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  • [30th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: South Asian power balance shifts towards Pakistan

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2019] The long-sustained image of India as a leader of the oppressed and marginalised Nations has disappeared on account of its new found role in the emerging global order”. Elaborate.Linkage: The PYQ directly connects with India’s changing global perception vs actual capabilities, as highlighted in the article. It tests understanding of soft power, diplomatic positioning, and shifting global roles, which form the core theme of the issue.

    Mentor’s Comment

    A renewed debate has emerged on South Asia’s power balance following Pakistan’s elevated diplomatic visibility, particularly as a mediator in U.S.-Iran engagements. This marks a contrast with India’s relatively restrained global posture, especially on major geopolitical issues like Gaza and Iran. The development is significant because it suggests a perceptual shift where Pakistan is gaining diplomatic relevance without major changes in core capabilities.

    Why is Pakistan’s diplomatic rise being viewed as a turning point in South Asia?

    1. Diplomatic Mediation Role: Pakistan facilitated communication between the U.S. and Iran, elevating its relevance in global diplomacy. Example: Public acknowledgment by U.S. leadership for Pakistan’s role in maintaining communication channels.
    2. Leadership Recognition: Pakistan’s leadership, including military and political heads, received international visibility, strengthening external legitimacy.
    3. Contrast with India: India maintained strategic silence on major geopolitical issues (e.g., Gaza crisis), leading to perceptions of reduced engagement.
    4. Perception Shift: Pakistan is now seen as a central diplomatic actor, whereas India is perceived as relatively passive.

    How has enhanced diplomatic visibility translated into strategic gains for Pakistan?

    1. U.S. Engagement: Strengthened ties with the U.S., particularly in counterterrorism cooperation against Al-Qaeda and ISIS.
    2. Gulf Influence: Expanded influence in Gulf countries; example: Saudi Arabia’s multi-billion dollar financial commitments.
    3. Security Partnerships: Defence cooperation with Saudi Arabia and potential alignment with Qatar enhances regional leverage.
    4. Economic Gains: Diplomatic outreach converted into financial and political dividends.
    5. Narrative Advantage: Pakistan countered India’s attempts to diplomatically isolate it on terrorism issues.

    What does the ‘hierarchy of power’ framework reveal about this shift?

    1. Superpowers: U.S. and China dominate global influence across military, economic, and institutional domains.
    2. Global Powers: States like Russia project power across multiple regions.
    3. Middle Powers: Countries like Türkiye, South Korea, Indonesia, Brazil influence through partnerships and economic strength.
    4. Regional Powers: States like Saudi Arabia dominate geographically limited regions.
    5. Analytical Insight: Pakistan is moving from a lower regional position toward aspiring middle-power status, while India risks slipping from global to middle-power perception.

    Why is India’s global profile perceived to be declining despite strong fundamentals?

    1. Strategic Restraint: Limited public positioning on major global crises reduces visibility.
    2. Geopolitical Silence: Lack of assertive stance on issues involving U.S. and Israel affects perception.
    3. Economic Signals: Decline in India’s ranking from the 4th to 6th largest economy weakens perception.
    4. Platform Visibility: Reduced prominence of groupings like I2U2, BRICS, and QUAD in current discourse.
    5. Outcome: India’s image shifts from a proactive global power to a cautious middle power.

    How do soft power and perception influence international rankings more than hard power?

    1. Soft Power Dimensions: Diplomacy, economic networks, and institutional influence shape global standing.
    2. Lowy Institute Framework: Combines hard power (55%) and soft power (45%) to assess national power.
    3. Pakistan’s Advantage: Improved diplomatic outreach enhances soft power without major change in material strength.
    4. India’s Limitation: Strong hard power (military, economy, demographics) not fully translated into diplomatic influence.
    5. Key Insight: Perception can temporarily outweigh structural capabilities in global politics.

    What structural constraints continue to shape India and Pakistan’s long-term power positions?

    1. India’s Strengths: Military capability, large economy, demographic scale, technological base.
    2. Pakistan’s Constraints: Fragile economy, dependence on external aid, limited industrial base.
    3. Sustainability Question: Pakistan’s rise is largely perception-driven, while India’s power remains structurally grounded.
    4. Policy Implication: Long-term dominance depends on hard power fundamentals, not short-term diplomatic gains.

    Conclusion

    The current shift reflects a perception-driven recalibration, not a structural transformation of power. Pakistan’s diplomatic assertiveness has enhanced its visibility, while India’s restraint has affected its global image. However, enduring power hierarchies remain anchored in economic strength, military capacity, and technological advancement. India’s challenge lies in aligning its strong fundamentals with more visible and proactive diplomacy.

  • Increasing coverage, growing distress

    Why in the News?

    Recent NSS 80th Round (2025) data reveals a striking contradiction: health insurance coverage has increased significantly since 2017-18, yet hospitalisation rates have not improved and out-of-pocket expenditure has sharply increased, especially in private hospitals. This is significant because, for the first time, empirical evidence shows that government-funded insurance schemes are not delivering financial protection, and may even be benefiting relatively better-off groups.

    Why has increased insurance coverage not improved healthcare utilisation?

    1. Stagnant hospitalisation rates: NSS data shows hospitalisation rates remain below 2014 levels in rural areas and only marginally higher in urban areas.
    2. Shift to private care: Public hospital usage declined, while private sector reliance increased.
    3. Access barriers: Unavailability of medicines, diagnostics, and high transport costs reduce public healthcare utilisation.
    4. Inefficiency in coverage translation: Coverage expansion does not ensure actual service delivery or utilisation.

    Why is out-of-pocket expenditure increasing despite insurance schemes?

    1. Rising private sector costs: OOP expenditure increased >70% (rural) and ~80% (urban).
    2. Partial coverage: Insurance schemes often exclude diagnostics, medicines, and indirect costs.
    3. Additional charges: Despite coverage, patients are frequently charged extra in private hospitals.
    4. Low reimbursement rates: Below-market rates under PMJAY incentivise informal billing practices.

    Why are insurance schemes disproportionately benefiting the better-off?

    1. Urban bias: Only 13% of urban beneficiaries belong to the poorest class.
    2. Awareness gap: Poor households have lower awareness and utilisation capacity.
    3. Private sector access: Better-off groups are more capable of accessing empanelled private hospitals.
    4. Structural inequality: Insurance design fails to address social determinants of access.

    What fiscal and systemic challenges are emerging from insurance-led healthcare?

    1. State fiscal stress: Increased hospitalisation under schemes leads to budgetary pressure on states.
    2. Delayed reimbursements: States like Haryana report delays in payments to private providers.
    3. Dependence on private sector: Weak public infrastructure leads to over-reliance on private providers.
    4. Market distortion: Insurance subsidies indirectly support private healthcare expansion.

    Is insurance-based Universal Health Coverage (UHC) viable for India?

    1. Profit-driven incentives: Private providers focus on high-margin treatments, undermining equity.
    2. Limited preventive care: Insurance model emphasises hospitalisation, not primary care.
    3. Weak regulation: Insufficient oversight leads to overcharging and unnecessary procedures.
    4. Public system neglect: Investment in primary healthcare remains inadequate.

    What alternative model is suggested for effective healthcare delivery?

    1. Strengthening public healthcare: Emphasis on universal, tax-funded public health systems.
    2. Primary care focus: Initiatives like Ayushman Arogya Mandir (AAM) offer comprehensive primary care, including NCDs.
    3. Integrated approach: Combining preventive, promotive, and curative care
    4. Regulation of the private sector: Ensures accountability and cost control.

    Conclusion

    India’s health insurance expansion highlights a structural paradox: coverage without care and protection without affordability. A shift from insurance-led to system-strengthening approaches, especially in primary healthcare, is essential for achieving equitable and sustainable Universal Health Coverage.

    PYQ Relevance

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

    Linkage: The PYQ highlights the gap between coverage expansion (financial inclusion) and actual welfare outcomes, similar to health insurance failing to ensure real protection. This is directly relevant to analysing whether insurance-led healthcare promotes inclusive growth or deepens inequality.

  • Hate speech stems from an ‘us versus them’ mindset

    Why in the News?

    The Supreme Court recently held that hate speech comes from an “us vs them” mindset. It weakens fraternity and social harmony. The Court refused to ask for new laws. It stressed poor enforcement of existing laws as the real problem. This is important because public debate often demands stricter laws. The Court says laws already exist but are not applied well. Petitions showed hate speech continues despite past judgments. This points to a system failure, not a legal gap.

    What is the constitutional and philosophical basis of the Court’s observation?

    1. Fraternity as a constitutional value: Ensures social cohesion and unity in diversity as part of the Preamble.
    2. Moral fabric of society: Strengthens dignity and mutual respect among citizens.
    3. Civilizational ethos: Reflects Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam, emphasizing universal brotherhood.
    4. Antithesis of hate speech: Undermines inclusiveness by promoting exclusion and hostility.

    Why did the Court refuse to mandate new laws on hate speech?

    1. Judicial restraint: Preserves separation of powers by avoiding legislative functions.
    2. Existing legal framework: Includes provisions under IPC/BNS addressing public order and incitement.
    3. Institutional role clarity: Limits judiciary to interpretation and application of law.
    4. Avoidance of overreach: Prevents creation of parallel regulatory regimes.

    What are the existing hate speech laws in India?

    1. Article 19(1)(a): Ensures freedom of speech.
    2. Article 19(2): Allows restrictions for public order and morality.
    3. Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS):
      1. Section on promoting enmity: Penalizes speech causing hatred between groups.
      2. Public mischief provisions: Punish rumours leading to fear or violence
    4. Representation of People Act, 1951:
      1. Electoral hate speech: Bars appeals based on religion, caste, etc.
    5. IT Rules and IT Act:
      1. Online regulation: Targets fake news and harmful content.

    What explains the persistence of hate speech despite legal provisions?

    1. Enforcement deficit: Weak implementation by law enforcement agencies.
    2. Administrative failure: Inconsistent application of laws across regions.
    3. Delayed justice delivery: Reduces deterrence effect of existing laws.
    4. Societal normalization: Continued tolerance of divisive narratives.

    How does hate speech threaten constitutional order and public harmony?

    1. Erosion of fraternity: Weakens unity in a diverse society.
    2. Public order disruption: Leads to inter-group hostility and violence.
    3. Institutional strain: Challenges governance and law enforcement credibility.
    4. Democratic decline: Undermines inclusive participation and trust.

    What role should institutions play in addressing hate speech?

    1. Law enforcement agencies: Ensure consistent and unbiased application of laws.
    2. Judiciary: Uphold constitutional values through interpretation.
    3. Legislature: Maintain clarity and adequacy of legal provisions.
    4. Civil society: Promote awareness and counter divisive narratives.

    What broader societal transformation is required?

    1. Mindset shift: Moves from identity-based exclusion to inclusive citizenship.
    2. Ethical reinforcement: Promotes empathy and respect in public discourse.
    3. Educational reforms: Integrates constitutional values into curricula.
    4. Media responsibility: Reduces sensationalism and misinformation.

    Conclusion

    The Supreme Court reframes hate speech as a societal and enforcement issue rather than a legislative gap. Addressing it requires strengthening institutional accountability and nurturing constitutional values of fraternity and inclusiveness.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Right of movement and residence throughout the territory of India are freely available to the Indian citizens, but these rights are not absolute. Comment.

    Linkage: This question reflects the idea that Fundamental Rights are subject to reasonable restrictions, similar to Article 19(2) limits on hate speech. The Supreme Court judgment reinforces that free speech is not absolute and must align with public order, dignity, and fraternity.

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    🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Shikhar Sir, Founder Civilsdaily IAS & Shubhankar Dhruv, AIR 52, UPSC CSE 25 | How to Use ChatGPT Effectively for UPSC Preparation | Join on 1st May at 7PM

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  • Sabarimala Review and Religious Reform 

    Why in the News

    The Supreme Court of India, while hearing the Sabarimala review case, observed that courts cannot reform religion, even as debates continue on balancing religious freedom and constitutional rights.

    Background of the Case

    • Concerns entry of women aged 10 to 50 years into the Sabarimala Temple
    • 2018 judgment allowed entry, upholding right to worship
    • Review petitions challenge this verdict

    Key Observations by the Court

    • Courts cannot initiate religious reform
    • Reform must come from within religion or society
    • Need to balance:
      • Religious practices
      • Constitutional values

    Arguments Presented

    For Reform (Indira Jaising’s View)

    • Religion must evolve to remain relevant
    • Equality (Article 14) and dignity (Article 21) cannot be subordinate to religion
    • Religious practices must align with constitutional morality

    Concerns Raised by Judges

    • Reforms should not destroy core religious identity
    • Need to avoid excessive interference in doctrinal matters

    Key Constitutional Provisions

    • Article 14: Right to equality before law
    • Article 21: Right to life and dignity
    • Article 25: Freedom of religion and worship

    Important Legal Concepts

    • Essential Religious Practices Test
      • Determines which practices are essential to a religion
      • Only essential practices get constitutional protection
    • Constitutional Morality: Principles like equality, dignity, and justice guide interpretation of laws
    [2019] Which Article of the Constitution of India safeguards one’s right to marry the person of one’s choice? 
    (a) Article 19
    (b) Article 21
    (c) Article 25
    (d) Article 29
  • Supreme Court on Hate Speech 

    Why in the News?

    The Supreme Court of India, in an April 2026 judgment, highlighted that hate speech and rumour mongering threaten the constitutional value of fraternity, but declined to direct enactment of new laws, emphasizing effective enforcement of existing legal provisions.

    Key Observations of the Court

    • Hate speech arises from an “us versus them” mindset
    • It promotes exclusion and discrimination
    • Undermines fraternity and unity in a diverse society
    • Considered against constitutional morality and civilisational ethos
    • Linked to the idea of “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam” (world is one family)

    Constitutional Provisions Involved

    • Article 19(1)(a): Guarantees freedom of speech and expression
    • Article 19(2): Allows reasonable restrictions on grounds like:
      • Public order
      • Decency
      • Morality
      • Sovereignty and integrity
    • Fraternity (Preamble): Ensures unity and sense of brotherhood among citizens

    Legal Position on Hate Speech

    • No single comprehensive law exclusively defining hate speech
    • Covered under various provisions:
      • Indian Penal Code sections related to
        • Promoting enmity
        • Public mischief
      • IT laws for online content

    Court’s Stand

    • Court cannot legislate new laws
    • Responsibility lies with: Legislature and Executive
    • Focus should be on better implementation of existing laws

    Key Concepts

    • Hate Speech: Speech that incites hatred, discrimination, or violence against groups
    • Fraternity: A constitutional value promoting unity, dignity, and brotherhood
    [2017] The mind of the makers of the Constitution of India is reflected in which of the following? 
    (a) The Preamble 
    (b) The Fundamental Rights 
    (c) The Directive Principles of State Policy 
    (d) The Fundamental Duties
  • Return of Trafficked Artefacts to India 

    Why in the News?

    Authorities in the United States have returned 657 trafficked antiquities worth about 14 million dollars to India. The artefacts were recovered from international smuggling networks linked to traffickers like Subash Kapoor and Nancy Wiener.

    Key Facts

    • Total artefacts returned: 657
    • Total value: 14 million dollars
    • Returned in three phases:
      • 612 artefacts in November 2024
      • 26 artefacts in July 2025
      • 19 artefacts in 2026
    • Major recovery led by investigative agencies in New York

    Important Artefacts Returned

    Buddha Sculpture

    • Material: Red sandstone
    • Value: 7.5 million dollars
    • Depicts Abhaya Mudra (gesture of protection)

    Avalokiteshvara Bronze

    • Value: 2 million dollars
    • Origin: Sirpur
    • Associated with Lakshmana Temple region

    Dancing Ganesha Sculpture

    • Origin: Temple in Madhya Pradesh
    • Smuggled through international art networks
    [2012] Lord Buddha’s image is sometimes shown with the hand gesture called ‘Bhumisparsha Mudra’. It symbolizes: (a) Buddha’s calling of the Earth to watch over Mara and to prevent Mara from disturbing his meditation. (b) Buddha’s calling of the Earth to witness his purity and chastity despite the temptations of Mara. (c) Buddha’s reminder to his followers that they all arise from the Earth and finally dissolve into the Earth, and thus this life is transitory. (d) Both (a) and (b)
  • NSO Survey on Health Seeking Behaviour 

    Why in the News?

    The National Statistical Office has released findings from its 80th round health survey (2025) showing improved health seeking behaviour in India, with higher reporting of illnesses and increased use of public healthcare services.

    Key Indicator

    Proportion of Population Reporting Ailment (PPRA)

    • Rural: 6.8 percent (2017–18) to 12.2 percent (2025)
    • Urban: 9.1 percent to 14.9 percent
      • Increase indicates greater awareness and reporting of illnesses

    Health Insurance Coverage

    • Rural: 12.9 percent to 45.5 percent
    • Urban: 8.9 percent to 31.8 percent
      • Driven by schemes like Ayushman Bharat Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana

    Institutional Deliveries

    • Rural: 95.6 percent
    • Urban: 97.8 percent
      • Indicates improved maternal healthcare access

    Out of Pocket Expenditure (OOPE)

    • Median OOPE (hospitalisation): ₹11,285
    • Public facilities:
      • Hospitalisation median: ₹1,100
      • Outpatient care: Zero in many cases
    • Suggests affordability of public healthcare services

    Disease Pattern Shift

    • Decline in infectious diseases
    • Rise in Non Communicable Diseases (NCDs)
      • Diabetes
      • Cardiovascular diseases

    Utilisation of Public Healthcare

    • Rural outpatient care: 28 percent (2014) to 35 percent (2025)
    • Increase due to:
      • Free drugs and diagnostics
      • Expansion of primary healthcare services

    Survey Coverage

    • Total households surveyed: 1,39,732
      • Rural: 76,296
      • Urban: 63,436
    [2025] Consider the following statements in relation to Janani Suraksha Yojana: 
    1 It is a safe motherhood intervention of the State Health Departments. 
    2 Its objective is to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality among poor pregnant women.
    3 It aims to promote institutional delivery among poor pregnant women. 
    4 Its objective includes providing public health facilities to sick infants up to one year of age.
    How many of the statements given above are correct? 
    (a) Only one (b) Only two (c) Only three (d) All four
  • [29th April 2026] The Hindu OpED: The RTE Act and the idea of social inclusion 

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2022] The Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education Act, 2009 remains inadequate in promoting incentive-based system for children’s education without generating awareness about the importance of schooling. Analyse.Linkage: The PYQ directly connects to Section 12(1)(c) by questioning effectiveness vs intent of RTE, especially in inclusion and awareness. The article strengthens this PYQ by showing that the issue is now implementation gaps (costs, compliance, access) rather than policy inadequacy.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The January 2026 judgment of the Supreme Court has reaffirmed the constitutional purpose of Section 12(1)(c) of the Right to Education Act, 2009. This comes at a time when declining enrolment in government schools and rising private schooling had triggered concerns about a silent shift toward privatization. The ruling is significant because it rejects the narrative that the provision dilutes public education and instead frames it as a tool for social integration, not welfare

    What is Section 12(1)(c) of the Right to Education (RTE) Act, 2009?

    It mandates that private unaided and special category schools reserve at least 25% of their entry-level seats (Class I or pre-school) for children from economically weaker sections (EWS) and disadvantaged groups. It ensures free, compulsory elementary education to these students, with states reimbursing schools for costs. 

    Key Details of Section 12(1)(c)

    1. Mandate: Private non-minority schools must reserve 25% of entry-level seats for EWS and disadvantaged group children, such as those from SC/ST, OBC, or with disabilities.
    2. Free Education: The provision covers tuition and fees until the completion of elementary education (typically up to Class 8).
    3. Reimbursement: State governments are responsible for reimbursing private schools for the fees of these students based on their actual cost or government school expenditure, whichever is lower.
    4. Purpose: The provision, often referred to as the “25% quota for weaker sections in private schools” or “RTE inclusion mandate,” seeks to promote social integration and equity, reducing the education gap between the privileged and underprivileged.
    5. Scope: This applies to Class I or pre-school, whichever is the entry point, and lasts throughout the elementary education cycle.

    Why is Section 12(1)(c) seen as a tool of social integration rather than welfare?

    1. Equality of Status: Ensures children from diverse socio-economic backgrounds study together, reducing social segregation.
    2. Shared Learning Spaces: Facilitates interaction across class lines; example, child of a judge studying with a street vendor’s child.
    3. Constitutional Morality: Operationalizes Article 14 and 21A of the Constitution of India through lived equality, not symbolic guarantees.
    4. Non-zero-sum Framework: Integrates public and private schooling systems instead of replacing one with the other.

    Does Section 12(1)(c) dilute the State’s responsibility towards public education?

    1. State Obligation: Retains primary duty to provide free and compulsory education.
    2. Complementary Role: Positions private schools as participants in achieving constitutional goals.
    3. Misplaced Criticism: Declining government school enrolment linked to infrastructure and teacher issues, not RTE
    4. Empirical Evidence: ASER 2006 highlights shift to private schools due to perceived quality gaps.

    What evidence exists on the ground regarding its impact?

    1. Scale of Reach: Over 5 million children benefited since rollout.
    2. Retention Rates: Maintains above 90% retention, indicating sustainability.
    3. Urban Normalisation: Cities like Delhi and Ahmedabad show blended classrooms as standard.
    4. Behavioural Outcomes: Research (Rao, Gautam, 2019) shows reduced discrimination and improved pro-social behaviour.
    5. Academic Neutrality: No negative impact on academic outcomes or classroom discipline observed.

    What are the key implementation challenges?

    1. Private School Resistance: Limits full inclusion and compliance.
    2. Hidden Costs: Uniforms, books, materials create barriers for poor families.
    3. Administrative Gaps: Weak grievance redressal and transparency mechanisms.
    4. Inter-state Variation: Uneven implementation across states.
    5. Awareness Deficit: Limited last-mile outreach reduces access for eligible families.

    What reforms have improved implementation outcomes?

    1. Digital Admissions: State-driven systems ensure transparent allocation (e.g., Rajasthan, Gujarat, Delhi).
    2. Reimbursement Systems: Streamlined financial flows to private schools improve compliance.
    3. Monitoring Mechanisms: Strengthens accountability and reduces discretion.
    4. Policy Clarity: Court judgment removes ambiguity about intent and scope.

    What is the way forward for effective realization?

    1. Cost Elimination: Removes hidden financial burdens on beneficiaries.
    2. Regulatory Enforcement: Strengthens compliance norms for private institutions.
    3. Institutional Accountability: Improves grievance redressal frameworks.
    4. Inclusive Norms: Ensures experiential equality, not just access.
    5. Administrative Focus: Shifts policy debate from ideology to execution.

    Conclusion

    The reaffirmation of Section 12(1)(c) marks a shift from ideological contestation to administrative responsibility. The core challenge lies in ensuring that access translates into meaningful inclusion, thereby fulfilling the constitutional promise of social integration.

  • UAE leaves OPEC and OPEC+ in huge blow to global oil producers’ group

    Why in the News?

    The United Arab Emirates’ decision to exit the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) marks a significant rupture in the cohesion of one of the world’s most influential oil cartels. It is a major development because the UAE is OPEC’s third-largest producer, and its exit reflects growing internal dissent over production quotas. This move contrasts sharply with OPEC’s traditional unity in managing oil supply to influence global prices. The development gains further significance amid already constrained global oil supplies due to geopolitical tensions, including disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.

    What is OPEC and OPEC plus?

    Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC)

    1. Formation: Established in 1960 at Baghdad Conference by five founding members, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela.
    2. Headquarters: Locates secretariat in Vienna, Austria.
    3. Membership: Includes 13 members (variable over time) such as Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, UAE, Nigeria, Angola, Algeria, Libya, Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Venezuela (Qatar exited in 2019; UAE exiting).
    4. Objective: Ensures coordination of petroleum policies to stabilize oil markets and secure fair prices for producers and reliable supply for consumers.
    5. Production Quotas: Allocates output limits to control global supply and influence prices.
    6. Market Share: Accounts for ~40% of global oil production and a higher share of proven reserves.

    OPEC+:

    1. Origin: Formed in 2016 in response to dropping oil prices and increased U.S. shale production.
    2. Composition: Includes the original OPEC members plus 10 non-OPEC nations, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Brunei, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Mexico, Oman, Russia, South Sudan, and Sudan.
    3. Role: Coordinates production cuts with the core OPEC group to manage the global oil market

    Why has the UAE exited OPEC, and what structural tensions does it reflect?

    1. Production Constraints: Indicates dissatisfaction with OPEC quotas limiting output despite expanded capacity; UAE capable of producing ~5 million barrels/day.
    2. Strategic Autonomy: Prioritizes national economic goals over cartel discipline; seeks flexibility to maximize exports.
    3. Internal Frictions: Reflects weakening cohesion after Qatar’s exit (2019) and tensions with Saudi Arabia over quotas.
    4. Energy Strategy Shift: Aligns with long-term diversification and gradual supply increases based on market demand.

    Reflected Structural Tensions:

    1. Saudi Arabia-UAE Rivalry: The departure highlights the growing rift between Riyadh and Abu Dhabi, undermining Saudi Arabia’s leadership within the cartel.
    2. Weakening of OPEC Influence: The loss of a major producer with significant spare capacity is a major blow to OPEC’s ability to manage global supply,. This signals a potential shift towards a more fragmented, less predictable oil market.
    3. Shift in Global Energy Alliances: The move aligns with the UAE building deeper economic ties with non-traditional partners and potentially improving ties with consumers like the US by increasing supply during market shortages. 

    How does UAE’s exit impact OPEC’s global influence and bargaining power?

    1. Reduced Market Share: Weakens OPEC’s control over supply; currently ~40% global output share.
      1. The departure removes approximately 15% of OPEC’s production capacity.
      2. For the broader OPEC+ alliance , the share is projected to fall from 50% to 45%
    2. Depletion of Spare Capacity: The UAE was one of the few members, alongside Saudi Arabia, with significant spare production capacity; the primary tool for responding to supply shocks.
    3. Downward Price Pressure: Free from quotas, the UAE can eventually add up to 1.6 million barrels per day (mb/d) back to the market once shipping through the Strait of Hormuz  stabilizes.
    4. Declining Coordination: Reduces ability to collectively stabilize prices.
    5. Cartel Fragmentation: Signals erosion of unity, reducing effectiveness of production agreements.

    What geopolitical and economic factors shape this development?

    1. Regional Politics: Reflects strained UAE-Saudi relations on economic and political issues particularly over differing agendas in the Yemen civil war.
    2. Iran Conflict Impact: War disruptions led to closure of Strait of Hormuz, affecting ~20% of global oil trade.
      1. Following the outbreak of war in early 2026, the UAE has been a major target of Iranian drone and missile strikes. 
      2. Abu Dhabi criticized fellow Arab states for a “weak” political and military response, making continued membership in a OPEC alongside Iran politically untenable.
    3. Distancing from Russia (OPEC+): The UAE has grown wary of the OPEC+ alliance, noting that Russia has remained a “steadfast partner” for Iran during the conflict.
      1. Exiting allows the UAE to distance itself from Moscow’s influence and strengthen ties with the U.S
    4. US Production Rise: U.S. output exceeds 13 million barrels/day, reducing reliance on OPEC.
    5. Monetizing Spare Capacity: The UAE has invested billions to reach a production capacity of over 5 million barrels per day.
      1. The National leadership wants to sell this oil now, before global demand peaks, to fund its Vision 2030 diversification into technology, tourism, and renewables.

    What are the implications for global oil markets and prices?

    1. Price Volatility: Reduces coordinated supply management, increasing fluctuations.
    2. Supply Expansion: UAE may increase independent production, adding to global supply.
    3. Market Uncertainty: Weakens predictability of production decisions.
    4. Short-term Stability: Limited immediate impact due to already tight supply conditions.

    What are the implications for India’s energy security and economy?

    1. Import Dependence: India imports ~85% of its crude oil; changes in OPEC dynamics directly affect supply security.
    2. Price Volatility Risk: Increased oil price fluctuations impact inflation, fiscal deficit, and current account deficit.
    3. Diversification Opportunity: Weakening OPEC control enables India to diversify suppliers and negotiate better terms.
    4. Strategic Reserves Use: Necessitates stronger use of Strategic Petroleum Reserves (SPR) during volatility.
    5. Energy Transition Push: Reinforces urgency for renewables and alternative energy to reduce import dependence.
    6. Diplomatic Leverage: Enhances India’s engagement with multiple producers beyond OPEC bloc.

    Does this signal a broader transformation in global energy governance?

    1. Resource Nationalism: Countries prioritize domestic economic gains over collective frameworks.
    2. Decline of Cartels: Traditional supply-control mechanisms lose effectiveness.
    3. Multipolar Energy Order: Influence spreads across US, OPEC, Russia, and emerging producers.
    4. Energy Transition Pressure: Long-term shift toward renewables reshapes oil strategies.

    Conclusion

    The UAE’s exit reflects structural changes in global oil governance, weakening cartel cohesion and reinforcing a shift toward decentralized, nationalistic energy strategies with direct implications for energy-importing countries like India.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] ‘Virus of Conflict is affecting the functioning of the SCO’. In the light of the above statement point out the role of India in mitigating problems. 

    Linkage: The PYQ highlights challenges within international groupings due to internal conflicts and divergent national interests, similar to fragmentation within OPEC. UAE’s exit reflects weakening multilateral cohesion, reinforcing the need to analyze stability, effectiveness, and India’s strategic positioning in global groupings.

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