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  • [14th July 2026] The Hindu OpED: The Right Path for India’s Nuclear Power Development 

    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: This PYQ directly tests the growth-versus-safety balance that is the article’s central tension.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The Government has opened India’s nuclear sector to public and private entrants, targeting 100 GW of nuclear capacity by 2047. This expansion has revived the debate on whether India should scale up using its own cost-competitive, indigenously developed reactor technology or turn to costlier foreign technology and untested small modular reactors (SMRs).

    Why did India’s nuclear programme become self-reliant instead of import-dependent?

    1. Sanctions after 1974: International sanctions followed India’s peaceful nuclear test of 1974, cutting off external technology and material supply.
    2. Partial opening in 2008: The India-United States civil nuclear deal ended restrictions on uranium and nuclear plant imports, but retained critical exceptions.
    3. Failed import route: Negotiations with major western nuclear plant suppliers were abandoned because their plants were far too expensive.
    4. AEC-industry partnership model: Every component of India’s nuclear plants was designed, developed, tested, and manufactured domestically through partnerships between the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and Indian firms.
    5. Capacity growth: Unit size rose from 220 MW to 500 MW, and 700 MW units are now operational; four units are under construction and ten more are being developed.
    6. Cost leadership: India’s nuclear plants now cost approximately $1,700 per kW, the cheapest in the world.

    Does India’s technological self-reliance weaken the case for importing foreign nuclear technology?

    1. Import proposals reflect a knowledge gap: Reports of plans to import nuclear power plants and technology indicate insufficient awareness of India’s own capabilities and price competitiveness.
    2. Market size does not equal optimal choice: India’s large potential nuclear market gives foreign suppliers a strong incentive to compete for a share of it, but supplier interest is not the same as national interest.
    3. Cost risk of importing: Importing technology at costs far higher than India’s domestic $1,700 per kW benchmark would erode the existing cost advantage.
    4. Technological vulnerability risk: Reliance on imported technology could create a new stream of dependence on foreign suppliers, reversing decades of self-reliance built after 1974.

    What technological path can deepen India’s self-reliance further?

    1. Fast Breeder Reactor (FBR) milestone: India’s 500 MW commercial fast breeder reactor is nearing commissioning after overcoming significant technical challenges.
    2. Current mainstay technology: India presently builds Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWR), which use natural uranium as fuel.
    3. Global mainstream technology: Light Water Reactors (LWR) use enriched uranium and are based on uranium enrichment technology, which is more widely used internationally than the PHWR route.
    4. Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) waiver constraint: NSG waiver was the 2008 exemption permitting India nuclear trade despite being outside the Non-Proliferation Treaty. This waiver permanently prohibits the transfer of enrichment and reprocessing technology to India.
    5. Case for indigenous LWR development: India should build its own LWR capability given adequate resources and a dedicated programme, rather than depend on a technology transfer route that is permanently closed.

    What is India’s institutional plan to scale nuclear capacity to 100 GW by 2047?

    1. 2047 target: The Government has decided that India will develop 100 GW of nuclear power capacity by 2047.
    2. Sector opened to new entrants: Both public and private sector players can now enter nuclear power generation.
    3. Enabling legislation: The Government has enacted legislation to open the sector that is described as well-crafted and investor-friendly.
    4. AEC technology-sharing for new entrants: The AEC has offered its 200 MW nuclear plant technology to new entrants.
    5. Smaller unit development: Smaller reactor unit sizes suited to emerging market needs can also be developed domestically through AEC-Indian firm partnerships.
    6. SMR market structure: Small Modular Reactors (SMRs): compact nuclear reactors, typically under 300 MW, designed for faster deployment than conventional plants. The Indian SMR market would function as a bilateral contractual matter between generator and buyer.

    Is scaling through domestic technology more feasible than importing small modular reactors?

    1. Price competitiveness achieved: Nuclear power in India is now price-competitive against thermal power.
    2. Scale economies favour domestic technology: A large domestic programme has scale effects that lower production costs further as it expands.
    3. Execution gains from new entrants: New entrants using proven domestic technology could reduce project execution costs and time.
    4. Imported technology raises costs: Bringing in foreign technology streams and equipment that produce far more expensive electricity does not merit serious consideration.
    5. SMRs remain unproven globally: Western SMR designs remain under development, with commercial deployment yet to begin, despite being proposed as a solution for the power demands of artificial intelligence data centres.
    6. Regulatory caution on foreign SMRs: A foreign-designed SMR should have operated satisfactorily for a few years elsewhere before deployment in India; there is little justification for deploying an untested SMR in India experimentally.

    What do international cost and safety examples show for India’s nuclear expansion?

    1. South Korea (cost benchmark): South Korean nuclear plants cost around $2,200 per kW, higher than India’s $1,700 per kW despite South Korea’s mature nuclear industry.
    2. France (mature-economy cost escalation): French nuclear plants cost over $5,500 per kW, reflecting higher costs even in a country with a long-established nuclear programme.
    3. United States (highest-cost comparator): US nuclear plants cost $15,000 per kW, the highest among the countries compared, underlining India’s relative cost advantage.
    4. Chernobyl, USSR (1986) (safety-incident precedent): A single nuclear accident at Chernobyl triggered strong public backlash across the West, bringing nuclear power development to a virtual standstill in many western countries for decades. This is the specific precedent cited as the safety risk India’s new entrants must guard against.

    Why must India’s nuclear expansion prioritise safety culture over speed?

    1. Exemplary record at stake: India’s record on nuclear plant safety has been exemplary till now, and this must be preserved as expansion proceeds.
    2. Industrial safety culture risk: Rapid expansion and the entry of new players is a major challenge given India’s prevailing industrial culture, where accidents at construction sites and operating industrial plants continue to occur.
    3. Backlash risk from a single mishap: A single nuclear mishap could trigger a strong public backlash similar to the post-Chernobyl reaction in the West, capable of stalling India’s nuclear programme.
    4. Recommended sequencing for new entrants: New entrants should initially develop only a few plants and establish a rigorous internal safety culture, subject to continuous external auditing, before scaling up.
    5. Gradual scaling preserves both goals: Scaling up can then take place gradually, without needlessly risking safety, while still working toward the 100 GW target by 2047.

    Conclusion

    India’s cost and technological self-reliance in nuclear power, built through decades of AEC-industry partnership after the 1974 sanctions, gives it little reason to import costlier foreign reactor technology or untested SMRs as it opens the sector to new entrants. The unresolved question is whether India’s weak general industrial safety culture can be reformed fast enough to match the pace of an expansion aiming for 100 GW by 2047; the article’s recommendation is that new entrants build a proven internal safety culture on a few plants first, scaling gradually rather than aggressively, so that self-reliance and safety are not sacrificed for speed.

  • What Is the India-Australia Uranium Supplies Agreement

    Why in the News?

    During the Indian Prime Minister’s visit to Australia, India and Australia finalised “administrative arrangements”, enabling private Australian mining entities to sign uranium supply contracts with private Indian companies under the 2015 Nuclear Cooperation Agreement. The announcement exposes a gap between India’s decade-old nuclear cooperation status with Australia and the still-limited commercial scale of actual uranium trade.

    What Does the Finalisation of the Administrative Arrangements Actually Change?

    1. Private Contract Access: Australian private mining entities involved in uranium extraction can now conclude commercial contracts directly with Indian private sector companies and joint ventures.
    2. Existing Legal Framework Unchanged: Exports remain governed by the Australia-India Nuclear Cooperation Agreement, 2015. All uranium supplied must be used exclusively for peaceful purposes under International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) watch.
    3. Domestic Trigger: The SHANTI Act, passed in December 2025, opened India’s nuclear sector to private players. This created the domestic legal space for Indian private companies to enter uranium contracts.
    4. Nature of the Change: The arrangement is administrative, not diplomatic. It operationalises an existing treaty rather than creating new cooperation.

    Why Was India Able to Access Australian Uranium Despite Not Signing the NPT?

    1. NPT Non-Signatory Status: India has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). This places it among a small group of non-signatory states.
    2. 2008 IAEA Safeguards Agreement: India signed a safeguards agreement with the IAEA in 2008. This followed the India-U.S. civil nuclear deal negotiated under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and President George W. Bush.
    3. NSG Waiver: The 48-member Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) subsequently exempted India from the list of countries barred from nuclear-energy-related trade. This opened the legal route for supplier countries to export uranium to India.
    4. Foundation for Later Agreements: This NSG exemption became the basis for the civil nuclear agreements India signed with multiple partner countries, including Australia in 2015.
    5. Mutual Non-Proliferation Commitment: A 2009 joint statement between India and Australia recorded a mutual commitment to oppose nuclear weapons. This non-proliferation commitment was carried forward into the Nuclear Cooperation Agreement.
    6. Track Record as Enabler: India’s unblemished nuclear supply chain record and its nuclear energy programme supported Australia’s decision to treat India as an exception to its NPT-linked export policy.

    Where Does India Stand Among Australia’s Uranium Export Partners?

    1. Global Reserve Share: Australia holds more than a quarter of global uranium reserves. This gives weight to its choice of export partners.
    2. Existing Export List: Australia has exported uranium to the United States, Japan, South Korea, France, Sweden, Belgium, Finland, the United Kingdom, and Germany. All of these countries are NPT signatories.
    3. Common Mechanism: Each of these countries holds a bilateral safeguards agreement with Australia. This is the general mechanism through which Australia permits uranium exports.
    4. India’s Exceptional Position: India is the only country on this export list that has not signed the NPT. Its inclusion is an exception grounded in the NSG waiver, not in NPT membership.
    5. Limits of the Comparison: The source material lists destination countries without detailing the specific safeguard terms negotiated with each. The extent to which India’s arrangement mirrors or diverges from these bilateral agreements cannot be assessed from this article alone.

    What Explains the Timing of an Arrangement Under Negotiation for Two Decades?

    1. Long Negotiation History: Bilateral discussions on nuclear and energy cooperation between India and Australia have continued for nearly two decades. The two issues were addressed as early as November 12, 2009, during Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s visit to India.
    2. Domestic Liberalisation Push: The SHANTI Act, passed in December 2025, created the private-sector opening on the Indian side that made commercial contracts under the arrangement meaningful.
    3. Energy Security Stress: India’s energy sector faces stress from the U.S.-Israel attack on Iran. This has forced India to diversify short-term hydrocarbon sourcing from Russia, the United States, and Venezuela.
    4. Long-Term Versus Short-Term Response: The Australia arrangement is positioned as a long-term energy planning measure. It is distinct from the short-term hydrocarbon diversification driven by the Iran-related disruption.
    5. Diplomatic Occasion: Prime Minister Modi’s visit to Australia provided the occasion for finalising the arrangement. The underlying treaty framework predates the visit by over a decade.

    Does the Arrangement Mark a New Opening or Formalise an Existing Trade?

    1. Trade Already Underway: At least 300 tonnes of uranium have been exported to India since 2018, under the 2015 agreement, before the current announcement.
    2. “Test Drive” Characterisation: The scale of exports since 2018 is understood as a “test drive.” This indicates that full-scale commercial trade had not begun despite the agreement being in force since 2015.
    3. Concerns About Indian Entities: Lingering concerns about Indian entities receiving Australian uranium contributed to the cautious, limited scale of exports before the current arrangement.
    4. What Is Actually New: The finalisation of administrative arrangements addresses the private-sector contracting gap. It does not change the underlying non-proliferation or safeguards architecture, which has been settled since 2008-2015.
    5. Unresolved Question: Whether private Australian and Indian entities will conclude contracts at commercial scale remains untested. The arrangement enables contracting; it does not guarantee it.

    Conclusion

    The finalisation of administrative arrangements does not create new nuclear cooperation between India and Australia. It unlocks private-sector participation within the government-to-government framework signed in 2015. Two structural preconditions made this possible: the 2008 NSG waiver that exempted India despite its non-NPT status, and the 2025 SHANTI Act that opened India’s nuclear sector to private companies. Exports since 2018 remained a limited “test drive”; the scale of future commercial deliveries now depends on Indian and Australian private entities actually concluding contracts, not on any further diplomatic breakthrough.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2013] With growing scarcity of fossil fuels, atomic energy is gaining more and more significance in India. Discuss the availability of raw material required for the generation of atomic energy in India and in the world.

    Linkage: The PYQ directly addresses India’s nuclear energy expansion debate.The Australia uranium supply directly feeds the raw material question underlying this expansion debate.

  • Can Biogas Aid India’s Energy Security

    Why in the News?

    Renewed West Asia tensions have again exposed India’s dependence on crude oil, of which it imports nearly 85% of its needs. This has revived the case for Compressed Biogas (CBG) as an alternative fuel. 

    What Is the Policy Architecture Built Around Compressed Biogas?

    1. Compressed Biogas (CBG): Biogas is formed from a mixture of methane, carbon dioxide and small quantities of other gases from anaerobic digestion of organic matter. It is processed and compressed until chemically identical to CNG. It is renewable, carbon-neutral, and usable for electricity, heating or cooking.
    2. Import exposure: India imports nearly 85% of its crude oil needs, much of it from West Asia. Around 90% of its LPG imports transit the Strait of Hormuz.
    3. SATAT initiative: The Sustainable Alternative Towards Affordable Transportation scheme, launched in 2018, set a target of 5,000 CBG plants by 2023.
    4. GOBARdhan scheme: The Galvanising Organic Bio-Agro Resources Dhan scheme offers grants of up to ₹50 lakh per district for community biogas plants under a “waste to wealth” approach.
    5. Budgetary allocation: ₹564 crore has been earmarked for biomass collection machinery and ₹994 crore for pipelines linking biogas plants to the gas grid.
    6. Blending mandate: The National Biofuels Coordination Committee approved a mandatory CBG blending obligation in 2023. Gas distributors must blend CBG into supply from FY26, starting at 1% and rising to 5% by FY29.

    Why Has Implementation Stalled Despite a Decade of Support?

    1. Target shortfall: Only 132 of the 5,000 targeted plants are complete as of June 3, 2026.
    2. Infrastructure gap: Inadequate collection and pipeline infrastructure has slowed the commissioning of plants.
    3. Credit access: Biogas project developers face difficulty accessing formal credit.
    4. Upfront cost: The high initial cost of CBG technology deters private investment.
    5. Missing fiscal incentives: Accelerated depreciation and tax holidays are not yet in place; their absence keeps many projects economically unviable for private players.

    Does the Push for Energy Security Create a New Food Security Risk?

    1. Administered pricing skew: The government fixes per-litre ethanol prices by feedstock. Maize-based ethanol commands the highest price, rice-based ethanol the lowest, and molasses-based ethanol is priced between the two.
    2. Price growth favouring maize: The administered price of maize-based ethanol grew at a compound annual growth rate of 11.7% between FY22 and FY25.
    3. Cropping shift: Maize area under cultivation and output rose between FY22 and FY25, while pulses output declined and oilseeds and other cereals registered only modest growth.
    4. Yield divergence: Economic Survey 2026 data show national maize yield rising from about 2.56 tonnes per hectare in FY16 to about 3.78 tonnes per hectare in FY25, while yields of soybean, sunflower, rapeseed, peanut and millet either stagnated or declined.
    5. Import consequence: India already imports large quantities of pulses and edible oils. A pricing structure that disincentivises their cultivation could deepen this dependence and expose domestic food prices to volatility during supply shocks.

    What Do Germany and Denmark Show About Managing This Trade-off?

    1. Germany, Renewable Energy Sources Act (2000): Introduced income guarantees and operator bonuses for biogas producers, accelerating sector growth.
    2. Germany, corn mania: High feedstock profitability drove farmers to replace other food crops with maize over more than a decade.
    3. Germany, corrective cap: The government was eventually forced to impose a cap on maize use in biogas plants to contain the distortion, a correction applied only after the damage had occurred.
    4. Denmark, feedstock design: Denmark targets 100% biomethane in its gas system by 2030 and discourages the use of crops as feedstock from the outset.
    5. Denmark, primary feedstock: Livestock manure and agricultural waste, not food crops, form the country’s primary feedstock base.
    6. Scale context: Europe, China and the United States together account for 90% of global biogas production; Germany ranks among Europe’s largest producers, alongside France, Denmark and the U.K.

    Can India Replicate Ethanol’s Blending Success With CBG?

    1. Ethanol precedent: Ethanol blending in petrol rose from 1.5% in 2014 to 20% by December 2025, five years ahead of the original 2030 target.
    2. Budgetary signal: In the February 2024 Budget speech, the Finance Minister announced that phased CBG blending in CNG for transport and Piped Natural Gas for domestic use “will be mandated.”
    3. Scale-up plan: The government is expanding the establishment of CBG plants to meet the phased blending targets of 1% by FY26 and 5% by FY29.
    4. Open question: Whether this scale-up can be achieved without repeating the pricing distortion that shaped the ethanol programme’s effect on cropping patterns remains unresolved.

    Conclusion

    India’s compressed biogas and ethanol blending programme is designed to cut crude oil import dependence, but its administered feedstock pricing currently favours maize over pulses and oilseeds. Left uncorrected, this design risks converting an energy import problem into a food import problem, as Germany’s early “corn mania” illustrates. The unresolved question is whether India builds feedstock neutrality into pricing design now, on the Danish model, or waits to correct the distortion after it has already reshaped cropping patterns, as Germany did. Closing the CBG implementation gap, from 132 plants toward the 5,000 target, will also require resolving credit, infrastructure and upfront-cost barriers independent of the pricing question.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Do you think India will meet 50 percent of its energy needs from renewable energy by 2030? Justify your answer. How will the shift of subsidies from fossil fuels to renewables help achieve the above objective? Explain

    Linkage: The PYQ asks whether subsidy redesign can shift India’s energy sourcing toward renewables by a fixed target year. It tests the same subsidy-design logic the article questions, whether an incentive structure achieves its stated energy goal without distorting a different sector

  • Retail Inflation Rises to 4.4%

    Why in News?

    India’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) based retail inflation rose to 4.4% in June 2026, crossing the RBI’s 4% target for the first time since January 2025.

    Key Highlights

    • CPI: Consumer Price Index, the primary measure of retail inflation.
    • Retail inflation: 4.4% (June 2026), up from 3.93% in May.
    • Food inflation: 5.05%, the highest under the new CPI series.
    • Major drivers:
      • Rising food prices due to an uneven monsoon.
      • Higher fuel prices amid the West Asia crisis.
      • Supply chain disruptions and geopolitical tensions.
    • Transport inflation rose to 4.3% (from 1.7%) because of fuel costs.
    • Inflation in personal care & miscellaneous goods/services reached 16.7%, driven by higher gold and silver prices.

    About Inflation Targeting

    • The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) follows a Flexible Inflation Targeting (FIT) framework.
    • Inflation target: 4% ± 2% (2% to 6%).
    • Inflation is measured using the Consumer Price Index (CPI) compiled by the National Statistics Office (NSO).

    [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

  • CSIR ASPIRE-SHAKTI

    Why in News?

    CSIR organised ASPIRE-SHAKTI: Celebrating Women in STEM at its headquarters and released the ASPIRE-SHAKTI Compendium, highlighting the achievements of women researchers.

    Key Highlights

    • CSIR: Council of Scientific & Industrial Research
    • DSIR: Department of Scientific & Industrial Research
    • STEM: Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics
    • CSIR-ASPIRE was launched on International Women’s Day 2023 to support women scientists as independent Principal Investigators (PIs).
    • Out of 2,878 proposals from 969 institutions, 301 women researchers were selected (~10% selection rate).
    • Research outcomes include:
      • 253+ SCI-indexed publications
      • 15+ patent filings
      • 20+ international conference presentations
      • Training of 300+ research fellows.
    • Next phase will focus on:
      • Commercialisation of innovations
      • Industry and startup linkages
      • Technology translation
      • Greater participation from the North-East, Ladakh, and Tier-2/Tier-3 institutions.

    About CSIR-ASPIRE

    • ASPIRE: A Special Call for Research Grants for Women Scientists
    • Implemented by CSIR-Human Resource Development Group (CSIR-HRDG).
    • Supports women researchers across Life Sciences, Physical Sciences, Chemical Sciences, Engineering Sciences, and Interdisciplinary Sciences.
    • Aims to promote women-led research, innovation, and scientific leadership.

    [2018] Consider the following statements :
    Human capital formation as a concept is better explained in terms of a process which enables
    1. individuals of a country to accumulate more capital.
    2. increasing the knowledge, skill levels and capacities of the people of the country.
    3. accumulation of tangible wealth.
    4. accumulation of intangible wealth.
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

    [A] 1 and 2

    [B] 2 only

    [C] 2 and 4

    [D] 1, 3 and 4

  • Guardians of India’s Maritime Frontiers

    Why in News?

    The Indian Navy recently commissioned INS Mahendragiri, INS Dunagiri, INS Sanshodhak, and INS Agray, strengthening India’s indigenous maritime capabilities.

    Key Highlights

    • Three indigenous naval classes strengthen India’s layered maritime security:
      • Nilgiri Class: Stealth Frigates (Project 17A)
      • Sandhayak Class: Survey Vessel (Large)
      • Arnala Class: Anti-Submarine Warfare Shallow Water Craft (ASW-SWC)
    • Designed by the Warship Design Bureau (WDB) with high indigenous content under Aatmanirbhar Bharat.
    • Protect India’s 11,098 km coastline, 2.4 million sq km Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), and sea lanes carrying ~90% of India’s trade by volume.

    About the Three Classes

    • Nilgiri Class (Project 17A): Next-generation stealth guided missile frigates for anti-air, anti-surface, and anti-submarine warfare.
      • Equipped with BrahMos missiles, advanced radar, sonar, and helicopters.
    • Sandhayak Class: Conducts hydrographic surveys, seabed mapping, and nautical charting.
      • Supports the Blue Economy, navigation safety, and disaster relief.
    • Arnala Class: Designed for coastal anti-submarine warfare in shallow waters.
      • Equipped with lightweight torpedoes, ASW rockets, and shallow-water sonar.

    Strategic Significance

    • Strengthens Aatmanirbhar Bharat through indigenous shipbuilding.
    • Supports SAGAR (Security and Growth for All in the Region) and MAHASAGAR (Mutual and Holistic Advancement for Security and Growth Across Regions) visions.
    • Enhances maritime security, defence exports, and the Blue Economy.

    [2016] Which one of the following is the best description of ‘INS Astradharini’, that was in the news recently?

    [A] Amphibious warfare ship

    [B] Nuclear-powered submarine

    [C] Torpedo launch and recovery vessel

    [D] Nuclear-powered aircraft carrier

  • Bharat Tex 2026

    Why in News?

    Bharat Tex 2026, India’s largest global textile exhibition, will be held at Bharat Mandapam, New Delhi, from 14 to 17 July 2026

    Key Highlights

    • Organised by the Bharat Tex Trade Federation (BTTF) with support from the Ministry of Textiles.
    • Based on the 5F Vision: Farm → Fibre → Factory → Fashion → Foreign.
    • Participation of 1,600+ exhibitors, 7,000+ buyers, and delegates from 20+ countries.
    • Over 4,000 Business-to-Business (B2B) meetings, 100+ Business-to-Government (B2G) meetings, and 30+ Memoranda of Understanding (MoUs) expected.
    • Covers the complete textile value chain including fibre, yarn, fabric, apparel, home textiles, and technical textiles.
    • Features 100+ knowledge sessions on sustainability, technical textiles, Industry 5.0, innovation, and exports.
    • Includes Confederation of Indian Textile Industry (CITI) Textile Sustainability Awards 2026 and AI-enabled digital business matchmaking.

    About Bharat Tex

    • India’s flagship global textile and apparel exhibition.
    • Promotes exports, investment, innovation, sustainability, and international partnerships.
    • Showcases India’s textile manufacturing capabilities and strengthens its position in global value chains.

    Government Initiatives

    • PM MITRA: Prime Minister Mega Integrated Textile Region and Apparel Parks
    • PLI Scheme: Production Linked Incentive Scheme for Textiles
    • NTTM: National Technical Textiles Mission
    • SAMARTH: Scheme for Capacity Building in Textile Sector

    [2022] Which of the following activities constitute real sector in the economy?
    1. Farmers harvesting their crops
    2. Textile mills converting raw cotton into fabrics
    3. A commercial bank lending money to a trading company
    4. A corporate body issuing Rupee Denominated Bonds overseas.
    Select the correct answer using the code given below:

    [A] 1 and 2 only

    [B] 2, 3 and 4 only

    [C] 1, 3 and 4 only

    [D] 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • [13th July 2026] The Hindu OpED: Five crore Indians wait when the courts take a break

    Mentor’s Comment

    The Supreme Court’s six-week summer break (June 1 to July 12) coincides with a record 5.39 crore pending cases across Indian courts, the Supreme Court’s heaviest load in over 30 years. This has sharpened the debate on whether collective, en masse judicial recess is defensible when nearly three in four prisoners in India are undertrials awaiting the completion of their own trials.

    What does the coexistence of a record case backlog and a mass judicial vacation reveal about court functioning in India?

    1. Scale of pendency: More than 5.39 crore cases were pending in Indian courts as of the last day of 2025.
    2. Distribution of the backlog: District courts held over 4.76 crore cases, High Courts held 63.6 lakh cases, and the Supreme Court held more than 92,000 cases, its heaviest load in over 30 years.
    3. Undertrial burden: Roughly three in four prisoners in India are undertrials. They are unconvicted and presumed innocent, yet some serve longer in custody than the sentence they would have received had they pleaded guilty.
    4. Institutional asymmetry: Hospitals, police stations, markets, and government offices continue functioning through individual staff leave. The Supreme Court and High Courts instead shut down collectively for six weeks.
    5. Clearance timeline: A government study calculated that clearing the existing backlog at the present pace would take three centuries.

    Why does an individual judge’s right to rest not justify the institution’s collective closure?

    1. Workload reality: Indian judges are among the most overworked in the world. The recess period is when reserved judgments finally get written.
    2. Continuity is achievable: Last year the Chief Justice of India and the four senior-most judges worked through the first week of the break.
    3. The actual design flaw: The problem is not that judges rest. It is that almost all of them rest together, so the institution goes quiet for six-plus weeks every year.
    4. Colonial origin: The current calendar traces to a practice built for English judges. They withdrew to cooler climates during the Indian summer and took long Christmas holidays in winter.

    Why did the 2024 renaming of the summer vacation fail to reduce the backlog?

    1. Rebranding without substance: In 2024, the Supreme Court renamed the “summer vacation” as “partial court working days.”
    2. No change in working days: The actual number of sitting days remained at approximately 190 days a year.
    3. Litigant impact unaddressed: A litigant whose case is stalled is unaffected by the label given to the recess. What matters is whether the matter is heard and disposed of.

    What administrative reform has been repeatedly recommended to keep courts continuously functional, and why has it not been adopted?

    1. Staggering as the core proposal: The judiciary’s own watchdogs have long recommended not abolishing judicial rest but staggering it, rotating leave so Benches remain full.
    2. Parliamentary recommendation: A 2023 parliamentary standing committee objected to “the entire court going on vacation en masse” and proposed rotating leave to keep courts running continuously.
    3. Earlier precedent: The Law Commission of India and the Justice Malimath Committee made the same recommendation earlier. They were not opposing the courts; they were trying to protect them from themselves.
    4. Institutional analogy: A hospital does not empty its wards because doctors are owed time off. It builds a roster instead.
    5. Status: Despite three separate recommending bodies, this reform remains unimplemented.

    Is the crisis in India’s courts one of vacations or of vacancies? 

    1. The standard objection: Critics argue that vacations are a sideshow and the real disease is judicial vacancies, not recess.
    2. Vacancy scale: Up to a third of High Court seats lie vacant.
    3. The rebuttal: A Bench already running at half strength is thinned further for six weeks every summer. This makes the recess a stronger case against itself, not a defence of it.
    4. Distinct accountability: Filling vacancies depends on the government and the collegium, and will take years to resolve.
    5. Distinct reform lever: The vacation calendar is the judiciary’s own to fix. It needs only institutional will, not external permission.

    Beyond staggering leave, how can India reduce the flow of disputes into its courts?

    1. Symptom versus deeper fix: Staggering leave treats only the symptom. Courts were never meant to be the first stop for every dispute, only the last.
    2. Lok Adalat performance: Lok Adalats settled more than 2.59 crore cases in a single national sitting last December, and over 23.5 crore cases in three years.
    3. Mediation Act, 2023: This Act nudges parties to attempt settlement before approaching a court.
    4. Arbitration: Arbitration can remove commercial disputes entirely from judges’ hands. This route remains badly underused.
    5. Retired judges as an untapped resource: India has a reservoir of retired judges who step down at 62 or 65, still in full command of their expertise. Many already head quasi-judicial bodies and tribunals.
    6. Proposed use: A dedicated corps of former judges, freed from daily dockets, could identify where cases pile up, set public disposal targets, and report progress openly.

    Conclusion

    Collective judicial recess, an inherited colonial practice, is defensible for individual judges but indefensible as an institutional design when 5.39 crore cases and undertrial prisoners are held hostage to it. Cosmetic fixes such as renaming the vacation do not alter the actual working calendar. Staggering leave to keep Benches continuously functional is a reform within the judiciary’s own control, unlike the filling of vacancies, which depends on the executive and the collegium. The unresolved question is whether the judiciary will exercise this available reform, or continue mistaking cosmetic change for structural correction.

  • HC Halts Byelections in 5 Tamil Nadu Constituencies

    Why in the News?

    The Madras High Court restrained the Election Commission from notifying byelections to five Tamil Nadu Assembly constituencies whose sitting members resigned after the 2026 Assembly election, since election petitions challenging their victories remain pending. The interim order raises the question of whether a resignation-created vacancy is legally “clear” enough to trigger fresh polls when the same seat’s original result is still under judicial challenge.

    What is the factual and procedural backdrop of the Madras High Court’s interim order?

    1. Interim restraint: The Madras High Court restrained the Election Commission from notifying byelections to Tiruchi East, Perundurai, Ambasamudram, Viralimalai, and Karur Assembly constituencies until July 31.
    2. Trigger for vacancy: All five sitting MLAs resigned after winning the 2026 Assembly election.
    3. Core contention: The petitioner argued that byelections before disposal of pending election petitions could create an anomalous situation of dual representation for a single constituency.
    4. Deadline set: The court granted the respondents time till July 31 to file counter-affidavits.

    On what legal doctrine did the petitioner challenge the Election Commission’s power to notify byelections?

    1. Statutory basis challenged: The petitioner argued the Election Commission cannot treat these vacancies as a “clear vacancy” under Section 151A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951. Section 151A: provision requiring the Election Commission to fill a vacancy in a House through byelection within six months of its occurrence.
    2. Precedent cited: Sanjeevayya vs Election Commission of India (1967) held that byelections cannot proceed while an election petition relating to that constituency remains pending.
    3. Precedent cited: Election Commission of India vs Telangana Rashtra Samithi (2011) reinforced the same bar on byelections during pending adjudication.
    4. Precedent cited: Pramod Laxman Gudadhe vs Election Commission of India (2018) extended the same principle.
    5. Consequential prayer argument: All five election petitions sought not only to invalidate the winning candidates’ victory but also to declare the petitioners themselves as winners.
    6. Risk of dual mandate: A byelection conducted before these petitions are decided could produce a second declared winner for a seat where a court may later declare a different winner from the original contest.

    Does the timing of an MLA’s resignation relative to the election petition alter the vacancy’s legal status?

    1. Distinguishing principle raised: The Advocate-General argued that a distinction must be drawn between MLAs who resigned before an election petition was filed and those who resigned after.
    2. Chief Minister’s case: The Chief Minister resigned from Tiruchi East on May 10, before his rival candidate filed the election petition.
    3. Other MLAs’ case: Several other MLAs resigned before the election petitions challenging their victory were filed.
    4. Implication for vacancy classification: A resignation preceding the petition may create a genuinely clear vacancy. A resignation following the petition may not.
    5. Unresolved legal question: The Bench agreed that this timing distinction required deeper examination before final orders could be passed.

    What procedural objections did the respondents raise against the maintainability of the PIL?

    1. Locus standi challenge: Senior counsel representing the Chief Minister, questioned the PIL petitioner’s standing to direct the Election Commission’s conduct. Locus standi: the legal right of a party to bring a case before a court.
    2. Prematurity argument: The petition was argued to be premature since the Election Commission had not yet taken any decision on conducting byelections in the five constituencies.
    3. No notification issued: No notification on byelections had been issued at the time the PIL was heard.
    4. Distinct roles of respondents: The Advocate-General represented the Legislative Assembly Secretary. Separate counsel represented the Election Commission and the Chief Minister.

    How did the Bench reconcile the competing claims in its interim order?

    1. Rejection of narrow standing objection: The Bench held that a narrow and pedantic interpretation of locus standi cannot be applied in matters touching the purity of the democratic process.
    2. Acceptance of AG’s nuance: The Bench agreed that the Advocate-General’s argument on the timing of resignations relative to petition filing required deeper examination.
    3. Deferred decision: The court decided to pass final orders only after notice was issued to all respondents and counter-affidavits were filed.
    4. Interim balance struck: The Bench restrained byelection notification without ruling on the merits of either side’s substantive claim.

    Conclusion

    The order establishes that a resignation-created vacancy is not automatically a “clear vacancy” under Section 151A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, when the underlying election result is under judicial challenge. The unresolved question is whether the timing of resignation relative to the filing of an election petition changes this classification. Until the High Court examines the Advocate-General’s distinction between pre-petition and post-petition resignations, five Tamil Nadu constituencies remain without elected representation. The case will determine whether electoral finality doctrine can override the Election Commission’s statutory duty to fill vacancies promptly.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Discuss the procedures to decide the disputes arising out of the election of a Member of the Parliament or State Legislature under The Representation of the People Act, 1951. What are the grounds on which the election of any returned candidate may be declared void? What remedy is available to the aggrieved party against the decision? Refer to the case laws.

    Linkage: The PYQ asks directly about election petition procedure and remedies under the RP Act. The article’s central dispute is precisely about how pending election petitions interact with byelection notification under this Act.

  • AI Use by the Judiciary: SC’s Draft AI Regulations, 2026

    Why in the News?

    The Supreme Court released the Draft Regulations for Use of Artificial Intelligence in Courts, 2026 last month, inviting public comments till July 15. The draft permits AI for administrative and research functions in courts but places an absolute, non-derogable bar on any AI role in decisions affecting bail, recidivism (a critical metric used to measure the effectiveness of the justice and rehabilitation systems.), witness credibility, or personal liberty.

    What does the Draft Regulations permit AI to do in courts?

    1. Administrative and assistive functions: AI use is permitted for case management, transcription, translation, legal research, document summarisation, accessibility, and court administration.
    2. Approval requirement: Every permitted use requires prior written approval from the Apex Body for the Supreme Court, or the AI Committee of the concerned High Court or tribunal.
    3. Human supervision: Officers nominated by the court must supervise and verify AI-assisted outputs before use.
    4. Scope boundary: Permission covers efficiency-enhancing functions only. It does not extend to any function that produces or contributes to a judicial outcome.

    Why has the SC opted for a staggered, court-wise implementation instead of a uniform rollout?

    1. SC-specific notification: Provisions apply to the Supreme Court only from a date notified by the Chief Justice of India.
    2. High Court autonomy: Provisions for High Courts and the courts and tribunals under their jurisdiction come into force separately, on dates notified by the respective High Court Chief Justice.
    3. Provision-wise phasing: Different provisions can be brought into force on different dates within the same court.
    4. Rationale: Phasing allows each court to adopt AI at a pace suited to its own infrastructure, caseload, and readiness.

    Why is human judicial authority made non-negotiable in adjudicative outcomes?

    1. Categorical bar on algorithmic outcomes: No judicial outcome can be reached through algorithmic decision-making alone, or solely on the basis of AI-generated information.
    2. Determinative human authority: Human judicial authority is determinative in all adjudicative decisions, regardless of AI input.
    3. Advisory-only role: Where AI is used anywhere in a decision-making process, its role is only advisory.
    4. Independent evaluation mandate: Any AI-assisted input is subject to independent human judicial evaluation before use.

    What functions has the SC placed beyond regulatory reach altogether, and why?

    1. Risk scoring barred: AI cannot be used for ‘risk scoring’ to assess flight risk.
    2. Recidivism prediction barred: AI cannot be used to predict recidivism.
    3. Bail eligibility barred: AI cannot be used to evaluate bail eligibility.
    4. Witness credibility barred: AI cannot be used to determine the credibility of witnesses.
    5. Profiling barred: AI cannot be used to predict, profile, or infer the future conduct or behaviour of parties, accused persons, witnesses, or legal representatives.
    6. Undisclosed AI evidence barred: AI-generated output cannot be submitted as independent evidence without full disclosure of its AI-generated character.
    7. Blackbox AI barred in liberty matters: Unexplainable AI systems cannot be used in matters affecting personal liberty.
    8. Non-derogable status: These prohibitions are absolute. No authority can permit them later under the Regulations.

    Does the disclosure mechanism for litigants adequately safeguard their right to know?

    1. Material assistance trigger: Litigants must be informed only when an AI tool “materially assists” case management, document analysis, or judicial administration.
    2. Timely and accessible disclosure: Disclosure to litigants and their counsel must be made in a timely and accessible manner.
    3. Threshold-based, not blanket disclosure: Litigants are not informed of every instance of AI use in their case, only instances that meet the material assistance standard.
    4. Undefined threshold: The Regulations do not define what constitutes “material assistance,” leaving the disclosure trigger to case-by-case determination by courts.

    What institutional architecture will govern AI use in courts?

    1. Apex Body: An Apex Body at the Supreme Court will set minimum mandatory standards for AI systems and issue implementation guidelines.
    2. Composition: The Apex Body comprises sitting Supreme Court and High Court judges, an official of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, and experts in finance and cybersecurity.
    3. Specialised committees: The Apex Body will function through five specialised committees.
    4. Court-level AI Committees: The Supreme Court and each High Court will constitute their own AI Committees, backed by an AI Secretariat.
    5. Dedicated research body: The Centre of Research and Excellence on Artificial Intelligence (CoRE-AI) will evaluate AI tools and track technological developments to support the Apex Body.

    How are private AI vendors regulated to prevent capture of judicial data and infrastructure?

    1. Prior written approval: Private companies can supply AI tools only with written approval from the relevant court authority.
    2. Mandatory contract terms: Vendor agreements must include a mandatory list of contract terms set out by the Regulations.
    3. Data ownership and access: Contracts must specify ownership of, and access rights to, court data and AI outputs.
    4. Bar on sensitive data use: Vendors are barred from using sensitive judicial data.
    5. No unauthorised model training: Vendors cannot retain or fine-tune models using court data without the AI Committee’s written approval.
    6. IP restriction: Vendors cannot claim exclusive intellectual property rights over tools built substantially using public resources.

    Conclusion

    The Draft Regulations construct a two-tier framework for judicial AI: broad permission for administrative efficiency, and an absolute prohibition on AI’s role in outcome-determinative and liberty-affecting functions. This boundary, not the list of permitted uses, is the framework’s operative safeguard against algorithmic opacity compromising due process. The undefined “material assistance” threshold for litigant disclosure remains its weakest link, leaving courts significant discretion over what litigants get to know. Effective implementation will depend on how the Apex Body and CoRE-AI operationalise this boundary as AI adoption scales across courts.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Explain the reasons for the growth of public interest litigation in India. As a result of it, has the Indian Supreme Court emerged as the world’s most powerful judiciary?”

    Linkage: The PYQ discusses expansion of judicial power through institutional self-assertion. The Draft AI Regulations are another instance of the SC using its institutional authority to self-regulate its own processes.