💥UPSC 2026, 2027, 2028 UAP Mentorship (March Batch) + Access XFactor Notes & Microthemes PDF

Search results for: “”

  • [7th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: Climate change as public health emergency

    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: This question directly links to the article as it moves beyond environmental impacts to examine human health consequences, including disease spread, heat stress, and food insecurity. The article adds value by expanding climate change discourse into a public health emergency dimension, enriching GS-3 answers.

    Mentor’s Comment

    Observed on 7 April, World Health Day has brought renewed focus on climate change as a public health emergency. This is significant as global health discourse is now directly linking rising diseases, heat stress, and food insecurity to climate change. The issue is in the news because India is already witnessing these impacts, shifting disease patterns, heat-related deaths, and worsening air pollution, making it an immediate policy concern.

    How is climate change altering disease patterns and epidemiology?

    1. Vector Expansion: Extends mosquito habitats due to warmer and wetter conditions, increasing diseases like malaria beyond endemic zones (e.g., spread to Himachal Pradesh).
    2. Seasonal Disruption: Alters rainfall and temperature cycles, extending infection seasons and increasing unpredictability.
    3. Geographical Shift: Expands disease zones to previously unaffected regions lacking immunity and preparedness.
    4. Example: Dengue cases in Delhi-NCR now peak later than traditional cycles.

    How does climate change intensify waterborne and sanitation-related diseases?

    1. Urban Flooding: Overwhelms drainage systems in cities like Mumbai, creating breeding grounds for pathogens.
    2. Water Contamination: Compromises clean water supply, increasing diseases like cholera, typhoid, hepatitis A, and leptospirosis.
    3. Sanitation Breakdown: Overburdens infrastructure, exposing urban populations to infection risks.
    4. Example: Recurrent waterlogging in Mumbai leading to repeated outbreaks.

    How does climate change exacerbate air pollution and associated health risks?

    1. PM2.5 Increase: Fine particulate matter penetrates deep into lungs and bloodstream, affecting multiple organs.
    2. Respiratory Diseases: Increases incidence of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and reduced lung function.
    3. Cardiovascular Impact: Leads to hypertension, heart attacks, stroke due to vascular damage.
    4. Example: Rising air pollution in Indian cities linked with increased hospital admissions.

    How are heatwaves and rising temperatures affecting human health?

    1. Heat Stress: Causes dehydration, heatstroke, and mortality, especially among outdoor workers.
    2. Night-time Temperature Rise: Eliminates recovery period, increasing cumulative heat exposure (Delhi-NCR, Mumbai).
    3. Cardiovascular Strain: Forces body to regulate temperature, increasing risk of heart-related conditions.
    4. Example: Increased heatstroke deaths reported in Odisha, Telangana, Vidarbha.

    What are the impacts of climate change on food security and nutrition?

    1. Crop Disruption: Extreme weather events reduce agricultural productivity and disrupt cropping cycles.
    2. Nutritional Decline: Reduces quality of food, leading to micronutrient deficiencies.
    3. Food Price Rise: Increases economic burden and reduces accessibility.
    4. Milk Production Decline: Heat stress reduces livestock productivity, affecting child nutrition.
    5. Example: Increased malnutrition risks among children and elderly.

    How does climate change affect vulnerable populations disproportionately?

    1. Outdoor Workers: Faces prolonged exposure to extreme heat (manual labourers).
    2. Infants: Higher risk of preterm births and low birth weight due to heat and pollution exposure.
    3. Urban Poor: Lack access to cooling, sanitation, and healthcare infrastructure.
    4. Elderly: Increased susceptibility due to weaker immunity and chronic conditions. 

    Way Forward

    1. Integrated Policy Framework: Ensures convergence of climate action and public health systems under National Action Plan on Climate Change (NAPCC) and National Health Mission.
    2. Strengthening Surveillance Systems: Enables early detection of climate-sensitive diseases through real-time data and district-level health monitoring.
    3. Urban Climate Resilience: Promotes heat action plans, sustainable drainage systems, and pollution control to reduce urban health risks.
    4. Healthcare Infrastructure Expansion: Strengthens primary healthcare capacity in climate-vulnerable regions with focus on preventive care.
    5. Food and Nutrition Security: Supports climate-resilient agriculture, crop diversification, and nutrition-sensitive policies.
    6. Community Awareness and Behavioural Change: Enhances public awareness on heat protection, sanitation, and disease prevention.
    7. Adoption of One Health Approach: Integrates human, animal, and environmental health for holistic risk mitigation. 

    Conclusion

    Climate change has transitioned from an environmental concern to a systemic public health emergency. Addressing it requires integrated policymaking, strengthening healthcare systems, and prioritizing vulnerable populations to ensure resilience and adaptive capacity.

  • Understanding India’s internet censorship regime

    Why in the News?

    A recent study testing 294 million domains across six major Internet Service Providers (ISPs) in 2025 reveals significant inconsistencies in website blocking. Despite receiving identical blocking orders, ISPs do not block the same domains. Out of 43,083 blocked domains, only 1,414 were uniformly blocked, highlighting a fragmented censorship regime. This is a major concern because it demonstrates that internet censorship in India is not centrally uniform but ISP-dependent, marking a shift from the assumption of standardised enforcement.

    How does India’s legal framework enable internet censorship?

    India’s legal framework enables internet censorship primarily through broad executive powers granted by the Information Technology Act of 2000 (IT Act), supported by constitutional, penal, and procedural regulations that prioritize national security and public order.

    1. Information Technology Act, 2000 (ITA): The IT Act is the primary legislation used for digital censorship.
      1. Section 69A: Empowered by the 2008 amendment, this section allows the central government to issue directives to block public access to any information online. Grounds include the interest of sovereignty, integrity, defense of India, security of the state, or public order.
      2. IT Blocking Rules, 2009: These govern the process of Section 69A, allowing for confidential takedown orders, which often lack transparency, limiting the ability of content creators to challenge them.
      3. Section 79 (3)(b): This section dictates that “intermediaries” (like ISPs, search engines, and social media sites) must remove content upon receiving “actual knowledge” or being notified by the government that their platform is being used for unlawful acts. Failure to comply can lead to a loss of “safe harbor” protection, making them liable for user content.
    2. IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules, 2021: These rules significantly tightened control over online content.
      1. Content Takedown Timelines: Intermediaries must remove “unlawful” content within set timeframes (often within 36 hours, but tighter for specific content) after receiving a complaint or government notice.
      2. Mandatory Grievance Redressal: Platforms must establish an internal mechanism to handle complaints, strengthening the government’s ability to demand removal.
      3. Expedited Removal for Specific Content: Recent amendments (as of 2026) have proposed removing content within as little as three hours.
      4. Traceability Requirement: The rules require messaging platforms to be able to identify the “first originator” of a message, raising privacy concerns.
    3. Licensing Conditions under Telecom Regulatory Framework:
      1. Binding Obligations: Requires ISPs to comply with directions issued by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and other competent authorities
      2. Enforcement Mechanism: Non-compliance can lead to penalties, suspension, or cancellation of licenses
      3. Operational Impact: Ensures that censorship orders are effectively implemented at the network level.
      4. Example: ISPs blocking specific domains or services following government directives during security situations.
    4. Confidentiality Clause in Blocking Rules (2009):
      1. Secrecy of Orders: Mandates strict confidentiality regarding blocking requests and directions.
      2. Transparency Deficit: Prevents public disclosure of reasons, scope, and number of blocked websites.
      3. Accountability Constraint: Limits scope for judicial review, public scrutiny, and informed debate.
      4. Example: Users are often unaware why a particular website is inaccessible, as blocking orders are not publicly available. 

    Why does censorship vary across ISPs despite identical orders?

    1. Non-uniform Implementation: ISPs interpret and execute government blocking orders differently based on internal protocols, leading to variation in outcomes.
    2. Technical Discretion: ISPs choose different blocking techniques such as DNS, HTTP, or TLS filtering depending on their technical setup and preferences.
    3. Operational Constraints: Variations in infrastructure capacity, technical expertise, and financial resources influence how effectively orders are implemented.
    4. Compliance Prioritisation: ISPs differ in urgency and strictness while implementing orders, causing delays or partial enforcement.
    5. Lack of Standardisation: Absence of uniform technical guidelines results in fragmented enforcement across networks.

    What technical mechanisms are used for website blocking?

    1. DNS Blocking: Redirects domain queries to false or incorrect IP addresses through DNS poisoning, preventing access at the resolution stage. Example: Access request to example.com gets redirected to an incorrect or null IP address.
    2. HTTP Blocking: Restricts access at the application layer by intercepting HTTP requests and returning error or denial responses.
    3. TLS Blocking: Interferes with encrypted HTTPS connections by blocking or disrupting secure handshakes.
    4. IP Blocking: Blocks specific IP addresses hosting content, restricting access at the network layer.
    5. Key Insight: Most Indian ISPs rely primarily on DNS blocking due to its low cost, ease of deployment, and minimal infrastructure requirements.

    What does the empirical data reveal about the scale of censorship?

    1. 294 Million Domains Tested: Large-scale testing conducted across six major ISPs in 2025 to assess censorship patterns.
    2. 43,083 Domains Blocked: Indicates significant extent of content restriction across networks.
    3. Only 1,414 Commonly Blocked: Demonstrates that very few domains are uniformly blocked across all ISPs.
    4. Inter-ISP Variation: Same blocking orders result in different lists of blocked websites across providers.
    5. Inference: Internet censorship in India operates in a fragmented, inconsistent, and decentralised manner rather than a uniform system.

    What are the implications for users and digital rights?

    1. Unequal Access: Same website may be accessible on one ISP but blocked on another, leading to inconsistent user experience.
    2. Opacity: Users remain unaware of blocking reasons due to confidentiality of government orders and lack of disclosures.
    3. Freedom of Expression: Arbitrary and inconsistent restrictions weaken the protection under Article 19(1)(a).
    4. Accountability Gap: Limited transparency reduces scope for judicial review and public oversight.
    5. Chilling Effect: Uncertainty about access may discourage users from engaging with certain online content.

    Why is DNS blocking problematic as a primary tool?

    DNS (Domain Name System) is the “phonebook of the internet,” translating human-friendly domain names (like example.com) into machine-readable IP addresses (like 192.0.2.1). This system allows users to access websites using memorable names instead of complex numerical addresses, acting as a crucial intermediary for web browsers to find and connect to servers.

    1. Low Precision: Blocks entire domains instead of targeting specific unlawful content, leading to overblocking.
    2. Circumvention Risk: Easily bypassed using VPNs, proxy servers, or alternative DNS services.
    3. Security Risks: DNS poisoning may redirect users to malicious or unintended websites, compromising safety.
    4. Lack of Effectiveness: Ineffective against dynamic or mirror websites that frequently change domains.
    5. Over-Reliance: Excessive dependence on DNS blocking reflects technological limitations in implementing more precise methods. 

    Conclusion

    India’s internet censorship regime reflects legal backing but weak procedural uniformity and transparency. Addressing these gaps requires standardised implementation, greater accountability, and judicial oversight to balance state interests with fundamental rights.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2013] Discuss Section 66A of IT Act, with reference to its alleged violation of Article 19 of the Constitution.

    Linkage: The PYQ Examines limits of state power over online speech under Article 19(1)(a) and safeguards against arbitrary censorship. Similar to Section 66A concerns, the current internet censorship regime (Section 69A, ISP blocking) raises issues of overreach, opacity, and disproportionate restrictions on digital expression.

  • For China, trade risks spur larger diplomatic role

    Why in the News?

    China has, for the first time, jointly proposed a peace initiative with Pakistan on the West Asia conflict. This marks a clear shift from its earlier low-profile, reactive diplomacy to proactive crisis engagement. This is significant because China traditionally avoided political entanglement in volatile regions, focusing instead on economic ties. However, disruptions in critical chokepoints like the Strait of Hormuz and Bab-el-Mandeb, through which a substantial portion of global energy and trade flows, have exposed China’s vulnerability, given that nearly a quarter of global trade and a major share of its energy imports pass through these routes.

    What are the key features of the China-Pakistan five-point initiative for restoring peace and stability in the Gulf and Middle East Region?

    1. Immediate Cessation of Hostilities: Ensures de-escalation through ceasefire and facilitates humanitarian assistance across war-affected regions.
    2. Peace Talks and Sovereignty Protection: Safeguards territorial integrity and national independence of Iran and Gulf states while ensuring dialogue-based conflict resolution and prohibiting use of force during negotiations.
    3. Protection of Civilians and Infrastructure: Ensures adherence to International Humanitarian Law (IHL) by preventing attacks on civilians, energy facilities, desalination plants, power infrastructure, and peaceful nuclear installations.
    4. Security of Shipping Lanes: Ensures safe passage of commercial and civilian vessels through the Strait of Hormuz and restores normal maritime trade flows critical for global energy supply.
    5. Primacy of UN Charter: Reinforces multilateralism by upholding the United Nations’ central role and promoting a comprehensive peace framework based on international law.

    What explains China’s shift from economic presence to diplomatic activism?

    1. Economic Dependence: Reflects reliance on West Asian energy imports from Iran and Saudi Arabia, ensuring industrial continuity.
      1. Economic Dependence: Reflects high reliance on West Asian energy, with over 50% of China’s crude oil imports sourced from the Middle East (2024) and ~45–50% of its oil imports transiting through the Strait of Hormuz. Additionally, China alone accounts for ~37.7% of all oil flows passing through Hormuz, making it the single largest beneficiary of this chokepoint
    2. Supply Chain Vulnerability: Exposes risks to raw materials and intermediate goods essential for manufacturing dominance.
    3. Strategic Signalling: Demonstrates intent to shape global governance beyond trade through mediation initiatives.
    4. Institutional Expansion: Strengthens influence via BRICS expansion including Iran and Saudi Arabia, ensuring diplomatic leverage.

    How do maritime chokepoints shape China’s strategic calculations?

    1. Hormuz Dependency: Ensures energy security as a significant share of China’s oil imports passes through the Strait of Hormuz.
    2. Bab-el-Mandeb Disruptions: Increases freight and insurance costs due to Houthi attacks, affecting Red Sea–Suez trade routes.
    3. Malacca Dilemma: Highlights vulnerability due to dependence on narrow maritime routes near Malaysia and Indonesia.
    4. Trade Exposure: Reflects that nearly one-quarter of global trade passes through these routes, impacting Chinese exports.

    Why is the China-Pakistan initiative geopolitically significant?

    1. Crisis Mediation Role: Facilitates ceasefire, humanitarian access, and dialogue, marking China’s diplomatic assertiveness.
    2. Islamic World Access: Strengthens engagement through Pakistan’s regional connections and political legitimacy.
    3. Non-Western Diplomacy: Promotes Global South-led conflict resolution frameworks.
    4. Precedent Setting: Builds on earlier Iran-Saudi Arabia rapprochement mediated by China in 2023.

    What are the economic consequences of instability in West Asia for China?

    1. Energy Market Volatility: Disrupts oil supply chains, increasing costs and affecting industrial production.
    2. Logistics Disruptions: Forces rerouting via Cape of Good Hope, increasing transit time and shipping costs.
    3. Export Market Risks: Affects access to European markets dependent on Red Sea routes.
    4. Commodity Constraints: Leads to tighter controls on exports like fertilizers to safeguard domestic supply.

    How does changing US posture create space for China?

    1. Selective Engagement: Reduces direct US involvement in regional supply disruptions.
    2. Energy Self-Reliance: Limits US vulnerability due to domestic energy production.
    3. Leadership Vacuum: Enables China to expand diplomatic footprint in crisis management.
    4. Strategic Rebalancing: Reflects shift from security-centric to selective intervention approach.

    What lessons does China draw from the “Malacca Dilemma”?

    The Malacca Dilemma is China’s strategic vulnerability regarding its heavy reliance on the narrow Strait of Malacca for energy imports and trade. Coined by Hu Jintao in 2003, it highlights fears that a hostile power, primarily the US, could block this 2.8 km-wide chokepoint, disrupting ~80% of China’s oil imports

    1. Chokepoint Vulnerability: Recognizes risks of external pressure on critical maritime routes.
    2. Diversification Strategy: Promotes alternative trade routes and supply chains.
    3. Infrastructure Investments: Strengthens Gwadar port and connectivity via China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).
    4. Strategic Autonomy: Reduces dependence on vulnerable maritime corridors.

    Conclusion

    China’s evolving diplomatic posture in West Asia reflects a transition from economic pragmatism to strategic activism. Its growing role is driven by structural vulnerabilities in trade and energy flows, reinforcing its ambition to shape global governance while securing national interests.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2017] The question of India’s Energy Security constitutes the most important part of India’s economic progress. Analyze India’s energy policy cooperation with West Asian Countries

    Linkage: It highlights how energy dependence on West Asia shapes foreign policy and economic stability. It links to the article by showing how energy security and chokepoints like Hormuz drive geopolitical engagement.

  • Kalpakkam Fast Breeder Reactor Attains Criticality

    Why in the news?

    India’s first indigenous Fast Breeder Reactor (FBR) at Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu has attained criticality, marking a major milestone in India’s three stage nuclear programme.

    What is Criticality

    Criticality means:

    • Self sustaining nuclear chain reaction begins
    • Reactor core working as designed
    • Step before electricity generation
    • Capacity: 500 MWe reactor

    What is Fast Breeder Reactor (FBR)

    • Produces more fuel than it consumes
    • Uses:
      • Uranium plutonium MOX fuel
      • Uranium 238 blanket to produce more fuel
    • This process called: Nuclear transmutation

    India’s Three Stage Nuclear Programme

    • Stage 1
      • Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWR)
      • Fuel: Natural uranium
    • Stage 2
      • Fast Breeder Reactors (FBR)
      • Produces plutonium
    • Stage 3
      • Thorium based reactors
      • India has large thorium reserves

    Why This is Important

    • India to become 2nd country after Russia
    • Indigenous nuclear technology
    • Strengthens energy security
    • Moves India toward thorium based energy
    [2022] With reference to India, consider the following statements: 
    1. Monazite is a source of rare earths. 
    2. Monazite contains thorium. 
    3. Monazite occurs naturally in the entire Indian coastal sands in India. 
    4. In India, Government bodies only can process or export monazite.” 
    Which of the statements given above are correct? 
    [A] 1, 2 and 3 only [B] 1, 2 and 4 only [C] 3 and 4 only [D] 1, 2, 3 and 4
  • Babu Jagjivan Ram: 119th Birth Anniversary

    Why in News

    India paid tributes to Babu Jagjivan Ram on his 119th birth anniversary (5 April 2026) at Samta Sthal, New Delhi.

    About Babu Jagjivan Ram

    • Born: 5 April 1908, Chandwa, Bihar
    • Popularly known as: Babuji
    • Freedom fighter and social justice leader
    • Longest serving Union Cabinet Minister (35 years)
    • Served as Deputy Prime Minister (1979)

    Freedom Movement Contributions

    • Founded All India Depressed Classes League (1935)
    • Participated in Quit India Movement (1942)
    • Imprisoned by British
    • Youngest Minister in 1946 Interim Government
    • Held Labour portfolio

    Post Independence Contributions

    Green Revolution

    • Minister for Food & Agriculture (1967–70)
    • Helped India achieve food self sufficiency

    1971 War

    • Defence Minister during India Pakistan War 1971
    • Role in creation of Bangladesh

    Labour Reforms

    • Promoted:
      • Minimum wages
      • Workers welfare
      • Social security

    Political Career

    • Left Congress in 1977
    • Formed Congress for Democracy
    • Joined Janata Party
    • Deputy Prime Minister: 1979

    Death

    • Died: 6 July 1986
    • Memorial: Samta Sthal, New Delhi
    [2024] Consider the following pairs: Party : Its Leader 1 Bharatiya Jana Sangh : Dr. Shyama Prasad Mukherjee 2 Socialist Party : C. Rajagopalachari 3 Congress for Democracy : Jagjivan Ram 4 Swatantra Party : Acharya Narendra Dev How many of the above are correctly matched? (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four
  • BRO Project Chetak Completes 47 Years

    Why in News

    Project Chetak of the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) celebrated its 47th Raising Day on 4 April 2026 at Bikaner, Rajasthan.

    About Project Chetak

    • Launched: 1980
    • Implemented by: Border Roads Organisation (BRO)
    • Area: Western border region
      • Rajasthan
      • Punjab
      • Northern Gujarat

    Objectives

    • Strengthen border infrastructure
    • Ensure all weather connectivity
    • Support troop movement
    • Promote regional development

    Key Features

    • Maintains 4,000 km+ roads
    • 214 km Ditch Cum Bund (DCB) for: Border security and Flood control
    • Upgrading feeder roads to:
      • National Highway double lane standard

    About Border Roads Organisation (BRO)

    • The Border Roads Organisation (BRO), established on May 7, 1960, is a premier statutory construction force under India’s Ministry of Defence. 
    • It develops and maintains road networks, bridges, tunnels, and airfields in border regions and friendly neighboring countries. 
    • Primarily serving the armed forces, the BRO plays a critical role in enhancing national security and regional connectivity in challenging terrains.
    [2024] What are the duties of the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) as Head of the Department of Military Affairs? 1 Permanent Chairman of Chiefs of Staff Committee. 2 Exercise military command over the three Service Chiefs. 3 Principal Military Advisor to Defence Minister on all tri-service matters. Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1, 2, 3 (b) 1 and 2 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1 and 3 only
  • Supreme Court Allows Kozhikode Wayanad Tunnel Project

    Why in the News?

    The Supreme Court refused to interfere with environmental clearance granted to the Kozhikode Wayanad twin tube tunnel project in Kerala’s Western Ghats.

    Supreme Court Observation

    • Project appears of national importance
    • Kerala faces:
      • Land scarcity
      • Road congestion
      • Transport bottlenecks
    • Court noted:
      • Tunnels common worldwide
      • Experts will handle safety concerns

    About Kozhikode Wayanad Tunnel Project

    • Twin tube tunnel corridor
    • Connects:
      • Kozhikode district
      • Wayanad district
    • Located in Western Ghats
    • Landslide prone region

    Concerns Raised

    Petitioner NGO argued:

    • Near Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve
    • Ecologically fragile Western Ghats
    • Landslide prone area
    • Risk from blasting and vibrations
    • Should receive Category A environmental clearance
    [2016] ‘Gadgil Committee Report’ and ‘Kasturirangan Committee Report’, sometimes seen in the news, are related to (a) constitutional reforms (b) Ganga Action Plan (c) linking of rivers (d) protection of Western Ghats
  • 518 of 697 Lakes in Jammu and Kashmir Shrinking or Vanished: CAG

    Why in the News?

    According to CAG report, 518 out of 697 lakes (74%) in Jammu and Kashmir have either disappeared or shrunk, causing ecosystem degradation and climate risks.

    Key Findings

    • Total lakes assessed: 697
    • Lakes disappeared: 315 (45%)
    • Lakes shrunk: 203 (29%)
    • Total affected lakes: 518 (74%)
    • 63 lakes lost ≥50% water area

    Other Observations

    • 150 lakes (22%) increased in area
    • 29 lakes (4%) remained unchanged

    Major Causes

    • Encroachment and construction
    • Land use change
    • Aquatic vegetation growth
    • Lack of conservation plans
    • Anthropogenic pressure

    Flood Risk

    • Shrinking lakes contributed to 2014 Kashmir floods
    • Lakes act as natural flood buffers

    Governance Gaps

    • No conservation plans for 255 lakes
    • No detailed survey of 697 lakes
    • Poor coordination among departments

    Lakes with Conservation Programmes

    • Only 6 lakes have management plans: Dal Lake, Wular Lake, Hokersar, Manasbal Lake, Surinsar Lake, and Mansar Lake.
    [2023] Consider the following statements: 
    1 Jhelum River passes through Wular Lake. 
    2 Krishna River directly feeds Kolleru Lake. 
    3 Meandering of Gandak River formed Kanwar Lake. 
    How many of the statements given above are correct? (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) All three (d) None
  • 🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Rohin Kumar, AIR 39, UPSC CSE 25 | Master the Stages of Answer Writing for UPSC 2027 | Join on 07th April at 7PM

    🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Rohin Kumar, AIR 39, UPSC CSE 25 | Master the Stages of Answer Writing for UPSC 2027 | Join on 07th April at 7PM

    Register for the session


    Read about Webinar


    Most aspirants start answer writing.

    Very few know how to progress in it.

    They either start too early without direction…
    or delay it until it’s too late.

    The result?

    Effort is there.
    But marks don’t reflect it.

    Join me as I break down the stage wise approach to answer writing, so you know exactly what to do, when to do it, and how to improve.

    Rohin Kumar, AIR 39, UPSC CSE 25

    What I’ll cover in this session:

    1. The Different Stages of Answer Writing

    • Beginner stage: understanding structure and basics
    • Intermediate stage: improving content and clarity
    • Advanced stage: writing for marks and impact

    Answer writing is a process, not a one time activity.


    2. When to Start and What to Write

    • When should you begin answer writing?
    • What kind of questions to practice at each stage
    • How to avoid random, directionless writing

    Timing and direction matter as much as effort.


    3. What Actually Improves Your Answers

    • Content vs structure vs presentation
    • How to make answers more effective and evaluable
    • Common mistakes aspirants repeat

    Improvement comes from targeted corrections.


    4. Building Consistency Without Burnout

    • How to build answer writing stamina gradually
    • Managing answer writing alongside preparation
    • Avoiding overwhelm and fatigue

    Consistency beats intensity in the long run.


    5. From Writing Answers to Scoring Marks

    • How to shift from practice mode to exam mode
    • Writing within time limits with clarity
    • Developing a scoring mindset

    The goal is not writing more.

    The goal is scoring better.


    Who should attend:

    1. Beginners starting answer writing for UPSC 2027

    2. Aspirants confused about when and how to start

    3. Candidates looking to improve answer quality and scores

    Join us, for a 45 minute live Zoom session on 07th April 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 Arvind sir is known to be patiently solving all your doubts.

    Join us for a Zoom session on 07th April 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 2027, 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 07th April, at 7 PM

    (Don’t wait—the next webinar/session won’t be until End April’ 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. 
  • [6th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: Transforming India’s nuclear power landscape 

    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 article directly addresses the expansion of nuclear energy to 100 GW by 2047, highlighting its role in energy security and net-zero goals. It also reflects the “facts vs fears” dimension through issues like high costs, liability concerns, and safety challenges alongside baseload advantages.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s nuclear power sector is at a decisive inflection point. The announcement of scaling nuclear capacity from 8,180 MW to 100 GW by 2047, along with the proposed SHANTI Act (2025), signals a structural shift from a state-controlled model to a mixed public-private framework. This marks a departure from decades of institutional rigidity and reflects the urgency of achieving energy security and net-zero commitments amid rising electricity demand.

    Why is nuclear energy critical for India’s energy transition?

    1. Baseload Stability: Ensures continuous electricity supply unlike renewables dependent on weather conditions; nuclear contributed 57 TWh vs thermal 1,363 TWh (2024-25)
    2. Net-Zero Alignment: Supports decarbonisation as coal remains inconsistent with climate goals
    3. Energy Demand Surge: Requires >2000 GW capacity for Viksit Bharat; renewables alone insufficient
    4. Low Carbon Intensity: Emits significantly lower CO₂ compared to fossil fuels

    What structural changes are proposed under the SHANTI Act, 2025?

    1. Private Sector Participation: Enables private companies to build, own, and operate nuclear plants
    2. Regulatory Autonomy: Grants statutory status to Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) ensuring oversight independence
    3. Liability Reform: Replaces Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Act (CLNDA) of 2010 to attract foreign and domestic investment
    4. Legal Overhaul: Repeals Atomic Energy Act 1962, marking a systemic shift

    What are the major constraints in scaling nuclear power?

    1. High Capital Costs: Example: 700 MW PHWR costs ~$2 million per MW
    2. Project Delays: Example: Fleet mode reactors approved in 2017 yet not operational
    3. Financing Challenges: Requires $200+ billion investment over two decades
    4. Regulatory Complexity: Issues in tariffs, insurance, fuel ownership, and waste management
    5. Public Opposition: Safety concerns and land acquisition challenges

    How does nuclear compare with renewables in India’s energy mix?

    1. Installed Capacity vs Output: Renewables ~50% capacity but only 22% generation
    2. Intermittency Issue: Solar and wind depend on time-of-day and climate variability
    3. Storage Limitation: Requires large investments in battery storage
    4. Baseload Advantage: Nuclear ensures stable supply unlike renewables

    What technological pathways are being explored?

    1. Pressurized Heavy-Water Reactor (PHWR) Expansion: Indigenous 220 MW PHWR (15 operational) scalable to 540 MW and 700 MW
    2. Small Modular Reactors (SMRs): Government allocated ₹20,000 crore for 5–200 MW designs by 2033
    3. Foreign Collaboration: Westinghouse, GE-Hitachi designs under consideration
    4. Advanced Fuels: Thorium with HALEU to leverage India’s reserves

    What is the three-front strategy for achieving 100 GW?

    1. Indigenisation: Reduces cost through domestic manufacturing (example: China’s $2 billion per MW benchmark)
    2. R&D Acceleration: Focus on SMRs and molten salt reactors
    3. Private Sector Integration: Enables financing and scaling through industry participation

    What role can private industry play in nuclear expansion?

    1. Captive Power Plants: Industries already operate 10-200 MW fossil-based plants (~90 GW capacity)
    2. Sectoral Demand: Steel, cement, data centres show interest in nuclear energy
    3. Economies of Scale: Modular construction reduces time from first pour to commissioning to ~40 months

    Conclusion

    India’s nuclear expansion marks a shift from state monopoly to a mixed ecosystem driven by reforms, private participation, and technological innovation. Achieving 100 GW by 2047 depends on aligning regulatory clarity, financial viability, and public trust while integrating nuclear energy into a broader low-carbon strategy.

More posts