💥UPSC 2027,2028 Mentorship (May Batch) + Access XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

Search results for: “”

  • [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.

  • Why India needs to empower local bodies

    Why in the News?

    India’s rapid urbanisation has renewed focus on the weak condition of Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). Despite constitutional status under the 74th Constitutional Amendment, 1992, municipalities remain heavily dependent on states for funds, staff and decision-making. This exposes a major gap in India’s federal structure.

    What is the Constitutional position of Urban Local Bodies?

    India constitutionally recognised urban local governance through the 74th Constitutional Amendment Act, 1992, which came into force in 1993 to institutionalise democratic decentralisation in urban areas.

    Key Constitutional Dimensions 

    1. Part IX-A (Articles 243P-243ZG): Establishes the constitutional framework for municipalities and urban governance.
    2. Three-Tier Urban Structure: Provides for Municipal Corporations (large urban areas), Municipal Councils (smaller urban areas), and Nagar Panchayats (transitional urban areas).
    3. Twelfth Schedule: Assigns 18 functional responsibilities, including urban planning, roads, sanitation, slum improvement, public health, water supply, and land-use regulation.
    4. State Finance Commission (SFC): Ensures periodic recommendations for fiscal devolution to local bodies.
    5. State Election Commission (SEC): Ensures regular local elections and democratic continuity.
    6. Constitutional Objective: Seeks to establish democratic decentralisation through devolution of Funds, Functions and Functionaries (3Fs).
    Three Fs of Democratic
    DecentralisationFunds: Ensures fiscal autonomy through own-source revenues and predictable transfers.
    Functions: Ensures effective transfer of constitutionally mandated responsibilities.
    Functionaries: Ensures administrative autonomy through independent personnel control.

    Why has the 74th Amendment failed to empower ULBs?

    Constitutional recognition has not translated into real empowerment, leaving local bodies dependent rather than autonomous.

    1. Functional Incompleteness: Lack of Devolved Powers
      1. Incomplete Devolution: Restricts effective transfer of Funds, Functions and Functionaries (3Fs) despite constitutional backing under Part IX-A.
      2. Minimal Functional Transfer: States have only devolved an average of 9 out of the 18 functions, with crucial services like water supply, urban planning, and slum improvement often withheld. A 2022 Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) report covering 18 states revealed that in many areas, ULBs have full control over only 4 functions, a limited role in 7 functions, and almost no role in others.
      3. Proliferation of Parastatals: State governments frequently empower special-purpose agencies (parastatals) rather than elected municipalities. Authorities like water boards, development authorities, and housing boards manage critical urban services, marginalizing the elected city council.
      4. The Special Purpose Vehicles (SPV) Problem: Modern urban missions (e.g., Smart Cities Mission) often use SPVs controlled by bureaucrats rather than elected representatives, bypassing elected municipal councils.
    2. Fiscal Dependency: Lack of Financial Autonomy
      1. Weak Own-Source Revenue (OSR): Municipalities generate only a small portion of their income. A 2022-23 RBI report indicated that local bodies are overly dependent on grants, with very low generation of tax revenue. 
      2. Failure of State Finance Commissions (SFCs): The 74th Amendment mandates setting up SFCs to recommend financial devolution. However, states often delay forming SFCs, and when formed, their recommendations are frequently ignored.
    3. Administrative Control: Lack of Control Over Staff
      1. Dependence on State Cadre: Most municipal staff are deputed from the state government, meaning they are accountable to state bureaucracy rather than elected municipal officials.
      2. Lack of Own Personnel: Local bodies do not have their own specialized cadre of staff, affecting their capacity to plan and implement projects effectively.
      3. Political Centralisation: Allows states to retain substantial control over urban administration, weakening democratic decentralisation.
    4. Weakened Accountability and Political Structure
      1. Lack of Empowered Mayors: In many states, the Mayor’s position is not directly elected or lacks executive power, rendering the office a tokenistic figurehead.
      2. Neglect of Ward Committees: While the 74th Amendment mandates ward committees to encourage public participation, they exist only in a few states, weakening local democracy.
      3. Frequent Supersession: State governments often dissolve or supersede elected municipal councils prematurely, bypassing the 74th amendment’s intention of 5-year fixed terms.
    5. Constitutional-Practical Gap: Creates a disconnect between constitutional intent and actual governance outcomes.

    Why does political centralization persist within the urban governance architecture?

    1. The Low-Equilibrium Trap: It allows state political leaders to withhold administrative powers from local bodies under the pretext of limited local capacity. This creates a cycle that justifies keeping control centralized.
    2. Sidelined Mayoral Positions: Limits the role of the Mayor to a largely ceremonial figure with short tenures and little executive authority. This is unlike the powerful mayoral models seen in global metropolises.
    3. Suppressed Local Leadership: Discourages the emergence of strong local leadership, as state governments view empowered municipal leaders as potential political competitors.
    4. Examples of Weak Executive Terms: Restricts political continuity across major urban areas, as seen in cities like Mumbai or Bengaluru. Here the mayoral term is often limited to a single year or lacks direct executive power over the municipal budget.

    How does India compare globally in empowering local governments?

    1. Public Workforce Concentration: The Capacity Deficit
      1. India: Local government employment accounts for slightly above 10% of India’s total public workforce.
      2. Global Contrast: In sharp contrast, nearly two-thirds (60-65%) of all government employees in China and the United States function at the local level.
    2. Service Delivery Deficit: Restricts local governance capacity in urban planning, public utilities and municipal administration.
      1. The Indian Reality: Functions like urban planning, public utilities (water, sanitation), and municipal administration are fragmented. 
      2. The Global Contrast: Global cities operate as autonomous service powerhouses. For example, the Mayor of London or the New York City government directly controls public transit, public housing, policing, and zoning laws.
    3. Economic Governance Gap: Weakens India’s ability to develop city-led growth ecosystems compared to China.
      1. The Indian Reality: Indian cities are treated as centers of consumption rather than engines of production. Municipalities have virtually no power to independently attract foreign direct investment (FDI), offer localized tax incentives, or create bespoke economic zones. They rely heavily on top-down state and central government schemes.
      2. The Global Contrast: China’s economic miracle was largely built on city-led growth ecosystems. Chinese municipal leaders are given vast economic autonomy to negotiate directly with global corporations, build infrastructure, and compete aggressively with neighboring cities for investments.
    4. Fiscal Decentralisation: The Funding Disparity
      1. The Indian Reality: Local government revenue in India accounts for less than 1% of the national GDP.
      2. The Global Contrast: Local government revenues routinely exceed 6% to 10% of GDP in many developed and emerging economies

    Why are Urban Local Bodies fiscally weak in India?

    1. Stagnant Own Revenues: Limits ULB tax generation to only 0.3% of GDP, remaining largely stagnant over decades.
      1. Lack of Buoyant Taxes: The abolition of Octroi (a local entry tax) and the subsequent rollout of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) subsumed several local taxes. This stripped ULBs of their most dynamic, inflation-linked local revenue sources.
      2. Outdated Valuation and Leakages: Municipalities rely on outdated property assessment systems, suffer from low collection efficiencies, and lack comprehensive digital property registries (GIS mapping), causing massive revenue leakages.
    2. Asymmetric Fiscal Growth: Allows Centre and States to significantly increase independent revenues while municipal finances remain weak.
    3. High Fiscal Dependence: Forces ULBs to depend on grants and transfers for basic operations.
    4. Low Spending Capacity: Restricts third-tier spending to less than 1% of GDP, whereas Centre and States spend nearly 15-20 times more.
    5. Conditional Funding: Ties urban reform initiatives to centrally sponsored schemes rather than stable municipal revenues.
    6. Example: Schemes such as Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission (JNNURM) and AMRUT linked funding to reforms but did not fundamentally resolve fiscal dependence.

    Why did India fail to monetise urban land unlike China?

    1. The Missed Opportunity of Land Value Capture: Urbanization naturally causes land and property values to skyrocket relative to GDP. China successfully harnessed this trend, while India could not effectively capture rising urban land values during rapid urbanisation.
      1. The Chinese Miracle: China used rapid economic growth to fiscalise rising land values. Instead of selling land off, it systematically leased land. This scaled its revenue from land taxes and sales from less than 1% of GDP to over 10% of GDP during peak years.
    The Rise: China’s revenue from land taxes and sales hovered near 1-2% of GDP in the early 2000s, began climbing rapidly after 2009, and spiked sharply throughout the 2010s.
    The Peak: It reached its absolute highest point, exceeding 10% of GDP, in the year 2020, right before starting a downward trajectory in 2021.
    1. The Indian Stagnation: In contrast, India’s revenues from land taxes remained roughly stagnant at about 1% of GDP over the same 1999 to 2021, completely failing to benefit from the real estate boom.
    1. Restrictive Legal Frameworks and Ideological Baggage: The inability to fiscalise land owes much to “socialist-era idealist ideology intersecting with vested interests.”
      1. The ULCRA Bottleneck: The Urban Land Ceiling and Regulation Act (ULCRA) of 1976 fragmented urban land markets. Designed to prevent land hoarding, it backfired by trapping massive amounts of land in legal disputes.
      2. Artifical Scarcity: It splintered urban land into small parcels with ill-defined titles. This created an artificial scarcity of land, skyrocketing prices for citizens, and yielded a trivial amount of revenue for the state.
    2. Underutilised Public Land and State Monopoly: The Indian state sits on vast wealth that it refuses to or cannot mobilize.
      1. The Monopoly Contrast: Unlike India, China maintained a complete monopoly on land, allowing it to act as the city’s primary bank.
      2. Frozen State Assets: In India, massive public sector entities, such as public enterprises, ports, the defence department, state-managed temples, and railways, hold vast amounts of vacant or encroached-upon land. These valuable urban parcels have never been monetised to fund municipal infrastructure.
    3. Weak Property Tax Systems: Restricts municipal revenue mobilisation through poor valuation and collection mechanisms.
    4. Real Estate Distortions: Encourages informality and contributes to the growth of black money in real estate markets.
    5. Striking Data: Chinese local land revenue per urban resident was nearly 15 times higher than India in 1999, rising to almost 225 times higher by 2020.

    How has excessive state control weakened urban democracy?

    1. Appointment Control: Allows state governments to appoint municipal commissioners and senior administrators.
    2. Personnel Dependence: Keeps municipal staff accountable primarily to states rather than elected city governments.
    3. Weak Democratic Accountability: Reduces responsiveness to local citizen concerns.
    4. Administrative Over-Centralisation: Limits municipal flexibility in planning and public service delivery.
    5. Reduced Local Innovation: Prevents cities from designing context-specific development models.

    What is the ‘low-equilibrium political trap’ affecting Indian cities?

    “Low-equilibrium political trap” is a self-reinforcing vicious cycle where the upper tiers of government deliberately keep Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) weak, and then use that weakness as a justification to deny them autonomy. Instead of evolving into self-governing institutions, Indian cities are structurally pinned down into a state of permanent underdevelopment.

    1. Deliberate Under-Empowerment: Keeps local governments weak in taxation, staffing and administration.
    2. Dependency Cycle: Uses weak performance as justification for withholding further powers.
    3. Political Incentive Problem: Discourages municipalities from levying realistic property taxes and user charges.
    4. Institutional Stagnation: Produces a self-reinforcing cycle of weak finances and poor governance.
    5. Outcome: Cities remain administratively dependent instead of functioning as autonomous governance institutions.

    Can empowered cities strengthen India’s economic growth and federalism?

    1. Competitive Sub-Federalism: Encourages cities to compete for investment, talent and industrial growth.
    2. Urban Growth Engines: Positions cities as centres of innovation, employment and productivity.
    3. Rise of Tier-II Cities: Highlights potential in Bhubaneswar, Coimbatore, Indore, Kochi, Mohali and Surat as emerging economic hubs.
    4. Urbanisation Pressures: Makes city governance increasingly important amid congestion and pollution in megacities like Delhi and Bengaluru.
    5. Demographic Shift: Increases political importance of urban voters, especially with future delimitation.

    Way Forward: How Can India Strengthen Urban Local Governance?

    1. Genuine Devolution of 3Fs: Ensure effective transfer of Funds, Functions and Functionaries to Urban Local Bodies in line with the spirit of the 74th Constitutional Amendment.
    2. Strengthening Municipal Finances: Expand property tax reforms, user charges and land value capture mechanisms to reduce dependence on state grants.
    3. Administrative Autonomy: Grant municipalities greater control over appointments, staffing and personnel management to improve accountability.
    4. Land Monetisation Reforms: Unlock underutilised public land and adopt scientific urban land valuation to generate sustainable municipal revenues.
    5. Competitive Sub-Federalism: Empower Tier-II and Tier-III cities to emerge as growth centres through decentralised planning and investment.

    Conclusion

    India’s federalism cannot remain confined to Centre–State relations when cities are becoming the primary drivers of economic growth. Constitutional recognition without real devolution has left Urban Local Bodies dependent and weak. Strengthening municipal autonomy, finances and administrative capacity is essential for building liveable cities and making democratic decentralisation meaningful.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] “The states in India seem reluctant to empower urban local bodies both functionally as well as financially.” Comment.

    Linkage: The PYQ directly tests issues of devolution, municipal autonomy and fiscal decentralisation, which form the article’s core theme. The article explains this reluctance through weak fiscal autonomy, state control over staff, incomplete transfer of functions and poor municipal revenues despite the 74th Amendment.

  • Besides Hormuz, two more straits in India Ocean are vital for global trade

    Why in the News?

    Tensions around the Strait of Hormuz have again brought global maritime chokepoints into focus after Iran discussed tighter regulation of vessel movement through the route. Also, global trade does not depend only on Hormuz. Both the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait and the Strait of Malacca are equally critical. At the same time, any disruption in these narrow passages can delay trade, increase fuel prices, and disrupt supply chains worldwide.

    What are the major maritime chokepoints and why are they important?

    A strait is a naturally narrow water passage connecting two larger water bodies and acting as a route for ships and maritime trade.

    1. Strait of Hormuz
      1. Connects the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea.
      2. Serves as the main exit route for oil from Gulf countries.
      3. Handles nearly 20% of global oil and LNG trade.
    2. Bab-el-Mandeb Strait
      1. Connects the Red Sea and Suez Canal to the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean.
      2. Located between Yemen (Arabian Peninsula) and Djibouti-Eritrea (Horn of Africa).
      3. Functions as the western gateway of the Indian Ocean.
    3. Strait of Malacca
      1. Connects the Indian Ocean to the South China Sea and Pacific Ocean.
      2. Lies between Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore.
      3. Functions as the eastern gateway of the Indian Ocean and Asia’s most important trade corridor.

    Together, these narrow maritime routes form the backbone of globalisation by enabling uninterrupted movement of oil, gas, manufactured goods, food commodities, and industrial inputs.

    Why Are Maritime Straits Called the Lifelines of Global Trade?

    1. Maritime Chokepoints: Refers to narrow sea passages through which a disproportionately high volume of world trade moves, making them economically indispensable.
    2. Indian Ocean Centrality: Facilitates nearly 100,000 vessel movements annually, making the Indian Ocean a major highway of world commerce.
    3. Container Trade: Carries approximately 30% of global container traffic, reflecting dependence of manufacturing economies on uninterrupted shipping.
    4. Energy Transit: Supports nearly 80% of global seaborne oil trade, making disruptions immediately visible in fuel prices and inflation.
    5. Supply Chain Dependence: Ensures movement of electronics, machinery, industrial raw materials, food products, and consumer goods.
    6. Economic Shock Potential: Creates systemic risks because disruption in one chokepoint can affect prices and deliveries worldwide.
    7. Example: The Ever Given blockage in the Suez Canal (2021) delayed global trade worth billions of dollars and exposed vulnerabilities in maritime logistics.

    How Does the Strait of Malacca Function as Asia’s Economic Lifeline?

    1. Strategic Connectivity & Geography
      1. Strategic Connectivity: Connects the Indian Ocean with the South China Sea and Pacific Ocean, making it the shortest maritime route between Asia, the Middle East, and Europe.
      2. Geographical Feature: Extends roughly 900 km, narrowing to nearly 2.8 km at its narrowest point, creating a major bottleneck.
        1. The Phillips Channel Choke Point: The precise narrowest point (2.8 km / 1.7 miles) is located specifically in the Phillips Channel near Singapore. This is the absolute bottleneck where collision and piracy risks are highest.
    2. Global Economic & Trade Impact Traffic:
      1. Trade Share: Facilitates nearly 24% of global maritime trade.
      2. Shipping Traffic: Carries around 45% of global shipping traffic and nearly one-third of global trade.
      3. Dry Bulk Trade: Facilitates approximately 23% of dry bulk cargo, including coal, grains, and minerals.
    3. Energy Security & East Asian Dependence
      1. East Asian Dependence: Supports manufacturing economies of China, Japan, South Korea, and ASEAN nations.
      2. China’s “Malacca Dilemma”: Coined by Hu Jintao (2003), referring to China’s strategic vulnerability because nearly 75% of Chinese oil imports transit through Malacca.
      3. Global Oil Hub: Accounts for nearly 29% of global seaborne oil shipments (surpassing the Strait of Hormuz at over 23 million barrels per day).
    4. Operational Monopolies & Constraints
      1. Alternative Route Constraints: Makes the Lombok and Sunda Straits commercially unattractive as they add nearly 1,000-1,500 nautical miles and up to five extra sailing days.
      2. Singapore’s Strategic Position: Reinforces importance because Singapore functions as one of the world’s busiest transshipment and ship-refuelling hubs.

    Why Is Bab-el-Mandeb Emerging as the Most Vulnerable Trade Chokepoint?

    1. Strategic Position & Geography
      1. Strategic Position: Connects the Red Sea and Suez Canal with the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean, serving as the western maritime gateway.
      2. Meaning of the Name: Means “Gate of Tears”, historically associated with dangerous navigation.
      3. The Choke Point: Narrows to just 26 km (16 miles) wide, concentrating vessel traffic.
    2. Global Trade & Energy Impact
      1. Trade Volume: Handles around 8.7% of global seaborne trade.
      2. Oil Transit: Facilitates nearly 9.3% of global crude oil and petroleum shipments.
      3. Europe-Asia Trade Link: Acts as a critical route connecting European and Asian markets via the Suez Canal.
    3. Security Threats & Geopolitical Risk
      1. Security Threat: Faces attacks from Yemen-based Houthi rebels, especially after the Israel-Gaza conflict (2023).
      2. Asymmetric Warfare: Proximity to unstable coastlines makes commercial vessels easy targets.
    4. Commercial Fallout & Economic Toll
      1. Insurance Costs: Raises shipping insurance premiums due to missile and drone threats.
      2. Commercial Disruptions: Forces shipping companies to avoid the route, delaying supply chains.
      3. Slow Recovery: Shipping traffic has recovered only partially despite naval interventions.

    Why Are Alternative Routes Not a Practical Solution?

    1. Cape of Good Hope Diversion: Forces ships bypassing Bab-el-Mandeb to sail around southern Africa.
    2. Time Penalty: Adds nearly 10-14 days to shipping journeys.
    3. Cost Escalation: Increases voyage costs by nearly $2 million per trip due to higher fuel consumption and labour expenses.
    4. Infrastructure Challenges: Limits viability of alternative Indonesian straits because of shallow waters and weaker port infrastructure.
    5. Commercial Efficiency: Makes existing chokepoints indispensable as shorter routes reduce transport cost and turnaround time.

    How Are Geopolitical Tensions Turning Maritime Routes into Strategic Flashpoints?

    1. Weaponisation of Geography: Converts narrow waterways into tools of geopolitical pressure.
      1. Example: The Strait of Hormuz; Amid severe escalations, the waterway has effectively seen halts in commercial oil and gas transit. This is due to the targeted drone strikes, naval gridlocks, and aggressive state enforcement
    2. Unilateral Control Risks: Raises concerns when coastal states attempt tighter control or regulation over globally used waterways.
      1. Example: The South China Sea; The China Coast Guard (CCG) has scaled up aggressive patrols, using high-pressure water cannons and ramming tactics against Philippine vessels near Scarborough and Sabina Shoals. This is done to enforce unilateral sovereignty over a critical trade artery.
    3. Non-State Actor Threats: Demonstrates how militant groups can disrupt world trade despite advanced naval surveillance.
      1. Example: The Red Sea & Bab-el-Mandeb; Yemen-based Houthi rebels utilized inexpensive drones and anti-ship missiles
    4. Freedom of Navigation Concerns: Challenges the principle of free maritime movement under UNCLOS.
      1. Example: The Black Sea Corridor; The ongoing naval blockades and targeted infrastructure strikes stemming from the Russia-Ukraine war have severely challenged free navigation principles
    5. Naval Competition: Encourages stronger maritime deployments by powers including India, China, and the United States.

    What Are the Implications for India?

    1. Energy Security: India imports nearly 85% of crude oil, much of which passes through Indian Ocean chokepoints.
    2. Trade Dependence: Nearly 95% of India’s trade by volume moves through maritime routes.
    3. Strategic Geography: Places India at the centre of Indian Ocean security dynamics.
    4. SAGAR Doctrine: Strengthens India’s maritime cooperation and regional security approach.
    5. Indian Navy’s Role: Supports anti-piracy operations, maritime surveillance, and protection of Sea Lines of Communication (SLOCs).

    Conclusion

    According to Dr C Rajamohan, ‘’Unlike the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, the Indian Ocean is closed, that is, few straits control its access. This makes these straits immensely important for international trade.’’ The growing vulnerability of the Hormuz, Bab-el-Mandeb, and Malacca straits shows how globalisation depends on a few narrow maritime routes. As geopolitical tensions intensify and shipping disruptions become frequent, ensuring secure and open sea lanes has become central to global economic stability. For India, safeguarding these maritime corridors is no longer merely a strategic concern but an economic necessity.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Discuss the geopolitical and geostrategic importance of Maldives for India with a focus on global trade and energy flows. Further also discuss how this relationship affects India’s maritime security and regional stability amidst international competition?

    Linkage: This PYQ tests understanding of the Indian Ocean Region (IOR), maritime geopolitics, trade routes, energy flows, and strategic competition. Similarly, Bab-el-Mandeb, Hormuz, and Malacca shape global trade and energy security in the IOR, directly connecting with India’s maritime interests and regional strategic stability.

  • Chandrayaan-3 ‘Hop’ Experiment Reveals Layered Lunar Surface

    Why in the News?

    Scientists analysing data from Chandrayaan-3 discovered that the Moon’s upper surface near the landing site has two distinct layers within a few centimetres of depth.

    Key Findings

    • The lunar surface (regolith) is not uniform.
    • A loose porous upper layer quickly changes into a denser compact layer:
      • About 2 to 6 cm below the surface.

    Role of the ‘Hop’ Experiment

    • Chandrayaan-3 lander performed a small “hop”.
    • The lander:
      • Lifted about 40 cm above the surface
      • Moved nearly 50 cm before landing again

    ChaSTE Instrument

    • The findings are based on data from Chandra’s Surface Thermophysical Experiment (ChaSTE)

    Function

    • Measured thermal properties and temperature profile of lunar soil.
    • Used a rod-shaped probe with temperature sensors.

    Important Discoveries

    • Even at 6-9 cm depth, the Moon showed layered structure.
    • Temperature dropped sharply with depth:
      • Around 60°C lower at 10 cm depth compared to the surface.
    [2016] Consider the following statements: The Mangalyaan launched by ISRO 
    1. is also called the Mars Orbiter Mission 
    2. made India the second country to have a spacecraft orbit the Mars after USA 
    3. made India the only country to be successful in making its spacecraft orbit the Mars in its very first attempt 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    [A] 1 only [B] 2 and 3 only [C] 1 and 3 only [D] 1, 2 and 3
  • U.S. Clears Apache and Howitzer Support Deals for India

    Why in the News?

    The United States approved support service deals for Apache helicopters and M777 howitzers for India, strengthening India-U.S. defence ties.

    Key Highlights

    Apache Helicopter Support Deal

    • Estimated value: $198.2 million
    • Includes:
      • Engineering and logistics support
      • Technical data and publications
      • Personnel training
      • Maintenance support

    M777A2 Ultra-Light Howitzer Support

    • Estimated value: $230 million
    • Includes:
      • Spare parts
      • Repairs
      • Technical assistance
      • Field service support

    About AH-64E Apache

    • Advanced attack helicopter used for:
      • Precision strikes
      • Anti-armour operations
      • Battlefield support

    About M777A2 Ultra-Light Howitzer

    • Lightweight artillery gun.
    • Can be airlifted for rapid deployment in mountainous regions.
    [2025] With reference to India’s defense, consider the following pairs: Aircraft type Description 
    1. Dornier-228: Maritime patrol aircraft 
    2. IL-76: Supersonic combat aircraft 
    3. C-17: Globe Master IIIMilitary transport aircraft 
    How many of the pairs given above are correctly matched? 
    [A] Only one [B] Only two [C] All the three [D] None
  • Strategic Importance of Indian Ocean Straits

    Why in the News?

    Rising tensions around the Strait of Hormuz have highlighted the strategic importance of other Indian Ocean chokepoints such as the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait and the Strait of Malacca for global trade and energy supplies.

    Strait of Hormuz

    • Connects the Persian Gulf with the Arabian Sea.
    • Carries around:
      • One-fifth of global oil and LNG supplies.
    • Iran recently announced mechanisms to regulate vessel movement.

    Bab-el-Mandeb Strait

    • Between Arabian Peninsula and Horn of Africa.
    • Connects:
      • Red Sea
      • Suez Canal
      • Gulf of Aden
    • Importance
      • About 8.7% of global seaborne trade passed through it in 2023.
      • Major route linking Asia and Europe.
      • Important for global crude oil shipments.
    • Security Concerns
      • Threatened by Houthi attacks from Yemen.
      • Disruptions affect shipping through the Suez Canal route.

    Strait of Malacca

    • Between: Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore
    • Shortest sea route linking Indian Ocean and Pacific Ocean.
    • Around 24% of global maritime trade passed through it in 2023.
    • Carries:
      • 45% of global oil shipments
      • 26% of internationally traded cars
      • 23% of dry bulk cargo
    [2024] Consider the following statements: 
    Statement-I Sumed pipeline is a strategic route for Persian Gulf oil and Natural gas shipments to Europe. 
    Statement-II: Sumed pipeline connects the Red Sea with the Mediterranean Sea. 
    Which one of the following is correct in respect of the above statements? 
    [A] Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II explains Statement-I 
    [B] Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct, but Statement-II does not explain Statement-I 
    [C] Statement-I is correct, but Statement-II is incorrect 
    [D] Statement-I is incorrect, but Statement-II is correct
  • Delhi Police Seek Review of UAPA Bail Principles

    Why in the News?

    The Delhi Police urged the Supreme Court of India to refer the issue of bail under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, 1967 (UAPA) to a larger Bench, citing “conflicting” judgments on prolonged incarceration and bail.

    Key Issue Before the Court

    • The question is whether: Long incarceration and delay in trial can override strict bail restrictions under UAPA.

    Delhi Police’s Argument

    Additional Solicitor General S. V. Raju argued:

    • Under Section 43D(5) of UAPA, the presumption of innocence takes a “backseat”.
    • If accusations appear “prima facie true”, bail restrictions become mandatory.
    • Conflicting Supreme Court judgments require consideration by a larger Bench.

    Background of the Case

    • The hearing concerned bail pleas of:
      • Abdul Khalid Saifi
      • Tasleem Ahmad
    • Accused in the 2020 Delhi riots conspiracy case.

    Reference to Recent Supreme Court Judgment

    • A Bench led by: B. V. Nagarathna and Ujjal Bhuyan recently observed:
    • “Bail is the rule and jail is the exception” even under UAPA.
    • Prolonged incarceration violates:
      • Right to life
      • Personal liberty
      • Speedy trial under Article 21 of the Constitution of India

    K.A. Najeeb Judgment

    • The Court referred to the Union of India v. K.A. Najeeb case, which held: Constitutional courts can grant bail despite UAPA restrictions when trials are excessively delayed.

    Section 43D(5) of UAPA

    • Restricts bail if accusations appear prima facie true.
    • Considered one of the strictest bail provisions in Indian law.

    Related Development

    A Delhi court dismissed interim bail plea of Umar Khalid for attending bereavement rituals and caring for his ailing mother.

    UPSC Prelims Pointers

    • UAPA is India’s anti-terror law.
    • Section 43D(5) imposes strict bail conditions.
    • Article 21 guarantees life and personal liberty.
    • K.A. Najeeb judgment recognised prolonged incarceration as ground for bail.
    [2020] Consider the following statements: 
    1. The Constitution of India defines its ‘basic structure’ in terms of federalism, secularism, fundamental rights and democracy. 
    2. The Constitution of India provides for ‘judicial review’ to safeguard the citizens’ liberties and to preserve the ideals on which the Constitution is based. 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    a) 1 only
    b) 2 only
    c) Both 1 and 2
    d) Neither 1 nor 2
  • Tiger Deaths in Kanha Tiger Reserve Raise CDV Concerns

    Why in the News?

    A sixth tiger has died in Madhya Pradesh’s Kanha Tiger Reserve within a month, with authorities suspecting infection by the Canine Distemper Virus (CDV).

    Key Highlights

    • Latest victim:
      • Six-year-old male tiger
      • Found dead in Mukki range of KTR
    • Earlier deaths: One tigress and four cubs in Sarhi range

    What is CDV (Canine Distemper)?

    • Highly contagious viral disease.
    • Mainly spreads through infected dogs.
    • Affects:
      • Respiratory system
      • Nervous system
      • Immune system

    Why is it a Concern?

    • Virus may be spreading across different ranges of the reserve.
    • Stray dogs entering buffer and core forest areas are suspected carriers.

    Role of Authorities

    • The National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) and Union government have sought reports from State officials regarding the tiger deaths.

    About Kanha Tiger Reserve

    • Located in Madhya Pradesh.
    • One of India’s major tiger reserves.
    • Part of the Project Tiger network.
    Consider the following statements about National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA): 
    1.It was constituted under Biodiversity act, 2002. 
    2.It is a statutory authority to implement Project Tiger. 
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct? 
    [A] 1 only [B] 2 only [C] Both 1 and 2 [D] Neither 1 nor 2
  • 🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2026] By Sreejay Sir, lead Prelims Prog, Civilsdaily IAS | Summary of all Elimination techniques in One Go | Join on 20th May at 7PM

    🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2026] By Sreejay Sir, lead Prelims Prog, Civilsdaily IAS | Summary of all Elimination techniques in One Go | Join on 20th May at 7PM

    Register for the session


    Read about Webinar


    Most students know elimination techniques. Very few know how to apply them effectively inside the exam hall.

    UPSC Prelims is no longer just about information. It is increasingly becoming a test of smart decision making, option analysis, and risk management under pressure.

    In this LIVE session, Sreejay Sir will revise all major elimination techniques in one go, along with the practical strategy needed to maximize marks in the final phase before Prelims 2026.

    Sreejay Sir, Civilsdaily IAS

    What this session is really about:

    • The most effective elimination techniques used in UPSC Prelims
    • How to approach difficult and confusing options
    • Intelligent guessing vs risky guessing
    • PYQ-based patterns and recurring traps
    • How toppers eliminate statements quickly under pressure
    • Final revision strategy for the last phase before Prelims
    • How to improve accuracy while attempting more questions


    Who should attend:
    •UPSC Prelims 2026 aspirants
    •Candidates struggling with revision overload
    •Aspirants stuck in the 75–90 marks range
    •Anyone looking for a structured final revision roadmap

    This is not a theoretical session. It is a practical revision-focused class designed for serious Prelims aspirants looking to improve scores in the final stretch.

    Join us, for a 45 minute live Zoom session on 20th May at 7PM.

    See you in masterclass.



    It will be a 45 minute session, post which we will open up the floor for all kinds of queries which a beginner must have. No questions are taboo and Sreejay sir is known to be patiently solving all your doubts.

    Join us for a Zoom session on 20th May at 7 PM. This session is a must attend for you If you are attempting UPSC for the first time or have attempted earlier and now preparing for 2026, then it is going to be a valuable session for you too.

    See you in the session”

    Register for the session for a complete in-depth UPSC Prep


    In this Civilsdaily masterclass, you will get:

    1. A 45-minute deep dive on how to plan your UPSC strategy from the start to the end.
    2. How do first-attempt IAS Rankers get the most out of their one year prep?
    3. Insider tips that only the top IAS and IPS rankers know and apply to get rank.

    By the end, you’ll have razor-sharp clarity and a clear path to crack UPSC with confidence and near-perfect certainty. 

    Join UPSC session on 20th May, at 7 PM

    (Don’t wait—the next webinar/session won’t be until End May’26)



    These masterclasses are packed with value. They are conducted in private with a closed community. We rarely open these webinars for everyone for free. This time we are keeping it for 300 seats only.

    Ready to attend the UPSC Webinar?


    Not sure yet?

    We recommend you register here. It takes less than 10 seconds to register.

    • No spam! Once in a while, we’ll only send you high-quality exam-related content. 
    • We will inform you about the upcoming Masterclasses that might benefit you.
    • You can demand one free mentorship call from verified Civilsdaily mentors. 
    • You can always choose to unsubscribe. 
  • [19th May 2026] The Hindu OpED: Improving efficiency of fertilizer use in India

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2020] What are the major factors responsible for making rice-wheat system a success? In spite of this success, how has this system become bane in India?
    Linkage: This PYQ is highly relevant because the article directly critiques the rice-wheat dominated cropping system, driven by MSP and fertilizer subsidies, for causing soil degradation and excessive fertilizer dependence. The article’s core argument on the “fertilizer trap,” monocropping, and need for pulse diversification can be used as contemporary value addition to enrich this answer.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s fertilizer policy has entered a structural paradox: despite spending over ₹2 lakh crore annually on fertilizer subsidies, a substantial share of nutrients fails to translate into food output and instead leaks into the environment through air and water pollution. The core challenge before Indian agriculture is no longer fertilizer availability, but fertilizer-use efficiency, as excessive and imbalanced use has created a “fertilizer trap”. This trap weakens soil health, inflates fiscal burdens, and threatens long-term food security.

    Why has India’s fertilizer ecosystem become structurally vulnerable?

    1. Urea Dependence: India produces nearly 80% of domestic urea requirements, yet remains dependent on imported natural gas feedstock, exposing domestic prices to global energy shocks.
    2. Phosphatic Vulnerability: India imports almost the entire requirement of mineral rock phosphate, creating dependence for phosphatic fertilizer manufacturing.
    3. West Asia Risk: Regional conflicts in West Asia increase shipping, fuel, and raw material costs, directly inflating India’s subsidy burden.
    4. Fiscal Exposure: Global fertilizer price volatility automatically raises government subsidy expenditure because domestic fertilizer prices remain politically controlled.

    Strategic Concern

    1. Food Security Risk: Fertilizer supply disruptions directly threaten agricultural productivity in a country where nearly half the workforce depends on agriculture.

    What is the Fertilizer Trap?

    A condition where excessive chemical fertilizer use reduces soil productivity, forcing farmers to apply even larger quantities to maintain the same yield.

    Structural Drivers

    1. Organic Matter Depletion: Excessive fertilizer application reduces soil organic carbon, weakening soil structure and long-term productivity.
    2. Declining Water Retention: Chemically degraded soils lose moisture-holding capacity, increasing vulnerability to drought and erratic monsoons.
    3. Diminishing Marginal Returns: Rising fertilizer application fails to produce proportional increases in output, increasing input costs without equivalent yield gains.
    4. Nutrient Imbalance: Over-reliance on nitrogenous fertilizers (urea) disturbs the NPK balance (Nitrogen-Phosphorus-Potassium).

    Environmental Consequences

    1. Air Pollution: Nitrogen fertilizers release ammonia emissions, contributing to air pollution.
    2. Water Pollution: Excess phosphates trigger water eutrophication, damaging aquatic ecosystems.
    3. Climate Impact: Fertilizer misuse increases greenhouse gas emissions, accelerating global warming.
    4. Biodiversity Loss: Soil microbial diversity declines due to excessive chemical exposure.

    Data

    1. Subsidy Inefficiency: More than two-thirds of India’s ₹2 lakh crore fertilizer subsidy reportedly fails to become food output and is instead lost to environmental leakages.

    Why has India’s fertilizer subsidy regime failed to improve efficiency?

    1. Subsidy Distortion
      1. Cheap Urea Incentive: Heavy subsidy makes urea disproportionately cheaper than phosphatic and potassic fertilizers, encouraging overuse.
      2. Nutrient-Based Subsidy (NBS) Limitation: Although introduced to rationalize fertilizer use, urea remains outside effective market pricing reforms, weakening impact.
    2. Technology Limitations
      1. Neem-Coated Urea: Reduces diversion and slows nitrogen release but fails to eliminate significant nitrogen losses through ammonia volatilization.
    3. Policy Failure
      1. Consumption Growth: Fertilizer use continues to rise despite repeated policy attempts to improve efficiency.
      2. Weak Incentives: Subsidies reward quantity consumed, not efficiency achieved.

    Institutional Gap

    1. Defunct Coordination: The Interministerial National Nitrogen Steering Committee ceased functioning before implementing major reforms.

    How do MSP distortions and cropping patterns worsen fertilizer inefficiency?

    1. Procurement Bias
      1. MSP Concentration: Although MSP exists for 20+ crops, effective procurement remains concentrated in rice, wheat, and sugarcane.
      2. Monoculture Incentives: Farmers shift toward fertilizer-intensive crops due to procurement certainty.
    2. Decline of Traditional Rotations
      1. Pulse-Cereal Breakdown: Traditional pulse-based crop rotations have weakened substantially.
      2. Nitrogen Loss: Reduced pulse cultivation lowers natural nitrogen fixation, increasing dependence on synthetic fertilizers.
    3. Resource Stress
      1. Water Stress: Rice and sugarcane intensify groundwater depletion alongside fertilizer dependence.
    4. Striking Trend
      1. Pulse Decline: Pulse cultivation area reportedly declined by nearly 10% between 2021-22 and 2024-25.

    Why are pulses central to improving fertilizer-use efficiency?

    1. Natural Nitrogen Economy
      1. Biological Nitrogen Fixation: Pulses naturally absorb atmospheric nitrogen and enrich soils.
      2. Lower Urea Requirement: Pulses require nearly 90% less nitrogen fertilizer than cereals.
    2. Residual Soil Benefits
      1. Nutrient Carryover: Nitrogen fixed by pulses benefits succeeding crops.
      2. Soil Regeneration: Pulse rotations improve soil structure and microbial activity.
    3. Climate Resilience
      1. Rain-fed Suitability: Pulses perform relatively better in water-stressed regions.
    4. Historical Lesson
      1. Traditional Sustainability: Pulse-cereal systems sustained Indian agriculture for centuries before synthetic fertilizer dependence expanded.

    Why has the Dalhan Aatmanirbharta Mission struggled to alter cropping patterns?

    Mission Objectives

    1. MSP Assurance: Guarantees 100% procurement of Tur, Urad, and Masoor.
    2. Financial Commitment: Allocates ₹11,440 crore to increase pulse production to 350 lakh tonnes annually within five years.

    Limited Ground Impact

    1. Minimal Acreage Expansion: Pulse acreage increased by only 1.26% in 2025-26.
    2. Persistent Decline: Expansion remains inadequate after nearly 10% contraction in pulse cultivation during 2021-22 to 2024-25.

    Implementation Challenges

    1. Weak Procurement Infrastructure: State agencies struggle to operationalize procurement guarantees.
    2. Monsoon Dependency: Pulse cultivation remains vulnerable to rainfall fluctuations.

    Judicial Concern

    1. Supreme Court Observation (March 2026): Called for stronger implementation mechanisms.

    What reforms can break India’s fertilizer dependence without compromising food security?

    1. Organic Basal Dosing
      1. Organic Priority: Ensures compost, manure, and biochar form the base nutrient layer.
      2. Chemical Top-Up: Restricts fertilizers to supplementary nutrient requirements.
    2. Integrated Nutrient Management (INM)
      1. Balanced Nutrition: Combines organic manure, crop residues, biofertilizers, and chemical fertilizers.
    3. Evidence-Based Fertilizer Reduction
      1. Crop Trials: Agricultural experiments demonstrate that up to 50% of fertilizer use can be replaced by manure or biochar without yield loss.
    4. Seed Innovation
      1. Nitrogen-Efficient Germplasm: Existing rice varieties may potentially double nitrogen-use efficiency per unit of urea supplied.
    5. Cropping Diversification/Pulse Expansion: Strengthens procurement and market support for pulses and oilseeds.
    6. Institutional Revival through National Nitrogen Governance: Revives inter-ministerial coordination for fertilizer-use reforms.

    Conclusion

    India’s fertilizer crisis is increasingly one of inefficient use rather than inadequate supply. Excessive chemical dependence, MSP-driven monocropping, and weak policy coordination have deepened the fertilizer trap, harming soil health and sustainability. Improving fertilizer-use efficiency through pulse diversification, organic supplementation, and targeted reforms is essential for balancing food security with ecological sustainability. 

    Important Concepts

    Integrated Nutrient Management (INM)

    • Balanced Input Mix: Combines organic and inorganic nutrient sources to improve soil productivity.

    4R Nutrient Stewardship

    1. Right Source: Appropriate fertilizer selection.
    2. Right Dose: Optimum nutrient quantity.
    3. Right Time: Synchronised nutrient application.
    4. Right Place: Efficient nutrient placement.

    Nutrient Use Efficiency (NUE): Measures agricultural output per unit of nutrient applied.

    Government Schemes

    • PM-PRANAM gives Fertilizer Reduction Incentive: Rewards states reducing chemical fertilizer consumption.
    • Soil Health Card Scheme talks about scientific fertilizer application: Enables crop-specific nutrient recommendations.
    • Neem-Coated Urea Scheme helps in nitrogen efficiency: Reduces diversion and improves slow nutrient release.
    • National Mission on Sustainable Agriculture (NMSA)/Climate-Smart Agriculture: Promotes sustainable farming practices.

    International Best Practices

    1. European Union-Farm to Fork Strategy
      1. Nutrient Reduction: Targets 20% fertilizer-use reduction and 50% nutrient-loss reduction by 2030.
    2. China-Zero Growth Fertilizer Strategy

    Consumption Cap: Limits chemical fertilizer growth through precision nutrient management.

More posts