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  • [27th May 2026] The Hindu OpED: Rajya Sabha Defections, constitutional questions

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2020] The anti-defection law has failed to achieve its intended purpose. Discuss.Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of the Tenth Schedule, defections, party discipline, and constitutional loopholes. The AAP Rajya Sabha controversy exposes ambiguity in the merger exception under Paragraph 4, questioning whether legislative majorities can bypass the original political party. 

    Mentor’s Comment

    A constitutional controversy has emerged after seven of AAP’s ten Rajya Sabha MPs reportedly invoked the merger exception under the Tenth Schedule of the Constitution of India to join the BJP. They have claimed support of over two-thirds of legislators. The episode has triggered a constitutional debate on whether legislators alone can claim merger without approval of the original political party, making it a major test for the Tenth Schedule.

    How did India’s anti-defection framework evolve from permitting splits to restricting defections?

    1. 1950 (Original Constitution): Articles 102 and 191 outlined basic disqualifications like holding an office of profit or unsound mind. The President or Governor decided cases based on the Election Commission’s opinion. Political defections were not explicitly penalized.
    2. 52nd Constitutional Amendment Act, 1985: Introduced the Tenth Schedule (Anti-Defection Law) to address frequent political defections and instability.
      1. Objective of the Law: Ensures political stability by discouraging elected representatives from abandoning party affiliation for political gain.
      2. Split Provision (Paragraph 3): Recognised a “split” if one-third members of a legislature party separated, thereby protecting them from disqualification.
    3. 2003 (91st Amendment): Deleted Paragraph 3 entirely. This eliminated the “split” defense, meaning individual or minor group defections always lead to disqualification.
      1. Under Paragraph 3, if a faction consisting of one-third or more of a party’s elected legislators decided to break away, the law deemed it a “split”. This newly formed faction was completely exempt from disqualification and could function as a separate group or support an opposition coalition without losing their seats.
    4. Shift in Constitutional Philosophy: Restored primacy of the political party over temporary legislative factions.
    Dinesh Goswami Committee (1990): Recommended tightening anti-defection provisions to reduce political opportunism.170th Law Commission Report (1999): Supported removal of the split provision due to misuse in legitimising defections.

    Why does the AAP Rajya Sabha episode raise constitutional concerns beyond routine defections?

    1. National-Level Significance: Involves Rajya Sabha MPs at the Union level, unlike previous state-level controversies.
    2. Striking Data: Seven out of ten AAP Rajya Sabha MPs (over two-thirds) reportedly sought merger with BJP.
    3. Merger Exception Invoked: Legislators relied on Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule, claiming exemption from disqualification.
    4. Constitutional Question: Raises uncertainty regarding whether legislators alone can engineer a merger without consent of the parent political party.
    5. Opposition Integrity: Affects the constitutional role of the Opposition in parliamentary democracy, especially if legislative majorities can dissolve party identity.
    6. Institutional Consequences: Tests the authority of the Rajya Sabha Chairman in deciding disqualification under the Tenth Schedule.

    Does the “merger exception” under Paragraph 4 permit legislators to override the original political party?

    Paragraph 4 refers to the “Merger Exception” within the Tenth Schedule of the Constitution of India. It provides legal immunity from disqualification for elected members (MPs or MLAs) when their political party merges with another party.

    The Core Mechanism: The “Twin Test”: To legally claim a merger and escape disqualification under Paragraph 4, a specific two-step requirement must be met: 

    1. Party-Level Merger (The Origin): The original political party must decide to merge with another political party.
    2. Legislative Agreement (The Numbers): Following the organizational merger, not less than two-thirds (66.6%) of the elected legislators of that party in the House must agree to accept the merger.
    Key Provisions of Paragraph 4
    Paragraph 4(1): Protection for Members: States that a legislator will not be disqualified if their original political party merges with another, and they choose to either join the new party or function as a separate group.
    Paragraph 4(2): The Deeming Fiction: Establishes that a merger is legally deemed to have taken place if and only if a minimum of two-thirds of the legislature party’s members give their consent to it.
    1. Core Constitutional Ambiguity: Uncertainty persists on whether legislators can independently trigger merger or merely implement a party-level decision.
    2. Judicial Position: In Subhash Desai (2023), the Supreme Court reinforced primacy of the political party over the legislature wing.
    3. Constitutional Concern: Allowing legislators alone to merge may enable temporary legislative majorities to appropriate party identity and electoral mandate.
    4. Democratic Implication: Risks weakening party stability and Opposition politics within parliamentary democracy.

    How has the judiciary interpreted the relationship between legislature parties and political parties?

    Core Judicial Principles

    1. Constitutional Hierarchy: The political party is the parent body. The legislature party is its subordinate wing and cannot sever ties or act independently.
    2. Source of Legitimacy: Legislators win elections based on the political party’s ticket, manifesto, platform, and campaign symbols. Therefore, their allegiance remains tied to the organizational party.
    3. The Whip Authority: The power to appoint the Chief Whip and the Party Leader belongs strictly to the political party organization, not to a majority faction of legislators.
    4. Protection vs. Usurpation: The “deeming fiction” in Paragraph 4 protects a two-thirds legislative majority from disqualification only after an actual party merger. It does not empower them to hijack the party’s identity or organizational assets.

    Landmark Judgment: Subhash Desai v. Governor of Maharashtra (2023): In this pivotal case, a 5-judge Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court firmly established the supremacy of the political party over the legislative wing:

    1. Continuous Guidance: The Court ruled that a political party’s influence does not end on election day; it continuously guides its elected representatives throughout their tenure.
    2. Illegal Appointments: The Court declared the Eknath Shinde faction’s appointment of their own Whip and Leader as illegal, stating that the Speaker must recognize only the Whip authorized by the parent political party.
    3. No Shield for Rebellion: Internal dissent or achieving a legislative majority cannot be used as a tool to bypass the Anti-Defection Law, especially since the “split” doctrine (Paragraph 3) was deleted in 2003.

    Structural Comparison

    FeaturePolitical Party (Parent Body)Legislature Party (Subordinate Wing)
    CompositionOffice bearers, cadres, and members nationwide/statewide.Only the elected MPs or MLAs in the House.
    Constitutional RoleHolds the fundamental democratic mandate and symbols.Executes the party’s agenda within the legislature.
    Control of the WhipYes. Has the exclusive right to appoint the Whip.No. Must follow the Whip appointed by the parent party.

    Can legislative majorities appropriate the identity of a political party?

    1. Constitutional Identity: A political party derives continuity from its organisation, leadership, ideology, and electoral mandate, not merely elected legislators.
    2. Risk of Party Capture: Permitting temporary legislative majorities to claim party identity may enable numerical capture of parties, weakening internal democracy and organisational autonomy.
    3. Legislature-Party Distinction: Legislators derive legitimacy from the party’s symbol and mandate; the legislature wing remains subordinate to the parent political organisation.
    4. Judicial Position: In Subhash Desai (2023), the Supreme Court reinforced primacy of the political party, including authority over appointment of the Chief Whip.
    5. Parliamentary Consequence: Allowing legislators to appropriate party identity may undermine Opposition politics and weaken the anti-defection law’s objective of preserving party-system integrity.

    What are the broader implications for parliamentary democracy and Opposition politics?

    1. Opposition Preservation: Anti-defection law indirectly protects parliamentary dissent, especially in the Rajya Sabha.
    2. Constitutional Morality: Prevents legislative arithmetic from undermining electoral mandates and voter trust.
    3. Need for Doctrinal Clarity: Ambiguity in Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule over whether merger requires party approval or only legislative majority necessitates clear judicial interpretation to prevent inconsistent decisions and constitutional instability.
    4. Federal Relevance: Similar disputes in Maharashtra, Karnataka, Arunachal Pradesh, and Manipur show that ambiguity in anti-defection law is a recurring issue across States. This necessitates uniform constitutional principles to ensure consistency and political stability.
    5. Democratic Stability: Ensures continuity of party-based representation, which remains central to parliamentary governance.

    Conclusion

    The Rajya Sabha defection episode involving AAP is not merely a question of political realignment but a constitutional test regarding the relationship between legislative numbers and political legitimacy. The interpretation of Paragraph 4 of the Tenth Schedule will shape the future of India’s anti-defection regime, the integrity of political parties, and the institutional strength of parliamentary opposition.

  • The judiciary’s role in complete justice

    Why in the News?

    The debate around Article 142 has gained attention after the Supreme Court recognised safe travel on National Highways as part of Article 21 (Right to Life) in In Re: Phalodi Accident vs NHAI (2025). Acting suo motu, the Court flagged a serious concern, over 30% of road deaths occur on National Highways, despite their limited share in total road length. The judgment signals a stronger judicial role where existing laws fail to ensure justice.

    What is Article 142 of the Constitution of India?

    1. It states that the Supreme Court may pass any decree or order necessary for doing complete justice.
    2. Article 142 is extraordinary, not unlimited. The Court has repeatedly said it cannot violate substantive law or the Constitution and must respect separation of powers.
    3. Examples of Use:
      1. Bhopal Gas Tragedy (1991): SC used Article 142 for settlement-related directions.
      2. Ayodhya Verdict (2019): Court used Article 142 to allot alternative land for mosque construction.
      3. Divorce Cases: SC has dissolved marriages irretrievably even when statutory conditions were not fully met.
      4. Phalodi Accident Case (2025): Used to strengthen road safety and recognise safe highways under Article 21.

    Why has Article 142 become central to the idea of “complete justice”?

    1. Constitutional Empowerment: Article 142 authorises the Supreme Court to pass orders necessary for ensuring complete justice where statutory mechanisms are inadequate.
    2. Residual Jurisdiction: Functions as a constitutional reserve power in situations where ordinary legal procedures fail to address exceptional injustice.
    3. Justice Beyond Technicalities: Enables equitable relief even where procedural or technical legal barriers exist.
    4. Constitutional Safety Valve: Fills institutional gaps when existing laws are silent, rigid, or incapable of immediate grievance redressal.
    5. Expansion of Rights-Based Jurisprudence: Strengthens substantive justice under Article 21, including newer dimensions such as road safety and dignified living.
    6. Illustration: Highway Safety Judgment (2025): In In Re: Phalodi Accident vs NHAI (2025), the Court recognised safe and motorable roads as part of Right to Life, while responding to alarming road fatalities.

    How did the Supreme Court justify judicial intervention in the highway safety case?

    1. Suo Motu Cognisance: The Court initiated proceedings after two road accidents in November 2025 led to 34 deaths.
    2. Right to Life Expansion: Interpreted Article 21 to include safe travel and well-maintained highways.
    3. Governance Failure: Judicial intervention emerged against the backdrop of persistent road safety failures.
    4. Striking Data: National Highways accounted for over 30% of road fatalities in India, despite comprising a limited share of total roads.
    5. Policy Context: Government targets 50% reduction in road accident fatalities by 2030 through the 4E Strategy:
      1. Engineering: Improves road infrastructure and black-spot correction.
      2. Education: Strengthens road safety awareness.
      3. Enforcement: Ensures traffic regulation compliance.
      4. Emergency Medical Services: Supports rapid trauma response.
    6. Mixed Outcomes: Despite a reported 11% decline in fatalities in 2024, accident deaths remain substantially high.

    What is the constitutional meaning of “complete justice”?

    1. Substantive Justice: Ensures outcomes aligned with fairness rather than rigid procedural compliance.
    2. Natural Justice: Requires adherence to principles of fair hearing, reasonableness, and equity.
    3. Constitutional Morality: Enables courts to protect constitutional values in emerging socio-legal contexts.
    4. Dynamic Interpretation: Adapts legal remedies to changing social realities where statutes lag behind societal needs.
    5. Institutional Trust: Strengthens public confidence by preventing denial of justice due to legal loopholes.
    6. Constitutional Intent: Reflects the framers’ objective of preserving justice even in legally exceptional situations.

    Can High Courts also exercise powers similar to Article 142?

    1. Constitutional Difference: High Courts do not possess powers identical to Article 142.
    2. Judicial Clarification: In Anil Kumar Jain v. Maya Jain, the Supreme Court held that Article 226 powers of High Courts are not co-extensive with Article 142 powers.
    3. Broader Writ Jurisdiction: High Courts may still deliver equitable relief under Article 226 for enforcement of fundamental and legal rights.
    4. Institutional Limitation: High Courts remain constrained by statutory frameworks to a greater extent than the Supreme Court.
    5. Functional Similarity: Both institutions pursue justice, but the Supreme Court possesses wider constitutional discretion.

    What judicial principles regulate the exercise of Article 142?

    1. Extraordinary Nature: Article 142 operates as an exceptional power and not an ordinary judicial mechanism.
    2. Judicial Restraint: Courts exercise caution to avoid institutional excess.
    3. Faith and Trust Principle: Judicial legitimacy depends upon restrained and principled use of extraordinary authority.
    4. Natural Justice Requirement: Fairness remains indispensable in all judicial interventions.
    5. Judicial Precedent: In Delhi Judicial Service Association v. State of Gujarat, the Court recognised Article 142 as distinct from ordinary law.
    6. Limited Exercise Principle: In Hitesh Bhatnagar v. Deepa Bhatnagar, the Court emphasised cautious application of extraordinary jurisdiction.

    Does Article 142 strengthen justice or undermine separation of powers?

    1. Judicial Activism: Supports proactive constitutional interpretation where governance gaps persist.
    2. Institutional Corrective: Responds to administrative inaction or legislative silence.
    3. Separation of Powers Concern: Critics argue frequent reliance on Article 142 risks judicial encroachment into executive and legislative domains.
    4. Procedural Bypass Criticism: Courts may bypass established statutory frameworks while granting remedies.
    5. Counterargument: Judicial intervention becomes necessary where evolving social issues outpace legislation.
    6. Illustration: Social Change: Courts have intervened in matters involving rights, dignity, and emerging social realities where existing laws proved inadequate.

    How has judicial precedent shaped the doctrine of complete justice?

    1. Equitable Justice Principle: In Canara Bank v. Debasis Das, the Court held that the Constitution seeks substantive justice beyond procedural rigidity.
    2. Legal Gap Filling: Article 142 addresses situations where legal systems fail to provide direct remedies.
    3. Precedent-Based Expansion: Judicial decisions have progressively broadened the operational meaning of “complete justice”.
    4. Balance with Constitutionalism: Courts continue to emphasise limits to avoid institutional imbalance.
    CaseContribution
    Delhi Judicial Service Association v. State of Gujarat (1991)Recognised independent scope of Article 142
    Canara Bank v. Debasis Das (2003)Reinforced substantive justice and natural justice
    Anil Kumar Jain v. Maya Jain (2009)Clarified High Courts cannot exercise Article 142 powers
    Hitesh Bhatnagar v. Deepa Bhatnagar (2011)Emphasised restraint in Article 142 use
    In Re: Phalodi Accident v. NHAI (2025)Linked safe highways with Article 21

    What are the criticisms of Article 142?

    1. Judicial Overreach: Expands the Court’s role beyond interpretation into policy-making, raising concerns of institutional overreach.
    2. Weakens Separation of Powers: Allows the judiciary to enter domains traditionally reserved for the Legislature or Executive.
    3. Bypassing Statutory Framework: Enables relief beyond existing laws, sometimes diluting Parliament-made procedures.
    4. Ambiguous Scope: The term “complete justice” lacks clear constitutional limits, creating scope for subjective interpretation.
    5. Democratic Accountability Concerns: Unelected judges making wide-ranging decisions may raise questions of democratic legitimacy.

    Conclusion

    Article 142 reflects the Constitution’s commitment to ensuring justice where statutory remedies prove inadequate. However, constitutional legitimacy requires a careful balance between judicial innovation and institutional restraint. The enduring challenge lies in preserving the Supreme Court’s role as the guardian of justice without unsettling the constitutional equilibrium among organs of the State.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2020] Judicial legislation is antithetical to the doctrine of separation of powers as envisaged in the Indian Constitution. In this context justify the filing of large number of public interest petitions praying for issuing guidelines to executive authorities

    Linkage: The PYQ directly tests the tension between judicial activism, judicial overreach, and separation of powers, the core debate surrounding Article 142. Article 142 embodies the same dilemma: Should courts intervene to ensure complete justice when governance fails, or does it amount to judicial legislation?

  • How safe is India’s critical national infrastructure

    Why in the News?

    India’s critical infrastructure security has come into focus amid rising concerns over cyber threats targeting IoT-enabled systems used in energy, transport, communications and industrial networks. Recently, there were warnings from India’s National Cyber Security Coordinator that highlight that traditional cyber defences are no longer adequate against increasingly sophisticated attacks on critical systems.

    What Constitutes Critical Infrastructure in India?

    Critical Information Infrastructure (CII): Systems whose incapacitation can severely impact national security, economy, public health or safety.

    Major Sectors

    1. Energy: Power grids, oil and gas networks.
    2. Transport: Railways, airports, ports and highways.
    3. Telecommunications: Internet backbone and communication networks.
    4. Banking & Finance: Payment systems and financial infrastructure.
    5. Healthcare: Hospital networks and medical databases.
    6. Strategic Systems: Defence, satellites and emergency services

    Why has digital transformation increased vulnerabilities in critical infrastructure?

    1. Digital Integration: Connects traditionally isolated infrastructure systems with internet-enabled networks, increasing exposure to cyber risks. Earlier, local control systems operated independently; today they function through networked environments.
    2. Automation Expansion: Enables predictive maintenance, remote monitoring and optimisation across power plants, chemical industries, transport systems and refineries. Greater connectivity, however, increases the possibility of remote compromise.
    3. IoT Proliferation: Expands attack surfaces through connected devices such as cameras, GPS systems, industrial controllers, water-level sensors and smart monitors that continuously exchange data.
    4. Systemic Dependence: Creates cascading risks because disruption in one sector may trigger failures across supply chains, communication networks and essential services.
    5. National Security Exposure: Converts technical vulnerabilities into strategic risks as attacks on infrastructure can disrupt economic stability and public order.

    How has the convergence of IT, OT and IoT transformed security risks?

    1. Information Technology (IT): Processes and stores digital data through servers, cloud systems and computational networks.
    2. Operational Technology (OT): Controls physical systems such as industrial machinery, transport systems and manufacturing plants.
    3. IoT Connectivity: Integrates physical infrastructure with digital control systems using sensors, controllers and automated devices.
    4. Control Vulnerability: Allows compromised IoT systems to manipulate physical operations. Breached devices may alter industrial controls or operational parameters.
    5. Invisible Threats: Creates hidden security risks through malicious firmware, embedded control pathways or hardware-level vulnerabilities.
    6. Trojan Risks: Enables insertion of concealed vulnerabilities that remain dormant but can later disrupt systems or facilitate surveillance.

    Why are conventional cybersecurity measures insufficient for critical infrastructure?

    1. Limited Scope: Cybersecurity measures such as server protection, anti-virus systems and breach prevention primarily secure digital layers but may not protect embedded physical systems.
    2. Physical-Digital Interdependence: Requires security frameworks that protect not only software but also hardware, sensors and communication pathways.
    3. Critical Infrastructure Sensitivity: Demands higher scrutiny because disruption may directly affect public safety and strategic operations.
    4. Procurement Gaps: Weak tender conditions often fail to prioritise trusted products or deep security evaluation.
    5. Compliance Weakness: Eligibility assessments frequently focus on paperwork rather than hardware authenticity, origin verification and operational vulnerability.
    6. Institutional Enforcement Deficit: Existing IT and IoT guidelines remain inadequately enforced for national-level infrastructure.

    Examples 

    1. SCADA Systems: Earlier local process control systems managed industrial operations through Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition systems; today many are internet-connected.
    2. CERT-In: Strengthens cyber response capacity through incident monitoring and emergency response protocols but does not fully secure infrastructure hardware.

    How do procurement and certification weaknesses create national security risks?

    1. Trusted Procurement Deficit: Allows deployment of imported systems without rigorous security verification.
    2. Security Evaluation Gaps: Weak scrutiny of design origin, manufacturing authenticity and operational vulnerabilities increases risk of embedded backdoors.
    3. Certification Challenges: Existing testing procedures remain lengthy and unevenly enforced across infrastructure sectors.
    4. Imported Device Risk: Raises concern over GPS-enabled electronic locks and communication systems manufactured abroad but deployed in sensitive supply chains.
    5. False Certification Concerns: Creates risks when imported products receive domestic certification despite unresolved security questions.

    Example 

    1. STQC Certification: Recent certification of cameras by Standardisation Testing and Quality Certification (STQC) ensures devices do not perform unintended control or data-sharing functions. However, certification remains time-consuming and inconsistently applied across IoT devices.

    Why is fuel transportation emerging as a major infrastructure vulnerability?

    1. Fuel Supply Digitisation: Integrates tankers with GPS tracking, digital monitoring and IoT-enabled electronic locking systems.
    2. Operational Dependence: Makes petroleum logistics increasingly dependent on remote communication technologies.
    3. Remote Disruption Risk: Creates vulnerability if vehicle tracking systems or e-locks are imported, compromised or improperly certified.
    4. Supply Chain Exposure: Enables interference with fuel distribution systems, affecting energy security and economic continuity.

    Example 

    1. Petroleum Tankers: Earlier protected through seals, locks and keys; now increasingly dependent on IoT-based keyless systems and GPS-enabled monitoring.
    2. Recent U.S. Case: A cyberattack on fuel storage systems reported by CNN demonstrates how attacks on energy systems can disrupt supply chains.

    How can India strengthen critical infrastructure resilience?

    1. Trusted Technology Ecosystem: Prioritises secure and trusted domestic technologies for sensitive sectors.
    2. Certification Enforcement: Ensures rigorous security testing for IoT devices deployed in national infrastructure.
    3. Supply Chain Security: Strengthens scrutiny of hardware origin, firmware integrity and manufacturing authenticity.
    4. Cyber-Physical Security Framework: Integrates IT, OT and IoT protection rather than treating cybersecurity as a software issue alone.
    5. Awareness Generation: Encourages industrial users, utilities and government agencies to recognise cyber risks in connected systems.
    6. Continuous Vigilance: Supports real-time monitoring and regular security audits of infrastructure networks.

    Conclusion

    India’s critical infrastructure is undergoing rapid digital transformation through automation, IoT and AI, improving efficiency and service delivery across sectors. However, increasing interconnection between digital and physical systems has also expanded vulnerabilities to cyberattacks, supply-chain risks and remote disruptions. In an era of connected systems, infrastructure resilience has become inseparable from national security and economic stability.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] What are the different elements of cyber security? Keeping in view the challenges in cyber security, examine the extent to which India has successfully developed a comprehensive National Cyber Security Strategy.

    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of cyber security architecture, vulnerabilities and institutional preparedness in India’s digital ecosystem. The article expands the cyber security debate beyond data protection to critical infrastructure protection.

  • Big Island (Hawaii)

    Why in the news?

    A magnitude 6.0 earthquake struck near Honaunau-Napoopoo on the Big Island.

    About the Big Island

    • The largest island in the Hawaiian archipelago
    • Part of Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean
    • Area: ~10,432 km²
    • Formed through volcanic activity

    Five Major Volcanoes

    • Kohala
    • Hualālai
    • Mauna Kea
    • Mauna Loa
    • Kīlauea

    Important Volcanoes

    Mauna Loa

    • One of the world’s largest volcanoes
    • Shield volcano
    • Greatest mass of any mountain on Earth

    Kīlauea

    • Among the world’s most active volcanoes
    • Frequently erupting since 1983

    Shield Volcano

    • A volcano with broad, gentle slopes formed by fluid lava flows. Examples: Mauna Loa and Kīlauea

    Mauna Kea

    • The highest point in Hawaii above sea level
    • Hosts major astronomical observatories

    Hawaiʻi Volcanoes National Park

    • UNESCO World Heritage Site
    • Protects Kīlauea and Mauna Loa volcanoes

    Why are Earthquakes Common in Hawaii?

    Due to:

    • Volcanic activity
    • Movement of tectonic plates
    • Hotspot volcanism

    Hotspot Volcanism

    • A hotspot is a place where hot magma rises from Earth’s mantle. As the Pacific Plate moves over it, volcanic islands form.

    [2024] Consider the following:
    1. Pyroclastic debris
    2. Ash and dust
    3. Nitrogen compounds
    4. Sulphur compounds
    How many of the above are products of volcanic eruptions?

    [A] Only one

    [B] Only two

    [C] Only three

    [D] All four

  • Vembanad Lake

    Why in the news?

    The Kerala government acted against houseboat pollution in Vembanad Lake following directions from the Kerala High Court.

    About Vembanad Lake

    • Largest lake in Kerala and longest lake in India
    • Largest tropical wetland ecosystem on India’s southwest coast
    • Also called Vembanad Kayal, Punnamada Lake, Kochi Lake
    • Spread across Alappuzha, Kottayam, and Ernakulam districts

    Source Rivers

    Fed by:

    • Pampa
    • Meenachil
    • Achankovil
    • Manimala

    Ecological Importance

    • Ramsar Site since 2002
    • Supports fisheries, biodiversity, flood control, and groundwater recharge
    • Part of National Wetlands Conservation Programme

    Agriculture

    • Famous for below sea-level farming in the Kuttanad region

    Tourism and Culture

    • Major part of Kerala backwaters tourism
    • Known for houseboats and inland water transport
    • Hosts Nehru Trophy Snake Boat Race in August

    [2022] Consider the following pairs : Wetland/Lake Location
    1. Hokera Wetland: Punjab
    2. Renuka Wetland: Himachal Pradesh
    3. Rudrasagar Lake: Tripura
    4. Sasthamkotta Lake: Tamil Nadu
    How many pairs given above are correctly matched?

    [A] Only one pair

    [B] Only two pairs

    [C] Only three pairs

    [D] All four pairs

  • India-US Critical Minerals Framework

    Why in the news?

    India and the United States signed a Critical Minerals Framework to secure supply chains amid concerns over China’s rare earth export restrictions.

    Critical Minerals

    Essential for:

    • Economic development
    • National security
    • Clean energy transition
    • Examples: Lithium, Cobalt, Nickel, Graphite, and Rare Earth Elements (REEs)

    Rare Earth Elements (REEs)

    • Group of 17 metallic elements used in: EVs, Defence systems, Electronics, Renewable energy, and Semiconductors

    Why Important?

    • Crucial for EVs, solar panels, batteries
    • Used in missiles, fighter jets, AI hardware
    • Key to semiconductor and telecom industries

    China’s Dominance

    China dominates rare earth processing and refining, creating:

    • Supply chain vulnerabilities
    • Geopolitical risks
    • Export control concerns

    [2025] Consider the following statements:
    I. India has joined the Minerals Security Partnership as a member.
    II. India is a resource-rich country in all the 30 critical minerals that it has identified.
    III. The Parliament in 2023 has amended the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 empowering the Central Government to exclusively auction mining lease and composite license for certain critical minerals.
    Which of the statements given above are correct?

    [A] I and II only

    [B] II and III only

    [C] I and III only

    [D] I, II and III

  • Haj Pilgrimage and Mount of Mercy (Arafat)

    Why in News?

    Muslim pilgrims gathered at the Mount of Mercy (Jabal al-Rahmah) on the plain of Arafat near Mecca during the annual Hajj pilgrimage.

    What is Hajj?

    • Hajj is the annual Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca and one of the Five Pillars of Islam. It is performed during the Islamic month of Dhu al-Hijjah, mainly from the 8th to 12th day.

    Importance

    • Mandatory once in a lifetime for every financially and physically capable Muslim.

    Five Pillars of Islam

    • Shahada (Faith)
    • Salah (Prayer)
    • Zakat (Charity)
    • Sawm (Fasting during Ramadan)
    • Hajj (Pilgrimage)

    What is Arafat?

    • Arafat is a plain about 20 km southeast of Mecca where pilgrims gather on the 9th day of Dhu al-Hijjah. It is considered the most important ritual site of Hajj.

    Mount of Mercy (Jabal al-Rahmah)

    Religious significance:

    • Prophet Muhammad delivered his Farewell Sermon here.
    • Islamic tradition believes Adam and Eve reunited here after separation.

    [2022] The term “Levant” often heard in the news roughly corresponds to which of the following regions?

    [A] Region along the eastern Mediterranean shores

    [B] Region along North African shores stretching from Egypt to Morocco

    [C] Region along Persian Gulf and Horn of Africa

    [D] The entire coastal areas of Mediterranean Sea

  • [26th May 2026] The Hindu OpED: Finance Commission transfers and equity issue 

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2021] How have the recommendations of the 14th Finance Commission of India enabled the States to improve their fiscal position?Linkage: It directly examines the role of the Finance Commission in Centre-State fiscal relations and State finances. The present article extends this debate by questioning whether Finance Commission transfers under the 15th and emerging 16th FC framework are ensuring equity or disproportionately benefiting certain States while penalising economically stronger ones.

    Mentor’s Comment

    Consultations for the 16th Finance Commission have revived the debate on the fairness of tax devolution, with several States demanding changes in transfer criteria and a higher share in central taxes. The issue has gained urgency as large disparities in health and education spending persist despite decades of fiscal transfers. At the same time, the southern and economically stronger States argue that current formulas disproportionately favour poorer States.

    Why has the Finance Commission become central to the debate on fiscal federalism?

    The Finance Commission (FC) is central to the fiscal federalism debate because it acts as the primary constitutional arbitrator balancing the financial powers of the Centre with the development responsibilities of the States .

    1. Correction of Structural Imbalances: Under Article 280, the FC resolves the vertical imbalance (Centre vs. States) and horizontal imbalance (richer vs. poorer States) to ensure uniform national development.
    2. Tension over Resource Sharing through Vertical Devolution: While the 15th FC maintained a 41% vertical devolution to States, the actual money transferred has shrunk due to the Centre’s increasing reliance on cesses and surcharges, which are not shared with States.
    3. The Equity vs. Efficiency Dilemma: Horizontal distribution criteria like “income distance” favor less-developed States. This leads to growing protests from highly performing southern States that feel penalized for their demographic and economic successes.
    4. Compounded Fiscal Stress: The aftermath of the GST transition, volatile public debt levels, and rigid fiscal deficit targets have left States highly dependent on FC recommendations for survival.
    5. Erosion of Autonomy: The proliferation of Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS) forces States to spend their own matching funds on federal priorities, severely limiting their local budgeting freedom.

    Why are States dissatisfied with the present structure of fiscal transfers?

    1. Cesses and Surcharges: Exceeded 15% of gross tax revenues and remain outside the divisible pool, reducing States’ effective share to around 8-10% lower than expected transfers.
    2. Non-Tax Revenues: Centre retains significant revenues from natural resource extraction, asset monetisation, and RBI surplus transfers, limiting fiscal decentralisation.
    3. GST Constraints: Structural changes after GST reduced States’ tax flexibility and independent fiscal capacity.
    4. Borrowing Restrictions: States face tighter fiscal discipline norms despite increasing expenditure obligations.
    5. CSS Burden: Restructuring of schemes such as MGNREGA requires States to bear 40% programme costs, increasing expenditure pressure.
    6. Demand for Higher Share: Several States demanded 50% vertical devolution, citing shrinking fiscal space.

    How have Finance Commission criteria altered interstate equity outcomes?

    1. Changing Criteria: Successive Finance Commissions frequently changed weights assigned to devolution criteria, creating uncertainty for States.
    2. Reduced Role of Income Distance: States argued for lower weightage or purchasing-power adjustments due to cost-of-living variations.
    3. Shift in State Shares: Combined share of four major beneficiary States, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal, increased from 42.5% under the 15th FC period to 51% under the 16th FC calculations.
    4. Southern States’ Decline: Share of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Karnataka, Kerala and Tamil Nadu fell from 24.8% to 15.8%, widening perceived inequities.
    5. Fiscal Incentive Concern: Heavy reliance on unconditional equalisation transfers may weaken incentives for revenue mobilisation and fiscal discipline.

    Why have fiscal transfers failed to ensure convergence in public service delivery?

    Evidence: Bihar spent ₹937 per capita on health (2022-23) compared to Arunachal Pradesh’s ₹10,148, despite transfer mechanisms. Bihar’s per-student elementary education expenditure stood at ₹20,282, compared to Sikkim’s ₹1,30,498 (2023-24).

    1. The Absorptive Capacity Deficit: Fiscally weaker states often lack the administrative machinery, technical staff, and institutional systems required to efficiently deploy and spend massive inflows of capital.
    2. Input-Centric Transfer Architecture: Financial allocations are traditionally tied to rigid, historical spending inputs rather than measurable quality-of-service metrics or regional development outcomes.
    3. Conditional Funding Rigidities: Centrally Sponsored Schemes (CSS) enforce strict, uniform guidelines across the country, preventing states from adapting funds to meet unique regional needs.
    4. Distorted Capital-to-Revenue Mix: A massive portion of devolved funds is consumed by fixed revenue expenditures, such as state salaries and pensions, leaving minimal capital for public infrastructure.
    5. Varying Cost of Delivery: Geographical terrain, population density, and existing infrastructure deficits mean the actual cost of delivering identical healthcare or education units varies drastically between states.
    6. Limited Outcome Orientation: Existing transfer systems prioritise redistribution rather than measurable governance outcomes.

    What major changes did the 15th Finance Commission introduce and why are they contested?

    1. Retention of State Share: Maintained 41% vertical devolution.
    2. Removal of Revenue Deficit Grants: Abolished revenue-deficit grants, sector-specific grants, and State-specific grants.
    3. Fiscal Discipline Measures: Recommended States discontinue off-budget borrowings, integrate liabilities into budgets, and maintain fiscal deficit below 3% of GSDP.
    4. Criteria Weightage: Assigned:
      1. Income Distance: 42.5%
      2. Population: 17.5%
      3. Area: 10%
      4. Forest Cover: 10%
      5. Demographic Performance: 10%
      6. Contribution to National GDP: 10%
    5. Square Root GSDP Formula: Used square-root transformation of GSDP shares rather than actual GDP shares, reducing the advantage of economically stronger States.
    6. Major Reduction in Shares:
      1. Maharashtra: From 14.23% to 8.31%
      2. Tamil Nadu: From 9.09% to 6.67%
      3. Karnataka: From 8.95% to 6.59%
    7. Marginal Gains: Smaller States witnessed increased allocations.

    Would alternative devolution criteria produce fairer outcomes?

    1. Higher GDP Weightage Scenario: A 25% weight to square-root GDP contribution with reduced income-distance weight could increase:
      1. Karnataka: 6.441% – 7.131%
      2. Maharashtra: 4.928% – 7.218%
      3. Tamil Nadu: 4.097% – 4.867%
    2. Equal Weight Formula: Could increase shares further:
      1. Karnataka: 5.544%
      2. Maharashtra: 7.845%
      3. Tamil Nadu: 5.246%
    3. Actual GSDP Share Formula: Even 10% weight using actual GSDP shares would increase:
      1. Maharashtra: 8.698%
      2. Karnataka: 5.517%
      3. Tamil Nadu: 5.478%
    4. Financial Implications: Under estimated transfers of ₹104 lakh crore, changes could yield annual gains:
      1. Maharashtra: ~₹49,744 crore
      2. Karnataka: ~₹37,565 crore
      3. Tamil Nadu: ~₹32,365 crore

    How does the Finance Commission reflect the broader tension between equity and efficiency?

    1. Equity Principle: Supports fiscally weaker States through redistributive transfers to reduce regional inequality.
    2. Efficiency Principle: Rewards States demonstrating higher tax effort, demographic control, fiscal prudence, and stronger economic output.
    3. Political Economy Concern: States with greater parliamentary representation often receive higher transfers despite weaker fiscal performance.
    4. Delimitation Anxiety: Southern States fear demographic success may reduce political representation while redistribution continues to favour higher-population States.
    5. Future Challenge: Balancing need-based redistribution with performance-based incentives.

    Conclusion

    Finance Commission transfers remain central to India’s cooperative federal architecture. The debate increasingly reflects a deeper conflict between redistributive justice and fiscal efficiency. While poorer States require sustained support to ensure minimum public service standards, economically stronger States seek recognition for fiscal prudence and demographic performance. Future Finance Commissions may need to adopt outcome-based indicators, fiscal capacity measures, and balanced weighting frameworks to preserve both equity and federal trust.

  • Why is the Indian Rupee falling

    Why in the News?

    The Indian rupee recently crossed ₹96 per U.S. dollar in May 2025, compared to nearly ₹85 a year earlier. This marked a sharp depreciation amid global geopolitical tensions, foreign portfolio outflows, and rising import dependence.

    Why does the Indian rupee continue to depreciate despite India’s growing economy?

    1. Demand-Supply Dynamics: Currency prices depend on market demand relative to other currencies. A higher demand for dollars than rupees weakens the rupee.
    2. Import Dependence: India imports large quantities of crude oil, electronics, machinery, and industrial inputs, increasing demand for dollars.
    3. Trade Deficit: India’s imports consistently exceed exports, creating a merchandise trade deficit.
      1. Data Point: Merchandise trade deficit worsened from USD 244.9 billion (2023-24) to USD 286.9 billion (2024-25).
    4. Geopolitical Uncertainty: Global instability encourages investors to shift funds toward safer assets such as the U.S. dollar, strengthening it relative to emerging market currencies.
    5. Dollar Strength: Higher U.S. interest rates attract global capital into dollar-denominated assets.

    How does India’s Balance of Payments (BoP) shape the rupee’s exchange rate?

    India’s Balance of Payments (BoP) directly shapes the rupee’s exchange rate by determining the net demand and supply of foreign currency within the economy.

    1. Analyze Current Account ImpactThe Current Account reflects the net balance of trade in goods, services, and transfer payments
      1. Merchandise Trade Deficit: Increased from USD 244.9 billion (2023-24) to USD 286.9 billion (2024-25).
      2. Invisibles Surplus Buffers Rupee: Strong software services exports and remittances from workers abroad (especially West Asia) created a net invisible surplus rise from USD 218.8 billion to USD 263.9 billion. This creates massive inflows of foreign currency, supporting rupee stability.
      3. Net Deficit Weakens Rupee: Because the merchandise deficit outweighs the invisibles surplus, the overall current account remains in a deficit (CAD).
    2. Evaluate Capital Account Dynamics: The Capital Account tracks the flow of investment capital, loans, and banking capital across national borders.
      1. Financing the Gap: India relies on foreign capital inflows to bridge the CAD.
      2. FDI and Portfolio Inflows: Inflows from Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and Foreign Portfolio Investment (FPI) demand Indian currency. Foreigners convert USD to INR to buy assets, which strengthens the rupee.
      3. External Borrowing Risks: Relying on short-term loans and external borrowings can cause sudden rupee volatility if global interest rates spike or investors pull funds out rapidly.
    3. Review Exchange Rate Outcomes: The final value of the rupee hinges on the net interaction between these two accounts.
    BoP Condition Market MechanismImpact on Indian Rupee
    Overall BoP SurplusCapital Inflows > Current Account DeficitAppreciates (Rupee strengthens)
    Overall BoP DeficitCapital Inflows < Current Account DeficitDepreciates (Rupee weakens)

    India’s BoP Snapshot (Figures in USD billion)

    Component2023-242024-25
    Current Account-26.1-23.1
    Merchandise Trade-244.9-286.9
    Invisibles218.8263.9
    Capital Account89.4116.6
    FDI54.24.52
    Loans6.529.3
    Others28.7-17.2
    Forex Reserves Change-63.7+5

    How do foreign capital outflows weaken the rupee?

    Foreign capital outflows weaken the rupee through a direct market mechanism of asset liquidation and currency conversion.

    1. The Conversion Mechanism: When foreign portfolio investors (FPIs) decide to exit the Indian market, they liquidate their holdings in domestic stocks and bonds. This process unfolds in two distinct steps that put downward pressure on the currency:
      1. Asset Liquidation: Investors sell Indian equities and debt instruments, receiving payments in Indian Rupees (INR).
      2. Currency Conversion: To repatriate their capital, these investors must immediately sell their newly acquired rupees in the foreign exchange market to buy US Dollars (USD).
    2. Supply and Demand Imbalance: The mass exit of foreign capital disrupts the equilibrium of the foreign exchange market:
      1. Surplus of Rupee: The market experiences a sudden, heavy supply of rupees as exiting investors rush to dump the currency.
      2. Scarcity of Dollars: Simultaneously, the demand for US dollars spikes sharply.
      3. Depreciation: According to standard economic laws of supply and demand, an oversupply of a currency combined with intense demand for a foreign counterparty currency causes the domestic currency (the rupee) to lose value.
    3. FPI vs. FDI Stability: The nature of the capital leaving the country dictates the severity of the exchange rate impact:
      1. High Volatility (FPI): Foreign Portfolio Investment is highly liquid and seeking short-term financial returns. It can exit a country almost instantly, earning it the label “hot money.” This makes FPI the primary driver of sudden, sharp currency depreciation during global market panics.
      2. Resilient Cushion (FDI): Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) involves long-term, physical investments like building factories or buying corporate infrastructure. Because these assets cannot be quickly liquidated, FDI remains stable during crises and serves as a critical structural anchor for the rupee.

    Why does a falling rupee become costly for India’s economy?

    1. Imported Inflation: Depreciation raises costs of imported goods.
    2. Oil Burden: India imports a substantial share of crude oil, making energy prices vulnerable to currency depreciation.
    3. Data Illustration: At ₹96 per dollar, purchasing USD 100 worth of oil requires ₹9,600, compared to ₹8,500 at ₹85 per dollar.
    4. Inflationary Transmission: Higher fuel costs increase logistics and transportation expenses across sectors.
    5. Manufacturing Constraints: Expensive imported raw materials raise production costs.
    6. Growth Trade-off: Depreciation may support exports but simultaneously increases import dependence.

    Does a weaker rupee improve India’s exports automatically?

    1. Export Competitiveness: A cheaper rupee can make Indian goods more affordable globally.
    2. Structural Constraints: Export gains remain limited when manufacturing competitiveness is weak.
      1. Even if the rupee depreciates from ₹96 to ₹120, export gains may remain modest due to supply-side constraints.
    3. Import Dependence in Manufacturing: Many exporters rely on imported inputs, reducing net gains from depreciation.

    What role does the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) play in defending the rupee?

    1. Forex Intervention: RBI sells dollars from reserves to reduce excessive rupee depreciation.
    2. Market Stabilisation: Dollar sales increase dollar supply in forex markets and support rupee demand.
    3. Forex Reserve Strength: India’s reserves stood at approximately USD 691 billion by March 2026, sufficient for around 10.8 months of imports.
    4. Intervention Evidence: RBI actively intervened during October 2024-January 2025 and August-December 2025.
    5. Limitation: RBI can moderate volatility but cannot permanently reverse depreciation caused by structural deficits.

    Why is oil dependency central to rupee vulnerability?

    1. Crude Oil Imports: India imports nearly 85% of its crude oil requirement, increasing dollar demand.
    2. External Vulnerability: Oil price shocks worsen trade deficits and strain forex reserves.
    3. Geopolitical Linkage: Conflicts in energy-producing regions raise crude prices, amplifying pressure on the rupee.
    4. Policy Imperative: Reducing oil dependence through renewables, EVs, ethanol blending, and domestic energy diversification strengthens currency stability.

    Conclusion

    The rupee’s depreciation reflects deeper structural realities of India’s external sector rather than merely short-term market fluctuations. Persistent trade deficits, dependence on imported oil, volatile portfolio flows, and geopolitical disruptions continue to pressure the currency. While RBI intervention and strong forex reserves provide temporary insulation, durable currency stability ultimately depends on strengthening exports, reducing import dependence, and improving external sector resilience.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] How would the recent phenomena of protectionism and currency manipulations in world trade affect macroeconomic stability of India? 

    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of exchange rate volatility, external sector vulnerabilities, capital flows, and macroeconomic stability. The article explains how rupee depreciation, trade deficits, foreign capital outflows, geopolitical tensions, and dollar strengthening affect India’s macroeconomic stability and Balance of Payments. 

  • Water governance in peri-urban areas

    Why in the News?

    India’s water challenge is increasingly shifting to peri-urban areas that are growing rapidly but lack proper governance and services. This has become important because India’s urban expansion is accelerating fast: the number of Census towns rose from 1,362 to 3,784 in two decades. While the Jal Jeevan Mission has brought tap water to nearly 80% of rural households, peri-urban regions still face urban-level pressures without reliable water and sanitation services.

    What are Peri-Urban Areas?

    1. Peri-urban areas are transitional zones located on the outskirts of metropolitan regions where urban and rural activities mix. 
    2. They are characterized by rapid, often unplanned, land-use changes, overlapping jurisdictions, and a heterogeneous population with diverse socio-economic backgrounds.
    3. India’s peri-urban landscape represents the transition zone where farmlands, fragmented settlements, industrial units, and expanding cities intersect.
    4. These areas are neither fully rural nor formally urban, resulting in governance ambiguity.

    Why are peri-urban areas emerging as the “missing middle” in India’s water governance framework?

    1. Institutional Vacuum: Creates governance ambiguity as peri-urban areas remain outside effective rural governance but lack urban administrative integration.
    2. Rapid Urbanisation: Expands peri-urban settlements at a pace faster than institutional adaptation. Census towns increased from 1,362 to 3,784, registering a 178% rise over two decades.
    3. Unplanned Settlement Growth: Converts agricultural land into industrial sheds and densely clustered settlements without parallel expansion of water and sanitation infrastructure.
    4. Administrative Limbo: Produces fragmented accountability as these regions are “no longer villages but not recognised cities.”
    5. Service Deficit: Imposes urban-level costs without corresponding urban-level services, creating dual vulnerabilities.

    How does governance fragmentation intensify water insecurity in peri-urban regions?

    1. Intermittent Water Supply: Forces residents into uncertain access arrangements. In Rawta village near Delhi, water is supplied only on alternate days between 7 p.m. and midnight, compelling households to sacrifice sleep for water collection.
    2. Dependence on Informal Markets: Encourages exploitation by private water vendors, particularly where piped access remains unreliable.
    3. Municipal Overstretch: Weakens service delivery when peri-urban regions are absorbed into municipal corporations without administrative preparedness. In Gurugram, abolition of rural governance exposed residents to urban prices without adequate services.
    4. Governance Discontinuity: Generates inefficiencies during transitions from panchayat systems to municipal administration.

    How does peri-urban expansion transfer environmental burdens onto vulnerable communities?

    1. Groundwater Contamination: Intensifies due to waste dumping and untreated urban spillovers. In peri-urban Hyderabad, toxic leachate from waste dumps contaminated groundwater systems.
    2. Urban Resource Extraction: Diverts water away from downstream users. The Bisalpur Dam, originally built for Tonk and Sawai Madhopur irrigation, increasingly prioritises Jaipur’s urban demand, shifting costs to rural farmers.
    3. Sacrifice Zones: Converts peri-urban regions into sites bearing ecological costs of urban growth without compensatory governance mechanisms.
    4. Water Inequity: Expands when rural water sources are appropriated for urban consumption without accountable regulatory systems.

    Why is sanitation failure becoming a major peri-urban governance crisis?

    1. Septic Tank Dependence: Leaves nearly 40 million urban households dependent on on-site sanitation systems such as septic tanks.
    2. Irregular Desludging: Creates public health risks because septic tanks are often cleaned only after overflow.
    3. Illegal Disposal: Encourages dumping of untreated septage into rivers and open fields, undermining sanitation outcomes.
    4. Infrastructure Reversal: Weakens gains achieved under the Swachh Bharat Mission, as a single 5,000-litre tanker dumping untreated waste can negate sanitation improvements created by thousands of constructed toilets.
    5. Public Health Risk: Increases groundwater contamination, vector-borne diseases, and ecological degradation.

    Institutional reforms necessary to address the peri-urban water governance vacuum:

    How can governance structures be redesigned for peri-urban settlements?

    1. Nagar Panchayats: Ensure institutional continuity for all Census towns, as envisioned under the 74th Constitutional Amendment.
    2. Functional Reclassification: Strengthens governance capacity after rural-to-urban transitions.
    3. Collaborative Governance: Improves accountability through local coordination. The Sultanpur village platform experiment brought together engineers, panchayat representatives, and residents, demonstrating better coordination outcomes.

    Why must water-source sustainability become central to urban water planning?

    1. Catchment Protection: Prevents encroachment and ecological degradation at water origins.
    2. Solid Waste Regulation: Reduces contamination risks near drinking water sources.
    3. Community Monitoring: Strengthens local accountability through sanitation inspections of water bodies.
    4. Source Sustainability: Addresses a key gap in Jal Jeevan Mission, which expanded tap access but requires stronger long-term water source protection.

    Why is a ‘Swachh Bharat Mission 3.0’ necessary for peri-urban India?

    1. Faecal Sludge Management: Prioritises safe collection and treatment of septage.
    2. Decentralised Treatment Infrastructure: Facilitates establishment of faecal sludge treatment plants where sewerage systems remain economically unviable beyond 15-20 km.
    3. Technology Integration: Deploys GPS-equipped desludging trucks to prevent illegal dumping.
    4. Narrow-Lane Accessibility: Introduces mini-cesspool vehicles, as demonstrated in Berhampur, Odisha.
    5. Financial Integration: Internalises desludging expenses (₹1,500-₹6,000 per trip) into monthly water charges through sanitation levies.
    6. Rural Employment Linkage: Leverages employment guarantee programmes for sanitation implementation.

    Can decentralised wastewater treatment improve peri-urban water resilience?

    1. Modular Systems: Support localised treatment close to wastewater generation points.
    2. High Water Recovery: Technologies developed by Indra Water and Tigreen recover over 95% of used water.
    3. Low Resource Requirement: Minimises land and energy consumption.
    4. Policy Support: Requires single-window clearances, green procurement mandates, and government-backed guarantees to create treated-water markets.

    Why should peri-urban water infrastructure be treated as strategic infrastructure?

    1. Future Urbanisation: India will require 230 million housing units and nearly 500 cities by 2047, increasing water demand sharply.
    2. Blended Financing: Strengthens investment capacity through models such as Uttarakhand’s financing framework, combining State risk-bearing with World Bank concessional loans linked to performance indicators.
    3. Infrastructure Prioritisation: Ensures financing for sanitation, decentralised treatment, and water reuse systems.

    Conclusion

    Peri-urban India represents the decisive frontier of India’s water future. Continued institutional neglect risks creating zones of ecological degradation, sanitation failure, and social inequity. Governance continuity, decentralised treatment, source sustainability, and strategic financing are necessary to transform peri-urban regions into resilient urban transitions rather than sacrifice zones of growth.

    Value Addition

    Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM), 2019

    1. Objective: Ensures Functional Household Tap Connections (FHTCs) to every rural household under the Ministry of Jal Shakti.
    2. Coverage Expansion: Increased rural tap water access from nearly 17% in 2019 to around 80%+ households, marking one of India’s largest public service delivery programmes.
    3. Community Participation: Strengthens local ownership through Village Water and Sanitation Committees (VWSCs/Pani Samitis).
    4. Source Sustainability: Supports rainwater harvesting, groundwater recharge, watershed management, and local water conservation to ensure long-term water security.

    Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban & Grameen)

    1. Objective: Ensures Open Defecation Free (ODF) status, improved sanitation infrastructure, and behavioural transformation.
    2. SBM-Grameen: Strengthens household toilets, solid-liquid waste management, and village sanitation systems.
    3. SBM-Urban: Facilitates scientific waste disposal, faecal sludge management (FSM), sewage treatment, and urban sanitation planning.
    4. SBM 2.0 Focus: Expands from toilet construction to ODF+, ODF++ standards, ensuring safe treatment of faecal waste.
    5. Behavioural Change: Promotes sanitation through Jan Andolan (people’s movement) and awareness campaigns.

    AMRUT Mission (Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation), 2015

    1. Objective: Strengthens urban water supply, sewerage networks, septage management, stormwater drainage, and green spaces.
    2. Coverage: Targets 500+ cities, particularly focusing on basic urban infrastructure.
    3. Water Security Focus: Ensures universal water supply, reduction of non-revenue water losses, and sewage treatment expansion.
    4. AMRUT 2.0: Prioritises water circularity, reuse of treated wastewater, rejuvenation of water bodies, and drinking water security.

    Atal Bhujal Yojana (Atal Jal), 2019

    1. Objective: Ensures sustainable groundwater management in water-stressed regions through community participation.
    2. Coverage: Implemented across 7 water-stressed States, Gujarat, Haryana, Karnataka, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh.
    3. Demand-side Management: Promotes water budgeting, crop diversification, efficient irrigation, and community-led groundwater monitoring.
    4. Institutional Innovation: Uses performance-based incentives for States linked to groundwater outcomes.
    5. World Bank Support: Implemented with financial and technical assistance from the World Bank.

    Case Studies / Examples 

    Rawta Village (Delhi): Example of Intermittent Water Access

    1. Issue: Residents receive piped water only on alternate days between 7 p.m. and midnight.
    2. Governance Challenge: Reflects irregular service delivery despite physical infrastructure presence.

    Gurugram: Example of Municipal Absorption Challenges

    1. Issue: Rural governance structures were abolished and peri-urban areas absorbed under the municipal corporation.
    2. Challenge: Municipal institutions struggled with administrative capacity and service provision.
    3. Outcome: Residents experienced urban-level costs without adequate urban services.

    Berhampur, Odisha: Example of Sanitation Innovation

    1. Innovation: Introduced mini-cesspool vehicles for desludging in narrow peri-urban lanes inaccessible to large trucks.
    2. Outcome: Improved faecal sludge management and reduced illegal dumping risks.

    Bisalpur Dam, Rajasthan: Example of Urban-Rural Water Conflict

    1. Issue: Originally constructed for irrigation in Tonk and Sawai Madhopur, but increasingly redirected to meet Jaipur’s urban water demand.
    2. Challenge: Creates tensions between urban consumption priorities and rural livelihoods.

    Hyderabad: Example of Groundwater Contamination

    1. Issue: Toxic landfill leachate from waste dumps contaminated peri-urban groundwater.
    2. Challenge: Demonstrates environmental costs of unregulated urban expansion and weak waste management.

    Uttarakhand Financing Model: Example of Blended Infrastructure Financing

    1. Model: Combines State risk-bearing with concessional World Bank loans linked to performance indicators.
    2. Objective: Ensures financing for water, sanitation, and decentralised treatment infrastructure.
    3. Outcome: Encourages result-based financing and accountability.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Analyse the role of local bodies in providing good governance at local level and bring out the pros and cons of merging the rural local bodies with the urban local bodies

    Linkage: The PYQ directly tests peri-urban governance transition. The article discusses how peri-urban areas fall into a governance vacuum during transition from Gram Panchayat to municipal governance, creating water and sanitation failures.

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