutional Method: Judicial discretion must remain disciplined by legal tradition, analogy, and constitutional order.
    3. Core Principle: Bench remarks must test legal positions rather than become vehicles for personal commentary.

    Constitutional Standards: The Oath of Office (Third Schedule)

    1. Before a judge takes their seat, they swear an oath under the Third Schedule of the Indian Constitution. They vow to perform their duties “without fear or favor, affection or ill-will.”

    Article 211 & Article 121 (Mutual Immunity): The Constitution sets up a strict separation of powers through a “speech immunity” pact between the Judiciary and Parliament:

    1. Article 121 bars Parliament from discussing the conduct of any Supreme Court or High Court judge (except during removal proceedings).
    2. Article 211 applies the same restriction to State Legislatures.

    Global Standards Adopted by India

    The Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct (2002): Formulated by global chief justices (and heavily endorsed by the Supreme Court of India), this is the international gold standard for judicial behavior. It highlights six core values, three of which directly govern speech from the bench:

    ValueThe Judicial Speech Rule
    ImpartialityA judge must ensure that their speech, both in the courtroom and in judgments, does not manifest bias or prejudice towards any person or group.
    ProprietyA judge must accept personal restrictions that might seem burdensome to ordinary citizens. Their language must remain courteous, patient, and dignified at all times.
    EqualityA judge must not, by words or conduct, manifest bias or prejudice based on irrelevant grounds like race, color, sex, religion, or national origin.

    How Did the Supreme Court Clarify the Status of Oral Remarks in the Vijaya Bhaskar Case?

    Background of the Case

    1. COVID-19 Context: In April 2021, the Madras High Court, while hearing a petition concerning COVID protocol violations during election rallies, criticised the Election Commission.
    2. Sharp Oral Observation: The Bench remarked that the Election Commission was “singularly responsible” for the situation and “should probably be booked for murder charges.”

    Supreme Court Intervention

    1. Media Reporting Challenge: The Election Commission challenged media reporting of these oral observations.
    2. Case: Chief Election Commissioner v. M.R. Vijayabhaskar (2021).

    Key Judicial Standard Established

    1. Bench Questions: Courts may ask difficult or provocative questions to test legal arguments.
    2. Language Restriction: Judicial freedom does not extend to “scathing language” directed against institutions or individuals crossing recognised judicial standards.
    3. Institutional Distinction: Courts clarified that formal opinions emerge through written judgments, not oral observations during hearings.
    4. Judicial Creativity: The Court accepted spontaneity during hearings but emphasised constitutional restraint.

    Important Principle

    1. Dual Test: The standard governing both bench questions and judicial language derives from judicial discipline and restraint.

    When Do Judicial Oral Remarks Raise Questions of Institutional Restraint?

    Justice Antonin Scalia (2003, University of Texas Admissions Hearing)

    1. Controversial Comment: Suggested some African-American students may perform better at less competitive institutions.
    2. Institutional Criticism: The remark attracted widespread criticism for prejudicial implications.
    3. No Retraction: Justice Scalia later reiterated the position.

    Justice S.A. Bobde (2021 Rape Bail Hearing)

    1. Insensitive Observation: During a rape-related bail hearing in Maharashtra, Justice Bobde reportedly asked whether the accused would marry the victim.
    2. Public Backlash: The remark drew criticism for trivialising sexual violence.
    3. Subsequent Clarification: Court clarified the statement had been misunderstood.

    Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg (2016 US Presidential Election)

    1. Political Comment: Called Donald Trump a “faker.”
    2. Retraction: Later expressed regret, recognising judges must avoid entering political debates.

    Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud (Marriage Equality Case, 2023)

    1. Oral Observation: Suggested absolute notions of “man” and “woman” were socially constructed.
    2. Final Judgment Contrast: Six months later, the written judgment reflected a different legal position, showing oral remarks need not indicate final judicial reasoning.

    Chief Justice Surya Kant Controversy (2025)

    1. Current Trigger: Remarks concerning senior advocate designation reignited debate over judicial language and institutional limits.

    How Has Technology Changed the Consequences of Judicial Oral Remarks?

    1. Instant Dissemination: Oral observations now circulate immediately through television, digital media, and social media platforms.
    2. Narrative Formation: Public opinion often forms before courts deliver reasoned judgments.
    3. Reputational Impact: Institutions and individuals may face reputational injury from informal remarks.
    4. Judicial Pressure: Courts increasingly face pressure to clarify statements made during hearings.
    5. Institutional Risk: Blurs distinction between courtroom exchange and authoritative judicial pronouncement.

    Can Judicial Spontaneity Coexist with Institutional Restraint?

    1. Argument Testing: Courts require freedom to ask uncomfortable questions and challenge arguments.
    2. Temperate Language: Judicial speech must avoid ridicule, humiliation, or prejudicial framing.
    3. Clarification Mechanism: Later clarifications may reduce controversy but cannot fully erase public impact.
    4. Institutional Balance: Judges must preserve spontaneity without compromising constitutional dignity.
    5. Core Challenge: Maintaining the distinction between testing legal positions and institutional commentary.

    Conclusion

    Judicial institutions derive legitimacy not only from constitutional authority but also from restraint in speech and conduct. While oral remarks help courts test arguments, maintaining a clear distinction between bench observations and written judgments remains essential to preserve judicial neutrality, public trust, and institutional credibility in the digital age.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Constitutionally guaranteed judicial independence is a prerequisite of democracy.” Comment.

    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of judicial independence, institutional credibility, and constitutional restraint in democratic governance. The article examines how judicial conduct and oral remarks can affect institutional neutrality and public trust, both essential for judicial independence.

  • How thorium as nuclear fuel can help India meet its long-term energy needs

    Why in the News?

    India’s long-term energy security debate has renewed focus on thorium-based nuclear power as the country seeks reliable clean energy to meet its net-zero target by 2070. The issue gains significance because India possesses nearly 21% of global thorium reserves. At the same time, commissioning of the 500 MW Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) at Kalpakkam marks a major step toward operationalising the third stage of India’s nuclear programme.

    How Does Thorium Fit into India’s Long-Term Energy Security Strategy?

    1. Thorium Abundance: India possesses nearly 21% of global thorium reserves, largely concentrated in monazite sands of Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, and Tamil Nadu.
    2. Energy Security: Reduces dependence on imported uranium and fossil fuels, strengthening strategic autonomy in electricity generation.
    3. Baseload Power: Supports continuous electricity generation unlike intermittent renewable sources such as solar and wind.
    4. Climate Commitments: Facilitates low-carbon electricity generation essential for achieving India’s net-zero target by 2070.
    5. Import Reduction: Limits exposure to volatile global uranium and hydrocarbon markets.

    How Does India’s Three-Stage Nuclear Programme Function?

    1. Stage-I (PHWRs): Uses natural uranium in Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWRs) to generate electricity and produce plutonium.
    2. Stage-II (Fast Breeder Reactors): Uses plutonium in Fast Breeder Reactors (FBRs) to generate more fissile material than consumed.
    3. Stage-III (Thorium Reactors): Converts thorium into Uranium-233 (U-233) for sustained long-term nuclear power generation.

    Why Has India Traditionally Relied on a Three-Stage Nuclear Programme?

    1. Limited Uranium Availability: India possesses low reserves of high-grade uranium, constraining large-scale expansion of conventional uranium-based reactors.
    2. Abundant Thorium Reserves: India holds nearly 21% of global thorium reserves, necessitating a long-term strategy to utilise domestic resources.
    3. Energy Security Imperative: Reduces dependence on imported uranium and strengthens strategic autonomy in electricity generation.
    4. Long-Term Fuel Sustainability: Ensures continuity of nuclear fuel supply through breeder technology and fissile material regeneration.
    5. Clean Baseload Requirement: Supports stable, low-carbon electricity generation essential for industrialisation and climate commitments.
    6. Indigenous Nuclear Vision: Reflects Homi Bhabha’s three-stage strategy designed around India’s resource endowment.

    Why Is the Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) a Critical Milestone?

    A Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor (PFBR) is an advanced nuclear reactor that produces more fissile fuel than it consumes, making it a crucial technology for long-term nuclear energy security. In India’s case, the 500 MW PFBR at Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu, developed by Bharatiya Nabhikiya Vidyut Nigam Limited, is the first reactor of Stage-II of India’s three-stage nuclear programme.

    1. Technological Breakthrough: Represents India’s transition from experimental capability to near-commercial breeder reactor technology.
    2. Fuel Multiplication: Produces more fissile material than it consumes, ensuring long-term nuclear fuel sustainability.
    3. Thorium Enabler: Creates necessary fissile inventory for Stage-III thorium reactors.
    4. Import Dependence Reduction: Strengthens indigenous nuclear capability and reduces vulnerability to external fuel markets.
    5. Strategic Milestone: Marks a shift from conceptual planning toward practical thorium deployment.

    Why is it called a “Fast Breeder Reactor”?

    1. Fast: Uses fast neutrons (without slowing them using a moderator) to sustain nuclear fission.
    2. Breeder: Produces more fissile material than it consumes. It converts non-fissile Uranium-238 into Plutonium-239, which can later be used as nuclear fuel.

    How Does India’s PFBR Work?

    1. Fuel Composition: Uses Mixed Oxide (MOX) fuel, comprising plutonium and uranium, to sustain nuclear fission and generate power.
    2. Fast Neutron Technology: Operates using fast neutrons without a moderator, enabling efficient breeding of additional fissile material.
    3. Sodium Cooling System: Uses liquid sodium coolant instead of water, facilitating high-temperature operation and efficient heat transfer.
    4. Electricity Generation: Produces 500 MW of electricity, strengthening India’s clean baseload power capacity.
    5. Fissile Fuel Multiplication: Converts non-fissile Uranium-238 into fissile Plutonium-239, thereby producing more fuel than it consumes.
    6. Thorium Linkage: Generates the plutonium required as a “starter fuel” for Stage-III thorium reactors, since Thorium-232 itself is non-fissile and cannot directly undergo nuclear fission.
    7. Thorium Conversion: Enables the conversion of Thorium-232 into fissile Uranium-233 (U-233), which can sustain nuclear reactions for long-term energy generation. 

    What Are the Major Technological Challenges in Thorium Utilisation?

    1. Non-Fissile Nature: Thorium itself is not fissile and must first convert into Uranium-233 (U-233).
    2. Fissile Material Requirement: Requires plutonium or enriched uranium to initiate reactions.
      1. The “Ignition” Problem: Natural uranium contains a tiny fraction (0.7%) of Uranium-235, which is fissile (it splits easily and starts a chain reaction naturally). Thorium (232) is fertile, meaning it must sit inside an active reactor, absorb a neutron from a different fissile material (like Enriched Uranium or Plutonium-239), and slowly transform into Uranium-233.
    3. The “Gamma Ray” Shielding Challenge
      1. When Thorium converts to Uranium-233, it always produces a tiny impurity called Uranium-232. 
      2. Uranium-232 decays into daughter isotopes that emit incredibly intense, highly penetrating gamma radiation.
      3. Because of this, used thorium fuel cannot be handled or manufactured manually behind standard protective glass. The entire fabrication and reprocessing pipeline must be completely automated using heavy robotics shielded behind massive walls of lead or concrete. This exponentially inflates infrastructure costs.
    4. Delayed Commercialisation: Thorium reactor systems remain technologically complex and commercially underdeveloped.
      1. Because uranium commercialization has a 70-year head start, the global nuclear supply chain is fully optimized for it.
    5. Infrastructure Constraints: Requires specialised reactor systems and long gestation periods.
    6. Cost Challenges: Commercial viability remains uncertain compared to conventional uranium reactors.
      1. The commercial viability is further challenged by the fact that thorium requires a closed fuel cycle (reprocessing and reusing spent fuel) to make economic sense. An open, “once-through” cycle where you throw away the thorium after one use loses all its resource advantages.

    Can Thorium Strengthen India’s Geopolitical and Strategic Position?

    1. Net-Zero Transition: Supports India’s goal of achieving net-zero emissions by 2070 by providing reliable, low-carbon baseload electricity alongside renewables.
    2. Energy Independence: Reduces external vulnerabilities arising from uranium imports.
    3. Technology Leadership: Positions India among few countries pursuing advanced thorium fuel cycles.
    4. Export Potential: Enables long-term prospects for indigenous reactor technology exports.
    5. Strategic Autonomy: Strengthens sovereign energy choices amid global supply disruptions.
    6. Climate Diplomacy: Supports India’s credibility in global clean-energy negotiations.

    Why Does Nuclear Energy Remain Important Despite Renewable Expansion?

    1. Intermittency Challenge: Solar and wind generation fluctuate based on weather conditions.
    2. Reliable Baseload: Nuclear ensures uninterrupted electricity supply for industrial growth.
    3. Grid Stability: Supports integration of renewable energy into national grids.
    4. Large-Scale Decarbonisation: Reduces emissions without compromising industrial energy demand.
    5. Land Efficiency: Requires comparatively less land than renewable alternatives for equivalent power generation.

    Conclusion

    Thorium offers India a unique opportunity to align energy security, clean growth, and technological self-reliance through its abundant domestic reserves. However, translating this strategic advantage into energy leadership depends on the successful operationalisation of the three-stage nuclear programme, particularly the scaling of Fast Breeder Reactors and thorium-based technologies. As India pursues net-zero emissions by 2070, thorium can emerge as a critical pillar of reliable, indigenous, and low-carbon energy transition.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] With growing energy needs should India keep on expanding its nuclear energy programme? Discuss the facts and fears associated with nuclear energy.

    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of India’s energy security, nuclear expansion, clean energy transition, and associated technological concerns. The article examines how thorium-based nuclear energy and PFBR can support India’s long-term energy needs.

  • Five southern states account for 75% of outstanding gold loans

    Why in the News?

    India’s gold loan market has emerged as the fastest-growing retail lending segment. It recorded a sharp 50.4% year-on-year growth, with five southern states, and Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Telangana, and Kerala, accounted for nearly 75% of India’s outstanding gold loans. The trend is significant because it reveals a stark regional contrast in credit behaviour, with even populous states like Uttar Pradesh (₹42,300 crore) lagging far behind Tamil Nadu (₹5.96 lakh crore) in gold loan penetration.

    Why Has Southern India Emerged as the Epicentre of Gold Loans?

    1. Agricultural Credit Linkages: High prevalence of agri-gold loans supports southern dominance, as banks use gold-backed lending to meet Priority Sector Lending (PSL) targets for agriculture.
    2. High Household Gold Ownership: Southern households traditionally hold larger quantities of gold jewellery, creating a stronger collateral base for borrowing.
    3. Cultural Acceptance of Gold Monetisation: Gold is widely treated as a financial asset rather than only ornamentation. This makes pledging jewellery socially acceptable during emergencies or for business needs.
    4. Dense Institutional Ecosystem: Strong presence of specialised gold loan NBFCs and bank branches ensures faster disbursal, easier access, and lower transaction costs.
      1. Example: Finance Giants like Muthoot Finance and Manappuram Finance both originated in Kerala.
    5. Greater Formal Credit Adoption: Borrowers in southern states show higher familiarity with organised gold-backed lending compared to informal borrowing channels.
    6. Higher Gold Prices and Loan Ticket Expansion: Rising gold valuations increased collateral worth, enabling borrowers to access larger loans and accelerating market growth.

    What Does the Data Reveal About Southern Dominance?

    1. Regional Concentration: Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka, Telangana, and Kerala account for nearly 75% of India’s gold loan outstanding.
    2. Outstanding Share: Out of ₹18.6 lakh crore, southern states account for ₹13.94 lakh crore (March 2026).
    3. State-wise Distribution:
      1. Tamil Nadu: ₹5.96 lakh crore
      2. Andhra Pradesh: ₹3.08 lakh crore
      3. Karnataka: ₹1.81 lakh crore
      4. Telangana: ₹1.60 lakh crore
      5. Kerala: ₹1.45 lakh crores

    Why Is Uttar Pradesh’s Low Gold Loan Penetration Significant?

    1. Population-Credit Disconnect: Despite being India’s most populous state and possessing substantial household gold holdings, Uttar Pradesh records only ₹42,300 crore in gold loan outstanding. This indicates weak formal credit uptake
    2. Regional Financial Imbalance: Sharp contrast with southern states highlights uneven regional deepening of secured retail credit, despite similar household demand for liquidity.
    3. Lower Formalisation of Household Finance: Greater dependence on informal borrowing channels may persist due to weaker penetration of organised gold-loan institutions.
    4. Limited Banking and NBFC Ecosystem: Lower density of specialised gold-loan providers reduces accessibility and familiarity with gold-backed borrowing.
    5. Credit Behaviour Differences: Unlike southern states where gold functions as a frequently monetised financial asset, northern households may treat gold more as a store of wealth/social asset than collateral.

    What Does the Comparative Data Reveal?

    1. Uttar Pradesh: ₹42,300 crore
    2. West Bengal: ₹35,000 crore
    3. Rajasthan: ₹41,700 crore
    4. Gujarat: ₹57,100 crore

    What Factors Are Driving the Rapid Expansion of Gold Loans?

    1. Rising Gold Prices: Higher collateral value enables borrowers to access larger loan amounts.
      1. Example: More Cash for the Same Gold: If a borrower pledged 50 grams of gold a few years ago, they might have qualified for a loan of ₹1.5 lakh. Today, that exact same jewelry can unlock ₹2.5 lakh or more.
    2. Secured Borrowing Preference: Gold loans provide relatively easier access to credit than unsecured personal loans.
      1. Gold loans require zero credit score checks (CIBIL scores are practically irrelevant), require no proof of income, and can be approved in under 15 minutes.
    3. Digital/Online Gold Loans: The rise of Online Gold Loans (OGL) and fintech partnerships has helped in:
      1. Locker-as-a-Service: Borrowers can store their gold in a bank’s secure vault once.
      2. Instant Drawdowns: Whenever they need cash, they can use a mobile app to instantly draw down a loan against that stored gold directly into their bank account, 24/7. They only pay interest for the exact number of days they use the funds.
    4. Increasing Credit Demand: Borrowers increasingly use gold loans to meet household expenses, consumption needs, and business requirements.
    5. Agricultural Reclassification: Shift of agri-gold loans into retail classification has contributed to portfolio expansion.
    6. Economic Uncertainty: Consumers increasingly prefer asset-backed borrowing during financial stress.

    How Fast Is India’s Gold Loan Market Growing?

    1. Fastest-Growing Lending Segment: Gold loans expanded 50.4% year-on-year and 15% quarter-on-quarter.
    2. Second-Largest Retail Product: Gold loans have emerged as the second-largest product in retail lending after home loans.
    3. Asset Quality Improvement: Early-stage delinquencies declined across ticket sizes between March 2025 and March 2026.
    4. Retail Credit Driver: Gold loans emerged as a major engine of retail credit growth in FY26.

    How Are Banks and NBFCs Competing in the Gold Loan Ecosystem?

    1. PSU Bank Dominance: Public sector banks continue to dominate gold loan originations by value.
    2. Market Share Decline: PSU banks’ share reduced from 51.1% in Q4FY24 to 44.6% in Q4FY26, despite retaining leadership.
    3. NBFC Expansion: NBFCs increased origination value share from 20.7% in Q4FY24 to 31.6% in Q4FY26.
    4. Volume Leadership: NBFCs account for 49% share in origination volume, reflecting strong penetration in smaller ticket loans.
    5. Distribution Advantage: Faster disbursal and deeper regional outreach strengthen NBFC-led growth.

    What Structural Changes Are Emerging in Gold Loan Borrowing?

    1. Higher Ticket Sizes: Borrowers increasingly seek larger loans due to rising gold prices.
    2. Income-Generating Uses: Loans increasingly finance business activity and productive expenditure, rather than only emergency consumption.
    3. Retail Portfolio Shift: Consumers increasingly shift toward secured retail credit amid tighter personal lending conditions.
    4. Collateral Strength: Larger loans in ₹2.5-5 lakh and ₹5 lakh+ categories witnessed improved collateral coverage.

    What Are the Broader Economic and Financial Implications?

    1. Financial Inclusion: Gold loans improve access to formal credit for households lacking traditional collateral.
    2. Credit Formalisation: Reduces dependence on informal moneylenders charging exorbitant interest.
    3. Consumption Stabilisation: Ensures liquidity during emergencies and supports household spending.
    4. MSME Financing: Facilitates short-term working capital for small businesses and self-employed households.
    5. Regional Imbalance: Concentration in southern India signals uneven access to financial products across regions.

    Conclusion

    Gold loans are increasingly emerging as an important pillar of India’s retail credit ecosystem. Ensuring wider regional penetration and balanced access to formal gold-backed finance will be essential for strengthening financial inclusion and reducing dependence on informal credit channels.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Is inclusive growth possible under market economy? State the significance of financial inclusion in achieving economic growth in India.

    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of financial inclusion, regional disparities in access to institutional credit, and inclusive economic growth.The article highlights how gold loans improve access to formal credit. But it also exposes regional imbalances, with southern states far ahead of states like Uttar Pradesh in secured lending penetration.

  • New Crystal Discovered in Debris of First Nuclear Explosion

    Why in the News?

    Scientists discovered a previously unknown crystal in trinitite, the glass formed after the 1945 Trinity nuclear test conducted by the United States in New Mexico.

    Key Highlights

    • Study published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
    • Researchers identified a rare cage-like crystal called a Clathrate

    What is Trinitite?

    • Glassy green material formed when the nuclear blast melted desert sand.
    • Created during the Trinity test on July 16, 1945.

    About the New Crystal

    • Composed of:
      • Calcium
      • Copper
      • Silicon
    • Classified as a Type-I clathrate

    Features

    • Silicon atoms form cage-like structures trapping other elements inside.
    • First clathrate discovered from a nuclear explosion product.

    How Was it Formed?

    The crystal formed under extreme conditions:

    • Temperature Above 1,500°C
    • Pressure Up to 8 gigapascals
    • Rapid cooling preserved the crystal structure.

    Link with Quasicrystals

    The study followed earlier discovery of a Quasicrystal in red trinitite (2021)

    Quasicrystals

    • Have ordered but non-repeating atomic patterns.
    • Earlier believed impossible in nature.
    • Researchers found Clathrates and quasicrystals formed separately during the blast.

    Scientific Importance

    The findings suggest:

    • Extreme environments can create entirely new forms of matter.
    • Nuclear blast conditions may help scientists develop novel synthetic materials.

    [2013] The efforts to detect the existence of Higgs boson particle have become frequent news in the recent past. What is /are the importance/importances of discovering this particle?
    1. It will enable us to understand why elementary particles have mass.
    2. technology to transferring matter from one point to another without traversing the physical space between them.
    3. It will enable us to create better fuels for nuclear fission.
    Select the correct answer using the codes given below:

    [A] 1 only
    [B] 2 and 3 only
    [C] 1 and 3 only
    [D] 1, 2 and 3

  • Core Sector Growth Rises to 1.7% in April 2026

    Why in the News?

    Growth in India’s eight core industries increased to 1.7% in April 2026, mainly driven by strong performance in the steel and cement sectors.

    What are Core Sectors?

    The eight core industries are:

    • Coal
    • Crude oil
    • Natural gas
    • Refinery products
    • Fertilisers
    • Steel
    • Cement
    • Electricity
    • These sectors together have about 40% weight in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).

    Key Highlights

    Overall Growth

    • April 2026: 1.7%
    • March 2026:
      • Revised upward to 1.2%
      • Earlier estimated contraction: -0.4%

    Sector-wise Performance

    Positive Growth

    Steel

    • Grew by 6.2%
    • Driven by higher construction and industrial activity.

    Cement

    • Grew by 9.4%
    • Highest growth in three months.

    Electricity

    • Grew by 4.1%
    • Three-month high.

    Sectors in Contraction

    Crude Oil

    • Contracted by 3.9%
    • Eighth consecutive month of decline.

    Natural Gas

    • Contracted by 4.3%
    • Affected by West Asia energy crisis.

    Fertilisers

    • Contracted by 8.6%
    • Linked to rising gas import prices.

    Coal

    • Output declined by 8.7%
    • Second consecutive month of contraction.

    Refinery Products

    • Contracted by 0.5%.

    [2015] In the ‘Index of Eight Core Industries’, which one of the following is given the highest weight?

    (a) Coal Production

    (b) Electricity generation

    (c) Fertilizer production

    (d) Steel production

  • Centre Opposes New Hydel Projects in Upper Ganga Basin

    Why in the News?

    The Union government informed the Supreme Court of India that no new hydroelectric projects should be permitted in the upper reaches of the Ganga in Uttarakhand.

    Key Highlights

    • Ministries of:
      • Environment
      • Jal Shakti
      • Power
    • Submitted a common affidavit opposing new hydel projects in the Alaknanda and Bhagirathi basins.

    Projects Allowed

    The Centre allowed only seven ongoing or substantially completed projects, including:

    • Tehri Pumped Storage Project
    • Tapovan Vishnugad
    • Vishnugad Pipalkoti
    • Singoli Bhatwari
    • Phata Byung

    Reasons for Restricting New Projects

    The government cited:

    • Seismic fragility of the Himalayas
    • Cumulative impact of “bumper-to-bumper” dams
    • Flood disasters such as:
      • 2013 Kedarnath floods
      • 2025 Dharali flash flood

    Background

    • The case originated after the 2013 Kedarnath disaster.
    • The Supreme Court had asked expert committees to study the impact of hydropower projects in Uttarakhand.

    [2009] The Dul Hasti Power Station is based on which one of the following rivers?

    (a) Beas

    (b) Chenab

    (c) Ravi

    (d) Sutlej

  • Supreme Court Flags Lack of Uniform Excise Laws Across States

    Why in the News?

    The Supreme Court of India raised concerns over differing State excise laws and the absence of a uniform definition of liquor “bottle”, which allegedly enables deceptive alcohol packaging.

    Key Observations by the Court

    • Chief Justice Surya Kant observed that cheap alcohol is being marketed deceptively as:
      • Fruit juice
      • Flavoured beverages
    • The Court noted misleading branding, such as“Green apple” vodka

    Issue Raised in the Petition

    • The petition was filed by: Community Against Drunken Driving

    Main Concerns

    • No uniform definition of “bottle” across States.
    • Some State excise laws even include:
      • Sacks
      • Wrappers
      • Cartons

    Risks Highlighted

    The petition argued that such packaging:

    • Encourages underage drinking
    • Promotes public consumption
    • Increases smuggling risks
    • Encourages drinking while travelling
    • Creates environmental hazards

    Public Health Concerns

    • Attractive colourful packaging resembles fruit drinks.
    • Health warnings are often not prominently displayed.
    • Alcohol companies allegedly use deceptive marketing to expand consumption.

    Court Action

    • The Supreme Court issued notice to:
      • Central Government
      • All State Governmentsare
    • seeking responses on the issue.

    Constitutional and Governance Aspect

    • Alcohol regulation falls under the State List in the Seventh Schedule of the Constitution.
    • States have power to frame excise laws and regulate liquor sale and taxation.

    [2024] Which one of the following statements is correct as per the Constitution of India?

    • (a) Inter-State trade and commerce is a State subject under the State List.
    • (b) Inter-State migration is a State subject under the State List.
    • (c) Inter-State quarantine is a Union subject under the Union List.
    • (d) Corporation tax is a State subject under the State List
  • [20th MAY 2026] The Hindu OpED: India’s EV ambition needs a grid strategy to match

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2023] The adoption of electric vehicles is rapidly growing worldwide. How do electric vehicles contribute to reducing carbon emissions and what are the key benefits they offer compared to traditional combustion engine vehicles?Linkage: This PYQ tests the EV transition debate, while the article deepens it by examining whether India’s electricity grid can sustain mass EV adoption. UPSC can extend the question from EV benefits to grid readiness, energy security, charging infrastructure, and power-sector reforms.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s EV transition is gaining momentum due to rising crude oil prices and energy-security concerns. However, the bigger challenge is not just EV adoption but whether India’s electricity grid can handle future charging demand. Full electrification may require 900-1,100 TWh of extra electricity, almost like building a second power system.

    Why Does India’s EV Transition Require a Fundamental Expansion of Electricity Infrastructure?

    1. Fleet Electrification Burden: India has nearly 420 million registered vehicles. Full electrification across categories could require an additional 900-1,100 TWh of electricity annually, depending on usage intensity and vehicle type.
    2. Partial Transition Impact: Even a 50% EV conversion by 2047 could increase electricity demand by nearly 500 TWh. This is equivalent to almost one-third of India’s present annual power generation.
    3. Second Power System Effect: Electrifying transport effectively requires creating a parallel energy ecosystem comparable to building a new power system. This is unlike gradual infrastructure upgrades witnessed historically.
    4. Freight Electrification Challenge: Heavy transport imposes disproportionate electricity demand due to high energy intensity. This makes freight, not scooters, the central grid concern.
    5. Long-Term Infrastructure Lag: India’s existing electricity infrastructure took nearly seven decades to evolve, whereas EV-led demand growth may materialise within two decades.

    Why Is the Political Visibility of Two-Wheeler Electrification Misleading?

    1. Dominant EV Narrative: Public discourse largely associates EV transition with scooters and commuter vehicles due to their high visibility and government incentives.
    2. Limited Grid Burden: India has around 309 million electric two-wheelers potential, yet complete conversion would add only 55-75 TWh annually, constituting less than 7% of projected EV electricity demand.
    3. Consumption Characteristics: A two-wheeler typically travels 5,000-7,000 km annually, consuming approximately 0.035 kWh/km. This results in relatively low aggregate electricity demand.
    4. Political Optics: Subsidies and adoption campaigns focus on visible commuter mobility while underemphasising grid-intensive sectors such as freight transport.
    5. Structural Misdiagnosis: Overemphasis on scooters risks obscuring the actual infrastructure bottleneck, powering commercial logistics networks.

    How Does Freight Electrification Create the Real Electricity Challenge?

    1. Heavy Goods Vehicle (HGV) Demand: India has approximately 6.26 million HGVs, each consuming 1.2-1.5 kWh per kilometre over nearly 60,000 km annually.
    2. Electricity Requirement: Electrifying HGVs alone could require nearly 450-565 TWh annually, exceeding several times the electricity consumed by the entire two-wheeler fleet.
    3. Medium Goods Vehicles (MGVs): Nearly one million MGVs would also significantly increase electricity requirements despite lower intensity.
    4. Passenger Car Comparison: A single heavy goods vehicle generates emissions equivalent to roughly 25 passenger vehicles, magnifying decarbonisation benefits but increasing grid stress.
    5. Freight-Centric Transition: “Electrifying roads” effectively means electrifying India’s logistics ecosystem rather than only personal mobility.

    Why Does EV Charging Create a Grid Stability Problem Beyond Annual Electricity Demand?

    1. Peak Demand Challenge: Power systems respond not only to annual consumption but also to instantaneous electricity demand, especially during evening hours.
    2. Simultaneous Charging Risk: If millions of EVs charge during evenings, electricity loads may rise by several hundred gigawatts, threatening supply stability.
    3. Distribution Network Constraints: High-tension depot connections for commercial fleets already face delays, revealing infrastructural bottlenecks.
    4. Financial Weakness of DISCOMs: Distribution companies remain burdened by accumulated losses, limiting their capacity to invest in required upgrades.
    5. Price Volatility Risk: Unmanaged charging could trigger supply disruptions and tariff spikes, affecting all electricity consumers rather than only EV owners.

    What Demand-Side Solutions Can Reduce EV-Induced Grid Stress?

    1. Time-of-Use Pricing: Differential tariffs incentivise charging during solar-rich daytime hours, reducing evening peak loads.
    2. Workplace Charging: Charging at offices shifts electricity demand away from residential peak periods.
    3. Battery Storage Hubs: Dedicated storage systems enable smoother electricity balancing during demand surges.
    4. Battery Swapping Networks: Fleet vehicles can replace depleted batteries instead of charging simultaneously.
    5. EV Tariff Innovations: Several states have introduced EV-specific tariff frameworks, though no uniform national standard exists.
    6. Smart Charging Capability: Chargers must respond dynamically to grid signals to optimise charging schedules.
    7. Retrofitting Challenge: Conventional chargers installed today without smart capability may require expensive retrofitting later.

    What Kind of Energy Mix Does India’s EV Grid Actually Need?

    1. Solar and Wind Energy: Renewable power offers lowest marginal cost and rapid deployment, but intermittency limits reliability due to 25-30% capacity factors.
    2. Storage Dependency: Renewable-heavy systems require battery storage or complementary generation to address non-solar hours.
    3. Nuclear Energy: Provides high-capacity-factor, weather-independent baseload power, though constrained by high costs and long gestation.
    4. Pumped Hydro: Ensures balancing capacity for variable renewable energy during demand fluctuations.
    5. Natural Gas: Supports short-duration peak electricity demand during transition periods.
    6. Diversified Energy Portfolio: Grid resilience requires a balanced mix rather than excessive reliance on a single source.
    7. Coal Expansion Concern: EVs powered primarily through coal merely replace oil-import dependence with coal-import dependence, especially from Australia and Indonesia, while reducing climate gains.
    8. Micro Modular Reactors (MMRs): May support highway corridors and urban logistics hubs by supplying localised baseload electricity.

    Why Does Battery Waste Pose a Long-Term Sustainability Challenge?

    1. End-of-Life Battery Surge: Hundreds of millions of EV batteries may eventually reach disposal stage.
    2. Recycling Infrastructure Deficit: India lacks battery recycling systems at required commercial scale.
    3. Waste Transition Risk: Failure to establish recycling systems could transform an energy transition into a waste-management crisis.
    4. Circular Economy Need: Recovery of lithium, nickel, cobalt, and rare materials becomes essential for long-term supply security.

    What Institutional and Policy Reforms Are Necessary for EV-Grid Readiness?

    1. Demand Projection Planning: Draft National Electricity Policy must integrate EV demand scenarios of 30%, 50%, and 100% electrification by 2047.
    2. Smart Charging Mandate: New charging infrastructure must include grid-responsive technology at equipment level.
    3. Freight Corridor Mapping: Golden Quadrilateral and Dedicated Freight Corridors require electricity planning before electric trucks scale commercially.
    4. Inter-Ministerial Coordination: Coordination between transport, power, finance, and distribution agencies ensures systemic preparedness.
    5. DISCOM Strengthening: Reform of Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme (RDSS) should include EV-readiness benchmarks.
    6. Last-Mile Delivery Electrification: Financial viability of EV logistics depends upon stronger distribution networks.

    Conclusion

    India’s EV transition cannot succeed through subsidies and vehicle sales alone. A sustainable shift to electric mobility requires grid readiness, smart charging systems, stronger DISCOMs, storage capacity, and freight-focused infrastructure planning. Without matching energy infrastructure, India risks replacing oil dependence with electricity stress rather than achieving true energy security and decarbonisation.

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