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  • 🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Purnima Ma’am, Civilsdaily IAS | 90% of the UPSC Syllabus Is Current Affairs | The Right Strategy for UPSC 2027 | Join on 1st July at 5PM

    🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Purnima Ma’am, Civilsdaily IAS | 90% of the UPSC Syllabus Is Current Affairs | The Right Strategy for UPSC 2027 | Join on 1st July at 5PM

    Register for the session


    Read about Webinar

    90% of the UPSC Syllabus Is Current Affairs.
    But most aspirants still study Current Affairs the wrong way.

    They read newspapers every day, make bulky notes, save hundreds of PDFs, and consume endless monthly magazines. Yet when UPSC asks a question, they fail to connect it with the static syllabus.

    The difference isn’t how much Current Affairs you read. It’s how you integrate it into your preparation.

    In this live session, I will explain why Current Affairs has become the backbone of UPSC preparation, and how serious 2027 aspirants should approach it from Day 1.

    What I will cover :

    • Why almost every GS paper is driven by Current Affairs in one way or another.
    • How to connect Current Affairs with the static syllabus instead of studying them separately.
    • How to build subject wise Current Affairs notes using microthemes.
    • What to read, what to ignore, and how to avoid information overload.
    • A sustainable Current Affairs strategy that works from Foundation to Mains and Interview.
    • Common mistakes beginners make that waste hundreds of preparation hours.

    If you’re starting your UPSC 2027 journey, this session will help you build the right preparation system before bad habits become permanent.

    Register to Access Microthemes PDF

    Join us, for a 45 minute live Zoom session on 01st July at 5 PM.

    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 Purnima Ma’am is known to be patiently solving all your doubts.

    Join us for a Zoom session on 01st July at 5PM. 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 01st July at 5PM

    (Don’t wait—the next webinar/session won’t be until Mid July’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.

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  • [30th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: Why artificial wisdom is the biggest AI risk

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2023] Introduce the concept of Artificial Intelligence (AI). How does AI help clinical diagnosis? Do you perceive any threat to privacy of the individual in the use of AI in healthcare?
    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of AI’s applications alongside ethical concerns such as privacy, accountability and responsible deployment. The article extends the debate beyond privacy to examine AI-generated misinformation, concentration of AI power, the limits of machine-generated knowledge, and the need for robust AI governance and regulation.

    Mentor’s Comment

    AI debates have centred on job losses and concentration of power among a few firms and nations. A third, less discussed risk is emerging: AI is being treated as a substitute for human cognition, even though it produces information, not knowledge. The conflation of AI output with genuine knowledge has no such precedent and currently has no accountability structure attached to it.

    Why are labour displacement and power concentration considered the more manageable AI risks?

    1. Historical precedent on labour: Technology has automated specific tasks, not entire professions; the steam engine displaced labour into new industries rather than eliminating it.
    2. Expected AI trajectory: Some occupations will shrink, others will expand, and new professions will emerge, mirroring past transitions.
    3. Transition cost is real: The shift will require substantial investment in reskilling, but is not existential.
    4. Capital-intensive economics of AI: Frontier models require massive investment in computing infrastructure, energy, talent and data, restricting ownership to a few firms and countries.
    5. Concentration risk has known parallels: Concentrated control of strategic resources such as gold or oil has historically produced geopolitical leverage and coercive behaviour.
    6. Institutional tools already exist: Legal institutions, international treaties and negotiated frameworks have managed comparable concentration risks before.

    What is the curse of “artificial wisdom” and why is it the most dangerous AI risk?

    1. Core misconception: AI enthusiasts position AI as a substitute for human cognition, leading society to internalise the belief that AI generates knowledge.
    2. What AI actually does: An AI system is trained on data to learn patterns and statistical relationships, and predicts the most probable next step in a sequence.
    3. Knowledge versus information: Information is what AI produces; Knowledge: understanding that requires context, judgment, experience and an understanding of consequences.
    4. Verification requires expertise: Only a human mind with domain expertise can judge whether AI-generated output is useful and appropriate for a given problem.
    5. Why this risk is least understood: It is structurally different from labour and power risks because it changes how truth itself is assessed, not just who holds resources or jobs.

    How does the information-knowledge conflation translate into systemic harm?

    1. Synthetic information advantage: AI-generated content can be more persuasive, accessible or appealing than genuine information.
    2. Erosion of fact-fabrication distinction: Individuals and institutions struggle to separate fact from fabrication, creating conditions for manipulation and misinformation.
    3. Organisational dependence: Organisations increasingly use AI for research, coding, legal drafting and financial analysis.
    4. Unverifiable decision-making: This creates systemic risk because decisions are influenced by intelligence that nobody is qualified to verify.
    5. Paradox of expertise: The AI age makes genuine domain expertise more valuable, since the rarest skill becomes determining whether machine-generated answers are correct.

    Why does AI’s accountability gap require a new governance architecture?

    1. Existing liability model: Manufacturers of harmful pharmaceutical products can be held accountable under established liability law.
    2. AI’s liability gap: AI systems have largely operated without comparable clear liability.
    3. Emerging accountability signal: Meta Platforms has faced lawsuits alleging that its platform design contributed to harm among young users, indicating accountability boundaries are beginning to be redrawn for digital platforms.
    4. Proposed safeguard structure: The response requires both technical and institutional safeguards, backed by a global non-proliferation agreement on disruptive AI.
    5. Containment objective: Such an agreement must allow humans to limit or shut down AI systems operating outside their intended boundaries.
    6. Precedent for restraint: Humanity has avoided nuclear catastrophe for eight decades; AI governance is framed as a comparable challenge of sustained, deliberate restraint.

    Conclusion

    The defining AI risk is not job loss or concentrated ownership, both of which have historical management precedents. It is the unchecked substitution of AI-generated information for genuine knowledge, compounded by the absence of liability and verification structures. Closing this gap requires a global governance architecture combining technical safeguards, institutional accountability, and a non-proliferation framework for disruptive AI capabilities, built before reliance on unverified AI output becomes irreversible.

  • What India’s 12 ‘operationally deployed’ nuclear warheads mean

    Why in the News?

    SIPRI’s 2026 Yearbook classified 12 of India’s 190 nuclear warheads as operationally deployed for the first time. These are positioned with active military forces mated with delivery systems and ready for use.The classification has triggered concern over a possible shift in India’s No First Use (NFU) doctrine.

    Why does SIPRI’s “deployment” classification not indicate a shift in India’s nuclear doctrine?

    1. No change in launch policy: NFU commits India to not launching a pre-emptive strike; SIPRI’s report records no revision of this commitment.
    2. No threshold lowering: The report does not indicate any lowering of the threshold for nuclear employment.
    3. No change in political control: Civilian and political oversight mechanisms governing nuclear release remain unaltered.
    4. Expert confirmation: Warheads mated with delivery platforms make assured retaliation more credible, not less restrained.
    5. Reaffirmed commitment: India’s representatives reaffirmed NFU and non-use against non-nuclear-weapon states at the UN High-Level Meeting in September 2025.
    6. Internal calls for first-use rejected: Periodic domestic proposals for a conditional or hybrid first-use posture have not prevailed.

    Why does the stockpile-deployment distinction matter for assessing India’s posture?

    Possessing a warhead and deploying it as part of an operational deterrent are not the same condition. The distinction determines whether a count of warheads signals readiness or merely holdings.

    1. De-mated baseline: For most of its nuclear history, India stored warheads separately from delivery vehicles at a central site under strict oversight.
    2. Purpose of de-mating: This was meant to maximise safety, reduce accidental-use risk, and signal restraint internationally.
    3. Definition of deployment: Deployment pairs a warhead with a delivery system and positions it with operational forces in readiness.
    4. Readiness, not intent: A deployed weapon is configured for use if authorised; it is not a signal of imminent use.
    5. Speed differential: A de-mated weapon needs time to prepare and deploy; a mated weapon can be launched faster.
    6. Scale of the shift: SIPRI’s count reflects a small but significant fraction of India’s arsenal now held in operational readiness, not a wholesale change in posture.

    How does the sea-based deterrent resolve the central vulnerability in India’s NFU doctrine?

    NFU is a retaliation-only doctrine, so it stands or falls on whether the force can survive a first strike. Sea-basing closes the specific gap that land-based deployment cannot.

    1. Survivability requirement: NFU depends on enough of the arsenal surviving a first strike to deliver a retaliatory blow; without this, NFU becomes a liability rather than a doctrine.
    2. Land-based vulnerability: Land-based missiles sit at known, mappable locations and can be targeted in a disarming first strike.
    3. Sea-based advantage: A submerged submarine cannot be found, tracked, or destroyed in time, removing this vulnerability.
    4. Arihant-class platform: India’s Arihant-class submarines have steadily strengthened second-strike survivability, with additional platforms expected to further consolidate this leg of the triad.
    5. Operational milestone: Three operational SSBNs allow India to keep at least one submarine submerged and on patrol at all times.
    6. Supporting readiness measure: Increasing reliance on canisterised Agni-series missiles, which carry fuel sealed and ready, raises operational readiness without requiring further preparation before launch.

    What broader trend does India’s deployment milestone sit within, and why does it matter?

    1. Global reversal: SIPRI’s 2026 Yearbook records states increasingly relying on nuclear weapons as instruments of national power, reversing decades of gradual disarmament progress.
    2. Scale of global arsenals: Nine nuclear-armed states held an estimated 12,187 warheads as of January 2026.
    3. China’s pace: China’s arsenal has grown to approximately 620 warheads, expanding faster than any other nuclear power and now over three times Pakistan’s estimated stockpile.
    4. Dual-direction posture: India’s modernisation is increasingly focused on long-range systems capable of reaching China, while continuing to account for Pakistan.
    5. Weakening arms control: Arms-control agreements have weakened or collapsed even as competition intensifies in hypersonic delivery, AI-enabled decision support, missile defence, and anti-submarine warfare.
    6. Unresolved risk: The maturation of India’s second-strike capability strengthens deterrence bilaterally, but does nothing to address the rising risk of miscalculation across a destabilising global order.

    Conclusion

    SIPRI’s classification of 12 Indian warheads as operationally deployed documents the maturing of India’s sea-based second-strike capability, not a retreat from No First Use. This development, however, sits inside a global environment where arms-control frameworks are weakening and major powers are re-arming. The institutions designed to manage nuclear risk must adapt to this faster-fielding environment, or the credibility gained through India’s improved deterrent will be offset by a rising structural risk of miscalculation.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2017] Give an account of the growth and development of nuclear science and technology in India. What is the advantage of fast breeder reactor programme in India?

    Linkage: Tests India’s strategic nuclear capabilities, indigenous nuclear development and the evolution of its deterrence architecture.The article explains how India’s maturing nuclear triad and operational deployment strengthen its credible minimum deterrence and second-strike capability without altering its No First Use doctrine.

  • Behind Europe’s heatwave, cliamte change the culprit

    Why in the News?

    A World Weather Attribution (WWA) study has confirmed climate change as the unequivocal cause of the ongoing European heatwave, which has broken or is forecast to break historic heat-stress records in 45% of 854 cities analysed. The finding sharpens a wider gap between the certainty climate science now offers and the declining political priority accorded to climate action.

    What does the WWA study establish about the causal role of climate change in the current heatwave?

    1. Unequivocal attribution: WWA found climate change, not the El Niño phenomenon or any other factor, responsible for the European heatwave.
    2. Recurrence pattern: This is the third severe heatwave to grip Europe in five years, after 2022 and 2023.
    3. Mortality scale: More than 1,300 excess deaths have been recorded since 21 June; over 1,00,000 people are estimated to have died from extreme heat across 2022 and 2023.
    4. Probability shift: Record-breaking night-time highs are nearly 100 times more likely now than in 2003; daytime peak temperatures are nearly 10 times more likely.
    5. Historical baseline broken: Temperature records being broken were set in 1976; the current daytime and overnight highs would have been virtually impossible to occur as recently as 1976.
    6. ENSO ruled out: The El Niño Southern Oscillation phase played no role in driving the heat during this spell.

    Why has climate attribution science become central to fixing responsibility for extreme weather events?

    1. Definition: Climate attribution is the scientific discipline that determines how much human-caused global warming influences the probability and intensity of specific extreme weather events. It quantifies how much worse or more likely a particular flood, heatwave, or drought has become compared to a hypothetical world without human-driven emissions
    2. Function: Attribution science tests the likelihood of a specific extreme weather event occurring if climate change were not taking place.
    3. Recency: The discipline has developed only over the last two decades.
    4. Speed gain: Assessments earlier took months or years; WWA’s methods now produce findings within days, even while an event is still ongoing.
    5. Purpose: The science removes ambiguity and fixes the exact extent of climate change’s responsibility for an event.
    6. Scientific caution without it: Scientists are otherwise wary of linking any individual extreme weather event to climate change without a dedicated attribution study.
    7. Policy intent: Beyond generating evidence, attribution studies are designed to force policymakers to act faster on climate change.

    Does scientific certainty on climate attribution translate into proportionate political action?

    1. Evidence-action gap: Scientific evidence on climate change is already voluminous and compelling, yet climate change has dropped down the list of global priorities.
    2. Political trigger: The decline has sharpened particularly after Donald Trump took office as US President.
    3. Forum evidence: Recent G7 meetings have carried little or no climate-related agenda or outcomes.
    4. Reversal of salience: Climate change was earlier among the most prominent items at international meetings involving influential leaders; this prominence has receded.
    5. Target abandonment: Scientists maintain the Paris Agreement targets of containing global temperature rise within 1.5°C to 2°C remain achievable, but governments treat them as effectively out of reach.
    6. Reframing of feasibility: Governments are treating the required resource mobilisation as politically impractical rather than scientifically unattainable.

    What risk does the global shift from mitigation to adaptation pose?

    1. Strategic shift: Countries are increasingly choosing to let climate change play out and to adapt to its impacts rather than prevent it.
    2. Scientific objection: Scientists routinely warn against adaptation as a substitute for mitigation.
    3. Inherent limits: Adaptation has limits beyond which impacts cannot be absorbed.
    4. Trend trajectory: Events such as the European heatwave are projected to increase in both frequency and intensity over coming years.
    5. Displacement, not resolution: The shift to adaptation transfers the climate risk from prevention to adaptation capacity rather than resolving it.

    Conclusion

    Climate attribution science has removed the scientific ambiguity once used to avoid linking individual extreme weather events to climate change. The European heatwave attribution exposes a widening gap between scientific certainty and political will, as global climate governance deprioritises mitigation. Countries are substituting adaptation for prevention despite scientists’ warnings that adaptation carries inherent limits. Closing this evidence-action gap is now central to achieving the Paris Agreement targets.

    PYQ Relevance

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

    Linkage: The PYQ xamines the impacts of climate change and the need for mitigation and adaptation strategies. The article uses the European heatwave as scientific evidence that climate change is intensifying extreme weather events and highlights the growing gap between climate science and political action.

  • MSMEs and Viksit Bharat 2047: formalisation, credit access, and the inclusion gap

    Why in the news

    The Ministry of MSME released its 2025–26 sector review highlighting landmark milestones: 8.7 crore Udyam registrations, CGTMSE completing 25 years, and MSME contributions reaching 31.1% of GDP and 48.58% of exports. The review exposes the central challenge — formalisation and credit access have expanded rapidly, but equity capital, market linkages, and structural inclusion for marginalised entrepreneurs remain uneven.

    What is the scale and economic significance of India’s MSME sector, and what structural gaps persist despite aggregate growth?

    • Economic footprint (January 2026 data): MSMEs contribute 31.1% of GDP, 35.4% of manufacturing output, and 48.58% of exports. With 38.9 crore employed, the sector is the second-largest employment source after agriculture.
    • Definition revision (April 2025): The government revised MSME classification thresholds based on investment and turnover, giving enterprises greater room to scale without losing policy support — addressing a longstanding cliff-edge disincentive to growth.
    • Formalisation reach: Udyam and Udyam Assist registrations crossed 8.7 crore as of June 2026, expanding access to institutional finance and government schemes for previously informal enterprises.
    • Persistent equity gap: Debt-based credit schemes have scaled, but equity capital essential for MSMEs seeking to move beyond micro-scale remains structurally limited. The SRI Fund (Fund of Funds) has reached only 761 enterprises with ₹2,851 crore as of May 2026, a narrow footprint relative to sector size.

    How has credit access for MSMEs been restructured, and what constraints remain in reaching the smallest enterprises?

    • CGTMSE expansion: The Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises approved 29.03 lakh guarantees worth ₹3.77 lakh crore (January–November 2025). The guarantee ceiling was raised from ₹5 crore to ₹10 crore, enabling larger collateral-free support.
    • Digital Credit Assessment Model: A new model reduces dependence on traditional collateral and balance-sheet assessment, improving access for first-generation and informal-origin entrepreneurs who lack formal credit histories.
    • PMEGP reach: The Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme has supported 10.84 lakh micro-enterprises with ₹29,623 crore in margin money subsidies, generating employment for over 97 lakh people since inception. Applications are now available in 19 regional languages (since June 2025).
    • Remaining constraint: Guarantee schemes address debt access but not enterprise viability. MSMEs without bankable cash flows common among artisan and rural enterprises — remain outside the formal credit architecture despite formalisation.

    How are technology adoption and quality certification being embedded into the MSME ecosystem?

    • ZED Certification (Zero Defect Zero Effect): Over 93.61 lakh MSMEs registered and 6.68 lakh certified as of May 2026. The framework promotes quality manufacturing with minimal environmental impact — aligning MSME output with global supply chain standards.
    • LEAN Manufacturing: Over 65,647 enterprises registered and 18,961 certified under the Lean Manufacturing scheme. Adoption of globally recognised lean practices reduces waste and raises operational efficiency.
    • Technology Centre network: 18 existing Technology Centres, 25 operational Extension Centres (trained 53,963 youth), and 9 World Bank-supported centres (trained 59,357 individuals, assisted 1,520 MSMEs as of November 2025). An additional 20 Technology Centres and 100 Extension Centres are under development.
    • IPR facilitation: Intellectual Property Facilitation Centres have approved 191 patents, 807 trademarks, 99 designs, and 6 GI registrations building a thin but growing innovation asset base within the sector.

    How effectively is MSME policy reaching marginalised groups artisans, SC/ST entrepreneurs, women, and the North East?

    • PM Vishwakarma: The scheme covers 18 traditional trades and reached its four-year registration target of 30 lakh beneficiaries in two years. Over 24 lakh completed basic skill training; ₹5,133 crore in collateral-free loans sanctioned to 5.98 lakh beneficiaries.
    • National SC/ST Hub: Public procurement from SC/ST-owned enterprises rose from ₹99 crore (2015–16) to ₹3,731 crore (2024–25). SC/ST-owned MSEs accounted for 1.93% of total public procurement as of December 2025, progress visible but far below proportional representation.
    • Women entrepreneurship: At the 44th IITF 2025, over 67% of MSME stalls were allotted to women entrepreneurs a market access intervention, though stall allocation does not translate directly into sustained commercial scale.
    • North East promotion: 73 projects approved under the NER & Sikkim scheme (total cost ₹114.37 crore, government assistance ₹89.60 crore), targeting manufacturing, testing, packaging, skilling, and tourism infrastructure. Eight new projects were approved in Assam and Meghalaya in 2025.
    • SFURTI (traditional industry clusters): 513 clusters approved, 376 functional as of June 2026, benefiting 3.03 lakh artisans. Cluster-based organisation addresses market linkage and tool access — the structural gaps that individual artisan support cannot solve.

    Do the governance and grievance redressal mechanisms match the scale of the MSME sector’s delayed payment and dispute burden?

    • MSME Samadhaan Portal: 2,56,892 applications received involving ₹55,244 crore in claims as of June 2026. Only 58,148 cases disposed — a 22.6% resolution rate, revealing a large unresolved claims backlog despite the portal’s existence.
    • CHAMPIONS Portal: 39,494 grievances received in 2025–26; 39,387 resolved a 99.72% disposal rate. High throughput here contrasts sharply with Samadhaan’s backlog, suggesting delayed payments are the deeper structural problem, not general grievance handling.
    • Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) Portal: Newly launched to reduce delayed payments through technology-enabled dispute resolution. Effectiveness is yet to be demonstrated at scale.
    • Public procurement monitoring: The MSME Sambandh Portal tracked ₹31,443 crore in CPSE procurement during FY 2026–27 (as of June 2026), with 54.51% sourced from MSEs across 29,769 enterprises. Mandatory procurement targets create market access but do not resolve the downstream payment delay problem.

    Conclusion

    India’s MSME sector has achieved significant formalisation and credit access milestones — but the policy architecture still addresses inputs (registrations, guarantees, skilling) more effectively than outcomes (enterprise viability, market competitiveness, equitable inclusion). The delayed payment backlog on Samadhaan, the narrow reach of equity capital under the SRI Fund, and the 1.93% SC/ST share in public procurement collectively indicate that expansion of the formal enterprise base has not yet translated into structural economic empowerment. For Viksit Bharat 2047, the MSME agenda must shift from formalisation as an end to commercialisation and sustained enterprise growth as the measure of success.

  • White-rumped Vulture Electrocuted in Mudumalai

    Why in the news?

    A radio-tagged, captive-bred White-rumped Vulture released in Mudumalai Tiger Reserve (Tamil Nadu) was electrocuted after coming into contact with a power line, marking the failure of the first reintroduction attempt of a captive-bred bird into the landscape.

    White-rumped Vulture (Gyps bengalensis)

    • Scientific name: Gyps bengalensis
    • IUCN Status: Critically Endangered
    • Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972: Schedule I
    • CITES: Appendix II
    • Distribution: India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan. In South India, Mudumalai Tiger Reserve hosts one of the last viable breeding populations.

    Why are White-rumped Vultures Declining?

    • Veterinary use of Diclofenac, causing kidney failure.
    • Electrocution from power lines.
    • Collision with transmission lines.
    • Poisoning from contaminated carcasses.
    • Habitat degradation and food scarcity.

    [2017] In India, if a species of tortoise is declared protected under Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, what does it imply?

    [A] It enjoys the same level of protection as the tiger.

    [B] It no longer exists in the wild, a few individuals are under captive protection; and not it is impossible to prevent its extinction.

    [C] It is endemic to a particular region of India.

    [D] Both (b) and (c) stated above are correct in this context.

  • Kisan Sarathi Platform

    Why in News?

    The Government highlighted Kisan Sarathi, India’s integrated digital agro-advisory platform, for strengthening agricultural extension services through technology, multilingual support, and expert-based advisories.

    What is Kisan Sarathi?

    • Launched in July 2021.
    • India’s largest integrated digital agro-advisory platform.
    • Joint initiative of Ministry of Electronics & Information Technology (MeitY) and Ministry of Agriculture & Farmers Welfare
    • Implemented by Indian Agricultural Statistics Research Institute (IASRI) and Digital India Corporation

    Key Features

    • Provides real-time, multilingual, location-specific advisories.
    • Two-way communication through Interactive Information Dissemination System (IIDS).
    • Offers: Weather forecasts, Mandi prices, Crop advisories, Government scheme information, and Expert consultations
    • Covers: Crops, Livestock, Poultry, Fisheries, and Allied sectors

    [2020] In India, which of the following can be considered as public investment agriculture?

    1. Fixing Minimum Support Price for agricultural produce of all corps
    2. Computerisation of Primary Agricultural Credit Societies
    3. Social Capital development
    4. Free electricity supply to farmers
    5. Waiver of agricultural loans by the banking system
    6. Setting up of cold storage facilities by the government

    Select the correct answer using the code given below :
    a) 1, 2 and 5 only
    b) 1, 3, 4 and 5 only
    c) 2, 3 and 6 only
    d) 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6

  • Advancing Electrolyte Engineering for Durable and Affordable Aqueous Batteries

    Why in News?

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

    What are Aqueous Zinc Ion Batteries (AZIBs)?

    • Rechargeable batteries that use zinc metal as the anode and a water-based electrolyte.
    • Considered a promising alternative to lithium-ion batteries because they are Safer (non-flammable electrolyte), Low-cost (abundant zinc), Environment-friendly, and Suitable for large-scale energy storage.

    Challenges in AZIBs

    • Growth of zinc dendrites (needle-like deposits causing short circuits)
    • Hydrogen Evolution Reaction (HER) leading to gas formation
    • Corrosion of zinc anode
    • Poor cycling stability and reduced battery life

    Key Innovation

    • Researchers developed an electrolyte additive called BDIM (1,3-bis(1,3-dicarboxypropyl)-1H-imidazole-3-ium chloride).
    • BDIM selectively adsorbs on the zinc surface and regulates the Inner Helmholtz Plane (IHP).
    • It displaces water molecules from the electrode surface, thereby:
      • Suppressing hydrogen evolution
      • Reducing corrosion
      • Preventing dendrite formation
      • Enhancing battery lifespan and stability

    Important Concepts

    • Electrolyte: A medium containing ions that enables the flow of electric charge between battery electrodes.
    • Inner Helmholtz Plane (IHP): The innermost layer at the electrode-electrolyte interface where electrochemical reactions occur. Controlling this layer improves battery efficiency and durability.
    • Research Techniques Used
      • Ultramicroelectrode (UME): Tiny electrode (<50 µm) enabling high-resolution electrochemical studies.
      • Fast-Scan Cyclic Voltammetry (FSCV): Technique used to study rapid charge-transfer and zinc deposition mechanisms.

    [2025] In the context of electric vehicle batteries, consider the following elements:
    I. Cobalt
    II. Graphite
    III. Lithium
    IV. Nickel
    How many of the above usually make up battery cathodes?

    [A] Only one

    [B] Only two

    [C] Only three

    [D] All the four

  • Government Introduces Improvement Notice Mechanism under the Legal Metrology Act

    Why in the news?

    The Department of Consumer Affairs has introduced the Improvement Notice mechanism under the Legal Metrology Act, 2009 through the Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2026. The reform aims to reduce the compliance burden, promote Ease of Doing Business (EoDB), and encourage voluntary compliance while ensuring consumer protection.

    What is the Improvement Notice Mechanism?

    • It allows first-time procedural or regulatory non-compliance to be corrected before penal proceedings begin.
    • A Legal Metrology Officer issues an Improvement Notice, identifying the deficiency and providing reasonable time for rectification.
    • If the entity complies within the prescribed period:
      • No penal action or unnecessary litigation.
    • If the entity Fails to comply, or Repeats the violation, Penal provisions under the Legal Metrology Act continue to apply.

    Objectives

    • Promote Ease of Doing Business (EoDB).
    • Encourage voluntary compliance.
    • Reduce compliance costs and litigation.
    • Foster trust-based governance.
    • Allow regulators to focus on serious and deliberate violations.

    Significance for UPSC

    • Example of Minimum Government, Maximum Governance.
    • Reflects the philosophy of the Jan Vishwas Act.
    • Balances Consumer protection, Regulatory efficiency, and Ease of Doing Business
    • Shifts regulation from a punitive approach to a facilitative approach.

    Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2026

    • The Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Act, 2026 is a reform aimed at promoting Ease of Doing Business (EoDB) by shifting from a punitive compliance regime to a trust-based governance framework.
    • It amends several Central laws to reduce unnecessary penalties for minor procedural violations while retaining strict action for serious offences.

    Legal Metrology Act, 2009

    • Legal Metrology is the application of laws and regulations to weights, measures, measuring instruments, and packaged commodities to ensure accuracy, fairness in trade, and consumer protection.
    • Enacted: 2009 (came into force in 2011)
    • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Consumer Affairs, Food and Public Distribution
    • Department: Department of Consumer Affairs

    [2022] In India which one of the following is responsible for maintaining for prices stability by controlling inflation?

    [A] Department of Consumer Affairs

    [B] Expenditure Management Commission

    [C] Financial Stability and Development Council

    [D] Reserve Bank of India

  • [29th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: The new digital slavery needs constitutional guardrails 

    Mentor’s Comment

    Pope Leo XIV’s encyclical Magnifica Humanitas has called for binding legal regulation of AI, warning that unchecked data ownership constitutes a new form of digital subjugation. The encyclical exposes a structural failure: AI governance frameworks worldwide have consistently lagged behind the pace of AI deployment, leaving democratic systems, including India, exposed to deepfake manipulation, algorithmic polarisation, and foreign information warfare.

    Why does conventional legislation structurally fail to govern AI, and what are the democratic consequences of this gap?

    • The asymmetry of speed: AI develops at the pace of start-up culture and mathematical discovery. Parliament governs conduct, not theorems. No legislature can prohibit a mathematical equation from being derived, making ex ante prohibition of AI capabilities structurally impossible.
    • Legislation always arrives late: The EU Artificial Intelligence Act and the UK Online Safety Act were passed after the specific harms they targeted had already mutated. Each legislative cycle produces rules calibrated to yesterday’s technology.
    • Epistemic collapse as a democratic threat: Democratic governance depends on a shared factual foundation from which public debate, policy, and electoral choice proceed. AI-generated deepfakes and synthetic media have advanced to a fidelity where human perception can no longer reliably distinguish forgery from reality.
    • Electoral manipulation at scale: Convincing audio-visual duplications of political leaders are deployed during electoral cycles to fabricate scandals, depress voter turnout, and destroy institutional trust. This is not a future risk, it is the present condition in multiple democracies.
    • Platform business model as the amplifier: Big Tech platforms are engineered to maximise engagement. Because outrage and fear generate the highest click-through rates, recommendation algorithms systematically amplify hyper-partisan content, driving radicalisation and social fragmentation a structurally predictable outcome of the current commercial architecture.

    How does algorithmic polarisation convert into a direct threat to national sovereignty and democratic integrity?

    • The polarisation-to-vulnerability chain: Societies fractured by algorithmic echo chambers lose the shared epistemic baseline required for democratic deliberation. A deeply polarised society is structurally easier to manipulate through foreign information operations.
    • Information warfare has professionalised: Foreign information manipulation operations are no longer bot-driven spam campaigns. They are AI-driven psychological operations that target pre-existing religious, ethnic, and socioeconomic fault lines with precision.
    • Covert amplification of domestic division: Adversarial state and non-state actors do not need to introduce new conflicts. They fund and amplify narratives that already exist, turning a democracy’s internal pluralism into a weapon against its own cohesion.
    • India’s specific exposure: As the world’s largest democracy with rapid digital adoption outpacing structural digital literacy, India combines high platform penetration with low systemic resistance to synthetic media manipulation, a uniquely high risk configuration.
    • The sovereignty framing: Algorithmic manipulation of the information environment is equivalent to unilateral disarmament. The code governing the public square is as critical to national security as physical border infrastructure.

    What do international regulatory efforts reveal about the limits of a purely technical or statutory approach to AI governance?

    • EU Artificial Intelligence Act: The EU adopted a risk-tiered regulatory framework categorising AI applications by potential harm. Its limitation is chronological by the time the Act was finalised, the threat models it addressed had evolved beyond the statute’s definitions.
    • UK Online Safety Act: The UK established platform liability for user safety harms. The Act illustrates the structural ceiling of statutory regulation: it can impose duties of care but cannot mandate algorithmic architecture changes in real time as capabilities shift.
    • Silicon Valley self-regulation: Voluntary commitments by technology firms content moderation pledges, ethics boards, and responsible AI charters have uniformly failed to produce structural accountability. Commercial incentives are architecturally opposed to the public interest outcomes these commitments claim to pursue.
    • The common lesson: No existing framework treats AI governance as a constitutional or rights based obligation. All existing approaches treat it as a regulatory or technical management problem a categorisation error that produces systematically inadequate responses.

    Can free speech protections and binding AI regulation coexist, or does effective governance of algorithmic manipulation require curtailing political expression?

    • The core tension: Any state power to define and combat disinformation carries the inherent risk of becoming a tool for censorship and the suppression of legitimate political dissent. This is the central civil liberties objection to content-based AI regulation.
    • The structural resolution: Regulation must target platform mechanics automated bot networks, deepfake originators, recommendation algorithm amplification rather than the content of individual ideological speech. The distinction is between regulating the infrastructure of manipulation and regulating the expression of opinion.
    • Transparency as a non-censorial tool: Requiring independent audits of recommendation engines and imposing systemic liability for algorithmic amplification that produces real-world violence does not restrict speech. It imposes accountability on the distribution architecture.
    • Safe harbour reform: Technology platforms currently benefit from immunity provisions that insulate them from liability for third-party content. These immunities were designed for passive intermediaries. They are structurally misapplied to platforms that actively curate, rank, and amplify content through proprietary algorithms.
    • Democratic legitimacy requirement: Rules governing the digital public square must be produced through open parliamentary debate and public participation not negotiated privately between platform executives and the executive branch. Process legitimacy is inseparable from substantive legitimacy here.

    What constitutional and institutional architecture does India require to elevate AI governance beyond conventional regulation?

    • Rights-based framework: AI governance must ground individual data rights, consent protocols, and protections against algorithmic discrimination in employment, credit, and healthcare as enforceable constitutional or statutory rights, not voluntary platform commitments.
    • Human accountability mandate: Wherever an automated system makes decisions affecting life, livelihood, or liberty loan approvals, employment screening, medical prioritisation a human being must remain legally accountable for the outcome. Algorithmic delegation of such decisions without human oversight violates the right to life and dignity.
    • The right to an unmanipulated information ecosystem: The capacity to distinguish reality from fabrication is a precondition for exercising the rights to free expression and democratic participation. This right must be recognised as an extension of Article 19 and Article 21 of the Constitution.
    • Early-warning infrastructure: India requires cross-sector, real-time detection systems for coordinated information operations integrating state security agencies, independent fact checking networks, and technical security researchers capable of identifying foreign influence campaigns before they achieve viral distribution velocity.
    • Digital literacy as a state obligation: Cognitive resilience within the population is a non-substitutable complement to structural regulation. A state-backed media literacy curriculum integrated across schools, universities, and rural community centres is a security investment, not an educational add-on.

    Conclusion

    AI governance cannot rely on corporate fixes or limited laws. Deepfakes, algorithmic manipulation, and foreign information warfare threaten the information ecosystem that underpins democracy. For India, AI governance is a constitutional, democratic, and sovereignty issue. It must go beyond regulation and become a constitutional obligation to hold platforms accountable, protect citizens, and safeguard informed democratic choice.