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  • 🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Komal Mavi, AIR 314, UPSC CSE 2025 | How to Plan Your UPSC 2027 Attempt Step by Step | Join on 21st March at 7PM

    🔴[UPSC Webinar for 2027] By Komal Mavi, AIR 314, UPSC CSE 2025 | How to Plan Your UPSC 2027 Attempt Step by Step | Join on 21st March at 7PM

    Register for the session


    Read about Webinar

    Planning for UPSC 2027 is not just about studying hard.
    It is about knowing what to do, when to do it, and how to stay consistent over a long preparation cycle.

    In this session, I will break down a step by step plan for the UPSC 2027 attempt, from building your base to managing revision, practice, and exam readiness.

    What You’ll Learn in This Session

    1. How to begin your UPSC 2027 preparation the right way
    You’ll understand how to start with clarity, avoid confusion, and build a strong foundation from day one.

    2. How to plan each phase of the journey step by step
    From basic books and notes to answer writing, Prelims preparation, revision, and test practice, this session will help you see the full roadmap clearly.

    3. How to avoid common mistakes that waste time in the first year
    Many aspirants lose months in over planning, over reading, or jumping between sources. You’ll learn how to avoid these traps.

    4. How to balance consistency, coverage, and revision
    I will explain how to study in a way that is sustainable and exam oriented, not just intense for a few weeks.

    5. What serious aspirants should focus on to stay ahead early
    This session will help you understand what creates long term momentum and how early planning gives you a real advantage.

    Who should attend:

    • Beginners targeting UPSC CSE 2027

    • College students and working professionals planning an early start

    • Aspirants who want a structured roadmap instead of random preparation

    Join us, for a 45 minute live Zoom session on 15th March at 7PM.

    See you in masterclass.



    It will be a 45 minute session, post which we will open up the floor for all kinds of queries which a beginner must have. No questions are taboo and Shubhankar Sir is known to be patiently solving all your doubts.

    Join us for a Zoom session on 21st March at 7 PM. This session is a must attend for you If you are attempting UPSC for the first time or have attempted earlier and now preparing for 2026/2027, then it is going to be a valuable session for you too.

    See you in the session”

    Register for the session for a complete in-depth UPSC Prep


    In this Civilsdaily masterclass, you will get:

    1. A 45-minute deep dive on how to plan your UPSC strategy from the start to the end.
    2. How do first-attempt IAS Rankers get the most out of their one year prep?
    3. Insider tips that only the top IAS and IPS rankers know and apply to get rank.

    By the end, you’ll have razor-sharp clarity and a clear path to crack UPSC with confidence and near-perfect certainty. 

    Join UPSC session on 21st March, at 7 PM

    (Don’t wait—the next webinar/session won’t be until End March’26)



    These masterclasses are packed with value. They are conducted in private with a closed community. We rarely open these webinars for everyone for free. This time we are keeping it for 300 seats only.

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  • [20th March 2026] The Hindu OpED: AI-powered tax governance in India and its challenges

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2023] Introduce the concept of Artificial Intelligence (AI). How does AI help clinical diagnosis? Do you perceive any threat to privacy of the individual in the use of AI in healthcare?Linkage: The question examines the use of Artificial Intelligence in healthcare and the associated concerns of data privacy and ethics. Similar privacy and ethical issues arise in AI-based tax governance, where sensitive financial data is processed.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The growing application of Artificial Intelligence in tax administration has significant implications for revenue mobilisation and governance in India. The Income Tax Department’s Project Insight (PI) represents a major shift towards data-driven tax administration. It leverages Artificial Intelligence and data analytics to enhance compliance, detect evasion, and improve revenue outcomes. 

    What is Project Insight (PI) and how does it function?

    1. Project Insight (PI): Establishes a data-driven tax intelligence system to strengthen compliance and enforcement.
    2. Income Tax Transaction Analysis Centre (INTRAC): Processes financial data from banks, GST, property, and securities to generate taxpayer insights
    3. 360-degree Profiling: Integrates multi-source financial data to build comprehensive taxpayer profiles
    4. Non-intrusive Usage of Data to Guide and Enable (NUDGE) Strategy: Uses behavioural nudges such as SMS and emails to prompt voluntary compliance
    5. Compliance Management Centralised Processing Centre: Ensures behavioural monitoring and correction of inaccurate filings

    How does AI improve tax compliance and administrative efficiency?

    1. Voluntary Compliance: Enables self-correction; over one crore revised returns filed since 2021
    2. Targeted Enforcement: Identifies high-risk taxpayers; 19,501 individuals contacted under NUDGE campaign
    3. Automation of Processes: Reduces routine workload; allows focus on complex assessments
    4. Service Delivery: Assists taxpayers in filing returns and resolving queries through automated systems
    5. Efficiency Gains: Reduces refund processing time from 93 days to 17 days

    What are the measurable outcomes of AI-driven tax governance?

    1. Revenue Augmentation: Generates ₹11,000 crore additional tax collection
    2. Foreign Asset Disclosure: ₹1,089 crore declared under foreign income reporting
    3. Digital Asset Tracking: ₹29,208 crore in overseas assets including cryptocurrencies identified
    4. False Claim Correction: ₹963 crore corrected under NUDGE campaign
    5. Additional Tax Payments: ₹410 crore realised from compliance actions
    6. Evasion Detection: ₹70,000 crore suppressed turnover identified since 2019-20
    7. Fraud Techniques Identified: Fake invoices, sales data manipulation, post-billing modifications

    What are the challenges related to data quality and accuracy?

    1. Data Dependence: Ensures outcomes depend on quality and completeness of input data
    2. False Positives: Flags legitimate transactions (e.g., joint family structures, clerical errors) as suspicious
    3. Error Propagation: Inaccurate data leads to flawed enforcement actions
    4. Administrative Burden: Increases grievance redressal workload

    How does algorithmic bias affect fairness in tax enforcement?

    1. Historical Bias Replication: Uses past enforcement data, reinforcing socio-economic disparities
    2. Geographical Skew: Targets specific regions or taxpayer categories disproportionately
    3. International Example: Dutch childcare benefits scandal demonstrates risks of biased AI systems
    4. Equity Concerns: Undermines fairness and trust in taxation

    Why is explainability critical in AI-based tax systems?

    1. Transparency Requirement: Ensures taxpayers understand reasons for scrutiny
    2. Right to Appeal: Facilitates challenge to algorithmic decisions
    3. Human Oversight: Maintains human-in-the-loop for high-impact decisions
    4. Legal Validity: Supports principles of natural justice and due process

    What are the concerns related to data privacy and security?

    1. Sensitive Data Handling: Involves financial and personal taxpayer information
    2. Cybersecurity Risks: Expands attack surface for data breaches
    3. Surveillance Concerns: Enables potential misuse of taxpayer data
    4. Regulatory Gaps: Highlights need for AI-specific safeguards

    Why is institutional oversight necessary in AI governance?

    1. AI Ombudsman Requirement: Establishes independent grievance redressal
    2. Algorithm Audits: Ensures external verification of AI systems
    3. Public Disclosure: Reports false positives and system accuracy
    4. Trust Building: Enhances legitimacy of tax administration

    Conclusion

    AI-based tax governance improves compliance and revenue outcomes. However, risks related to bias, privacy, and accountability require institutional safeguards. A balance between efficiency and fairness remains essential.

  • Oil, power, and politics of disruption

    Why in the News?

    The disruption of the Strait of Hormuz, through which nearly one-fifth of global oil trade flows, has triggered a sharp spike in oil prices (crossing $110/barrel) and exposed the fragility of global energy supply chains. The crisis is significant because it disrupts a critical chokepoint for the first time at this scale in recent years, contrasting with earlier relatively stable flows despite geopolitical tensions.

    How did past oil shocks reshape global energy geopolitics?

    1. 1970s oil crisis: Oil prices increased sharply due to OPEC actions, exposing dependence of Western economies on West Asian oil.
    2. Shift in control: Oil geopolitics moved from Western firms to state-controlled national oil companies in producer countries.
    3. U.S. response: Initiated energy diversification and domestic production push, culminating in shale oil revolution (mid-2000s).
    4. Outcome: U.S. became the world’s largest oil producer, reshaping global supply dynamics and reducing dependence on imports.

    How have wars and conflicts shaped control over oil resources?

    1. Gulf War (1990-91): Ensured continued Western access to Gulf oil after Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait.
    2. Iraq War (2003–2011): Reinforced U.S. strategic presence in West Asia and control over energy routes.
    3. Venezuela factor: U.S. actions (including sanctions and political pressure) influenced oil-rich regions outside West Asia.
    4. Strategic logic: Energy security has been a primary driver of military interventions and foreign policy decisions.

    What is the significance of global oil reserve distribution?

    1. Reserve concentration: Venezuela and Iran together account for ~39% of proven oil reserves, highlighting extreme geographic concentration.
    2. Power asymmetry: Countries with reserves wield disproportionate geopolitical influence.
    3. Supply vulnerability: Concentration increases risk of supply shocks during conflicts.
    4. Example: Hormuz disruption directly affects exports from reserve-rich Gulf countries.

    Why is the Strait of Hormuz central to global energy security?

    1. Strategic chokepoint: Handles nearly 20% of global oil trade, making it a critical artery for global energy flows.
    2. Geographical concentration: Links Persian Gulf producers (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran) to global markets.
    3. Energy dependence asymmetry: West Asia produces surplus energy, while Asia (China, India, Japan) drives demand.
    4. Limited alternatives: Lack of viable substitutes increases vulnerability; pipelines and alternate routes remain insufficient.

    How has the disruption reshaped global oil markets and prices?

    1. Price escalation: Oil prices surged beyond $110/barrel, indicating immediate supply shock.
    2. Market volatility: Disruptions triggered uncertainty, impacting futures markets and energy planning.
    3. Historical contrast: Earlier geopolitical tensions did not significantly block flows; current disruption marks a sharper shock.
    4. Supply shock transmission: Increased input costs for transport, manufacturing, and inflation globally.

    What role do major powers play in the geopolitics of energy flows?

    1. U.S. energy dominance: Became the world’s largest oil producer post-2000s shale boom, reducing import dependence.
    2. Strategic intervention: Seeks increased purchases of unsanctioned Russian oil to stabilize markets.
    3. Russia’s repositioning: Post-2022 sanctions, redirected exports toward India and China, emerging as key supplier.
    4. Control over reserves: Countries like U.S., Russia, Venezuela, Canada possess large reserves, influencing power balance.

    How has India navigated shifting oil geopolitics?

    1. Import dependence: India is the second-largest crude importer and third-largest consumer globally.
      1. Value addition: Crude oil is refined into petrol, diesel, LPG, and petrochemicals.
    2. Discounted Russian oil: Share increased from 2.5% (2022) to ~39% (2023), reducing import costs.
    3. Refining advantage: India processes crude into petrol, diesel, LPG, petrochemicals, exporting refined products.
      1. China parallel: Similar refinery expansion strategy adopted by China.
    4. Strategic vulnerability: Heavy reliance on imports, especially via Hormuz, exposes India to supply shocks.

    What are the structural imbalances in global energy flows?

    1. Supply-demand mismatch: West Asia = supply hub; Asia = demand hub, creating interdependence.
    2. Regional concentration risk: Energy reserves concentrated in few regions increases geopolitical tensions.
    3. Consumption disparity: U.S. per capita energy use is 10× India and 2.4× China, reflecting unequal demand patterns.
    4. Global trade imbalance: Countries like China and India remain net importers, while Gulf nations are exporters.

    What are the implications for future global energy order?

    1. Energy realignment: Shift toward Russia-Asia energy axis due to sanctions and trade redirection.
    2. Geopolitical fragmentation: Emergence of competing blocs (West vs Russia-China alignment).
    3. Strategic stockpiling: Countries likely to enhance reserves and diversify suppliers.
    4. Long-term uncertainty: Persistent instability in West Asia could reshape global energy governance.

    Conclusion

    The Strait of Hormuz disruption underscores the structural fragility of global energy systems rooted in geographic concentration and geopolitical rivalries. It accelerates the transition toward diversified supply chains, strategic autonomy, and new energy alliances, while exposing India’s dual position as both a beneficiary (discounted oil) and a vulnerable importer.

    PYQ Relevance

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

    Linkage: This PYQ aligns with the article’s focus on geopolitics of oil and chokepoint vulnerability, especially the Strait of Hormuz. It also reflects India’s evolving strategy of diversification (Russia) and refining-led value addition amid global energy disruptions.

  • Before salt, there was water: why Mahad Satyagraha deserves its centenary

    Why in the News?

    The Mahad Satyagraha is in the news due to its upcoming centenary in 2027, prompting reflection on its legacy. It is significant as it marked an organised Dalit assertion of civil rights, while also highlighting the continuing gap between constitutional equality and social reality.

    What was the Mahad Satyagraha?

    The Mahad Satyagraha (also known as the Chavdar Tale Satyagraha) was a non-violent social movement led by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar on March 20, 1927. It was a landmark event in the struggle for Dalit rights in India, aimed at asserting the right of “untouchables” to use water from the public Chavdar Tank in Mahad, Maharashtra.

    Key Aspects of the Movement

    1. The Act of Defiance: Dr. Ambedkar led thousands of followers to the tank and publicly drank water from it, symbolically breaking the traditional caste-based prohibition.
    2. Historical Context: Although the Mahad Municipality had officially opened the tank to all in 1924 following the 1923 Bole Resolution, local upper-caste resistance had effectively barred Dalits from using it until this direct action.
    3. Beyond Water: Dr. Ambedkar famously stated that the movement was not just about water, but about establishing human rights and dignity. He viewed it as a “social revolution” against the caste hierarchy.
    4. Backlash and Rituals: Following the protest, upper-caste individuals “purified” the tank using cow urine and other rituals, highlighting the deep-seated prejudice of the time.
    5. Manusmriti Dahan Din: Later that year, in December 1927, as part of the ongoing struggle in Mahad, Ambedkar and his followers publicly burned the Manusmriti, a text they saw as the ideological source of caste oppression.

    What structural inequalities did the Mahad Satyagraha challenge?

    1. Caste-based exclusion: Enforced denial of access to public resources; e.g., Dalits prohibited from using Chavdar tank despite legal sanction.
    2. Social segregation: Institutionalised untouchability dictated everyday practices; e.g., separate access to water, temples, and public spaces.
    3. Denial of dignity: Reduced individuals to impure status; e.g., prohibition on touching vessels or shared resources.
    4. Legal-social disconnect: Laws permitted access but social enforcement denied it; e.g., 1923 resolution remained ineffective.

    How did Mahad transform the idea of rights in India?

    1. Assertion over petitioning: Shift from appeals to direct action; e.g., Ambedkar leading thousands to drink water publicly.
    2. Civil rights framework: Established access to public resources as a fundamental right, not charity.
    3. Collective mobilisation: Mass participation of Dalits signified organised resistance; e.g., large procession in Mahad.
    4. Symbolic transformation: Water became a symbol of equality and citizenship.

    What was the legal and constitutional legacy of Mahad?

    1. Social Empowerment Day: The date of the satyagraha, March 20, is observed annually in India as Social Empowerment Day (Samajik Sabalikaran Din).
    2. Article 15 foundation: Prohibits discrimination in access to public places; reflects Mahad’s core demand.
    3. Article 17 embodiment: Abolishes untouchability and criminalises its practice.
    4. Constitutional morality: Reinforces equality as a lived principle, not abstract ideal.
    5. Judicial validation: Courts eventually upheld rights to public resources; e.g., prolonged litigation confirmed access rights.

    Why does caste discrimination persist despite constitutional guarantees?

    1. Social inertia: Deep-rooted caste norms resist legal change; e.g., continued exclusion in rural areas.
    2. Invisible discrimination: Shift from overt to subtle practices; e.g., indirect denial of services.
    3. Economic dependency: Marginalised groups lack bargaining power to assert rights.
    4. Weak enforcement: Laws exist but implementation gaps remain.

    How does Mahad compare with other nationalist movements like Dandi March?

    1. Different objectives: Mahad targeted internal social injustice; Dandi challenged colonial authority.
    2. Scope of reform: Mahad addressed civilisational inequalities; Dandi addressed economic exploitation.
    3. Moral depth: Mahad required reform within society itself, making it more complex.
    4. Historical imbalance: National narrative prioritised anti-colonial struggles over social reform movements.

    What does the centenary demand from contemporary India?

    1. Social audit: Evaluates realisation of equality in everyday life; e.g., access to water, sanitation, education.
    2. Behavioural change: Moves beyond legal compliance to societal transformation.
    3. Inclusive citizenship: Ensures dignity irrespective of birth.
    4. Policy prioritisation: Strengthens anti-discrimination enforcement mechanisms.

    Conclusion

    The Mahad Satyagraha remains a foundational moment in India’s journey toward equality, but its centenary exposes an unfinished agenda. The persistence of caste-based discrimination reveals that legal abolition has not translated into social transformation. The event calls for renewed commitment to constitutional morality, ensuring that dignity and equality move from text to lived reality.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2021] Trace the rise and growth of socio-religious reform movements with special reference to Young Bengal and Brahmo Samaj.

    Linkage: The PYQ tests evolution of socio-religious reform movements and their role in transforming Indian society. Mahad Satyagraha marks the shift from elite reform (Brahmo, Young Bengal) to mass-based assertion of equality and dignity by Scheduled Castes.

  • SC Strikes Down 3-Month Cap on Maternity Leave for Adoptive Mothers

    Why in the News

    • The Supreme Court of India (March 2026) struck down the 3-month age cap for maternity leave for adoptive mothers under:
      • Maternity Benefit Act, 1961
      • Code of Social Security, 2020

    What the Law Earlier Said

    • 12 weeks maternity leave was allowed only if child < 3 months at adoption
    • Result: Most adoptive mothers could not qualify

    Supreme Court Ruling

    • Adoptive mothers: Entitled to 12 weeks maternity leave regardless of child’s age
    • Held: “Motherhood cannot depend on child’s age”

    Why SC Struck Down the Cap

    1. Violation of Equality (Article 14)

    • Article 14 of the Indian Constitution
    • Court said: Distinction between mothers based on child’s age is: Artificial and unreasonable
    • Same caregiving responsibilities: Infant (2 months) vs child (4 months)

    2. Violation of Right to Life & Dignity (Article 21)

    • Article 21 of the Indian Constitution
    • Includes:
      • Reproductive autonomy
      • Right to form a family (including adoption)

    3. Law was “Illusory” in Practice

    • Adoption process (under Juvenile Justice Act, 2015):
      • Mandatory waiting periods
      • Legal procedures
    • Result: Child rarely available below 3 months

    4. Importance of Child Bonding

    • Maternity leave ensures: Emotional bonding and Child’s adjustment in new family
    • Applies equally to: Adoptive mothers (even more critical)

    5. Rejection of Government Argument

    • Govt suggested: Use crèche facilities
    • Court response:
      • Not universal (only for ≥50 employees)
      • Cannot replace maternal care
    [2019] With reference to the Maternity Benefit Amendment Act, 2017, consider the following statements: Pregnant women are entitled for three months pre-delivery and three months post-delivery paid leave. This act applies to all organisations with 20 or more employees. It has made it mandatory for every organisation with 100 or more employees to have a crèche. Which of the statements given above is/are correct? (a) 1 and 2 only (b) 2 only (c) 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
  • Ras Laffan Attack & India’s LNG Concerns  

    Why in News

    • Missile strikes on Ras Laffan Industrial City, the world’s largest LNG facility, amid West Asia conflict have raised concerns over global energy supply and India’s energy security.

    What Happened

    • Iran targeted:
      • LNG facilities in Qatar (Ras Laffan)
      • Other energy sites in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait
    • Earlier: Attack on South Pars Gas Field (world’s largest gas field)
    • Marks escalation from transport disruption → production disruption

    Why Ras Laffan is Important

    • Accounts for ~20% of global LNG supply
    • Hub of:
      • LNG production
      • Liquefaction
      • Export infrastructure
    • Damage may cause long-term supply disruption

    Impact on Global Energy

    • Brent crude: Jumped above $119/barrel
    • Natural gas prices: Sharp rise
    • Risk: From supply chain issue → full supply crisis

    India’s Energy Dependence

    1. LNG Dependence

    • ~50% of gas demand met via imports
    • >40% LNG from Qatar
    • Most from Ras Laffan

    2. Overall Energy Imports

    • Crude oil: ~88% import dependent
    • LPG: ~60%
    • Natural gas: ~50%

    3. Strategic Chokepoint

    • Strait of Hormuz:
      • ~50% of India’s crude imports
      • ~60% LNG
      • ~90% LPG

    Immediate Impact on India

    • LNG supply cuts to industries
    • LPG supply concerns
    • Rising energy import costs
    [2024] Consider the following statements: Statement-I: Sumed pipeline is a strategic route for Persian Gulf oil and natural gas shipments to Europe . Statement-II: Sumed pipeline connects the Red Sea with the Mediterranean Sea . Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct and Statement-II explains Statement-I (b) Both Statement-I and Statement-II are correct but Statement-II does not explain Statement-I (c) Statement-I is correct but Statement-II is incorrect (d) Statement-I is incorrect but Statement-II is correct
  • India–Myanmar Pulse Deal Extended

    Why in the News

    • India plans to extend its pulses import agreement with Myanmar for 5 more years (beyond 2025-26) to ensure food security amid global supply disruptions.

    Background of the Agreement

    • Original MoU signed in 2021
    • Between: India’s Ministry of Consumer Affairs and Myanmar’s Ministry of Commerce. 

    Import Commitments (2021–26)

    • Urad dal: 2.5 lakh tonnes/year
    • Tur dal: 1 lakh tonnes/year

    New Developments

    • Extension proposed till 2030-31
    • Additional: +1 lakh tonnes Tur dal (2026-27)

    Why Extension is Needed

    1. Demand–Supply Gap

    • India’s pulses demand: 28–29 million tonnes
    • Domestic production: 24–25 million tonnes
      • Persistent import dependence

    2. Falling Domestic Production

    • Tur: ↓ from 3.64 → 3.45 million tonnes
    • Urad: ↓ from 2.24 → 1.74 million tonnes

    3. Global Supply Chain Disruptions

    • Due to geopolitical tensions: US–Israel–Iran conflict.
      • Risks to: Fuel supply, Fertilizer availability, and Food imports.

    Role of Myanmar

    • Key supplier of pulses to India
    • Imports rising:
      • Tur: ↑ 44% (2025-26)
      • Urad: ↑ significantly

    Significance

    • Food Security: Ensures stable supply of protein-rich pulses (dal)
    • Price Stability: Prevents inflation in essential commodities
    • Strategic Trade Diversification: Reduces risk from global disruptions
    [2020] With reference to pulse production in India, consider the following statements: Black gram (Urad) can be cultivated as both kharif and rabi crop. Green-gram alone accounts for nearly half of pulse production. In the last three decades, while the production of kharif pulses has increased, the production of rabi pulses has decreased. Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1 only (b) 2 and 3 only (c) 2 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
  • Rising CO₂ Threatens Mangrove Fish Nurseries 

    Why in the News

    • A study in AGU Advances highlights declining oxygen levels in mangrove waters due to rising CO₂.

    Key Concept: Hypercapnic Hypoxia

    • Condition of: High CO₂ + Low dissolved oxygen
    • Occurs in: Mangrove estuaries (especially low tide, tropical regions)

    Major Findings

    • By 2100:
      • Oxygen ↓ 5–35%
      • CO₂ ↑ 8–60%
    • Events will:
      • Become 15× more frequent
      • Last longer (12–24 hours at 78% sites)

    Impact on Ecosystem

    1. Fish Nurseries at Risk

    • Reduced safe time for fish entry
    • Decline in juvenile fish survival

    2. Biodiversity Loss

    • Shift away from: Large reef-associated fish
    • Affects commercially important species

    3. Fisheries Impact

    • Mangroves: Support ~20,000 extra fish/ha/year
    • ~4 million fishers depend globally
    [2012] The acidification of oceans is increasing. Why is this phenomenon a cause of concern? The growth and survival of calcareous phytoplankton will be adversely affected. The growth and survival of coral reefs will be adversely affected. The survival of some animals that have phytoplanktonic larvae will be adversely affected. The cloud seeding and formation of clouds will be adversely affected. Select the correct answer using the code given below: (a) 1, 2 and 3 only (b) 2 only (c) 1 and 3 only (d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
  • India Power Sector Outlook (CEA 2026) 

    Why in the News

    • Central Electricity Authority released midterm review of 20th Electric Power Survey (EPS).

    About Central Electricity Authority: 

    • The Central Electricity Authority of India advises the government on policy matters and formulates plans for the development of electricity systems. 
    • It is a statutory organisation constituted under section 3 of Electricity Supply Act 1948, which has been superseded by section 70 of the Electricity Act, 2003.

    Demand & Growth

    • Peak demand: 459 GW (2035-36)
    • Electricity need: 3,365 BU
    • Growth: ~5.6–6.4% CAGR

    Capacity Expansion

    • From ~520 GW (2026)1,121 GW (2035-36)

    Energy Mix:

    • Solar: 509 GW (45%)
    • Coal: 315 GW (28%)
    • Wind: 155 GW (14%)
    • Hydro: 77 GW
    • Others: small share
      • Non-fossil capacity ~70%

    Key Insight

    • Solar leads in capacity
    • Coal dominates generation (51%) → ensures baseload power

    Energy Storage Need

    • 174 GW / 888 GWh
      • BESS: 80 GW
      • Pumped storage: 94 GW
    • Critical for renewable integration + grid stability
    • Investment: ~$2.2 trillion required

    Challenges

    • Import dependence: 75–80% lithium-ion cells
    • Critical minerals vulnerability: Lithium, Cobalt, Nickel
    [2024] Recently, the term “pumped-storage hydropower” is actually and appropriately discussed in the context of which one of the following? (a) Irrigation of terraced crop fields (b) Lift irrigation of cereal crops (c) Long duration energy storage (d) Rainwater harvesting system
  • [19th March 2026] The Hindu OpED: The opportunity in Cameroon to rebalance the WTO

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2023] What are the direct and indirect subsidies provided to the farm sector in India? Discuss the issues raised by the World Trade Organization (WTO) in relation to agricultural subsidies.Linkage: It directly tests understanding of WTO norms, subsidy regimes, and global trade fairness, which are central to GS-III (Indian Economy & Agriculture). It closely aligns with the article’s focus on market distortions, subsidy transparency, and need for WTO reform to balance equity between developed and developing nations.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The upcoming World Trade Organisation (WTO) Ministerial Conference (MC14) in 2026 at Yaoundé, Cameroon, comes at a critical juncture as the organization faces its most severe institutional crisis since 1995, with the dispute settlement system paralysed and rising unilateral trade actions undermining multilateralism. With 166 members struggling to reach consensus and digital trade rapidly expanding beyond regulatory frameworks, the relevance of WTO itself is under question. This makes reform not optional but existential.

    Why is the WTO facing an existential institutional crisis?

    1. Dispute Settlement Paralysis: Weakens enforceability of trade rules due to stalled Appellate Body appointments; reduces trust in multilateral commitments.
    2. Consensus Deadlock: The WTO’s consensus-based decision-making process (requiring all 164+ members to agree) has resulted in a deadlock, rendering the institution unable to update rules for modern challenges such as e-commerce, digital trade, and environmental sustainability.
    3. US-China Rivalry and Structural Disagreements: The US argues that the Appellate Body has engaged in “judicial overreach” by creating new obligations rather than just applying rules. Furthermore, the US contends that existing WTO rules are inadequate to handle China’s state-led economic model, specifically regarding subsidies and intellectual property theft.
    4. Developmental Divides: There is an ongoing conflict between developed and developing nations regarding “Special and Differential Treatment” (S&DT). Developed nations argue that self-declared developing countries (like China, India) should not receive special exemptions, while developing nations view these as essential for their economic growth. 
    5. Digital Trade Lag: Fails to regulate rapidly expanding digital commerce; creates regulatory gaps in cross-border trade.
    6. Unresolved Legacy Issues: Retains long-pending disputes and negotiations without resolution; reduces institutional credibility.

    How is global trade shifting from rules-based to power-based systems?

    1. Geopolitical Instrumentalisation: Uses tariffs and economic dependence as strategic tools; shifts trade from economics to power politics.
    2. Unilateral and Bilateral Actions: Bypasses WTO frameworks through preferential trade agreements and unilateral tariffs.
    3. “Wrecking-ball Politics”: Encourages short-term deals over institutional commitments, as highlighted in Munich Security Report 2026.
    4. Ad-hoc Arrangements: Replaces rule-based governance with power-driven negotiations lacking shared principles.

    How have changes in global production patterns challenged WTO frameworks?

    1. Technological Transformation: Expands trade in advanced and technology-intensive goods; requires updated regulatory frameworks.
    2. Climate-linked Trade Measures: Introduces carbon-related regulations impacting trade flows and equity concerns.
    3. Digital Integration: Reshapes global value chains through e-commerce and data flows beyond WTO’s current scope.
    4. Obsolete Rule Structure: Retains late 20th-century frameworks unsuitable for 21st-century trade dynamics.

    Why is dispute settlement reform central to WTO revival?

    Dispute settlement reform is central to World Trade Organization (WTO) revival because the system, often called the “crown jewel” of the organization, has been paralyzed since December 2019. The inability to appoint new Appellate Body members has rendered the binding dispute resolution mechanism dysfunctional, threatening to turn the WTO from a rule-based system into a power-based one, where larger economies can bypass trade norms with impunity.

    1. Credibility Restoration: Currently, over 20 panel rulings have been “appealed into the void,” meaning they cannot be resolved until new Appellate Body members are appointed. Reforms will ensure enforceability of rules through a functioning dispute resolution mechanism.
    2. Predictability in Trade: Reduces uncertainty in global trade relations; stabilizes economic expectations.
    3. Conflict Reduction: Prevents escalation of trade disputes into political conflicts.
    4. Trust Rebuilding: Encourages members to rely on institutional processes instead of unilateral actions.

    How can WTO reforms balance fairness with flexibility?

    1. Transparency in Subsidies: Ensures equitable competition through clearer reporting and monitoring mechanisms.
    2. Special and Differential Treatment (SDT): Updates provisions to reflect current economic realities while protecting developing countries.
    3. Inclusive Institutional Design: Maintains openness and universality in reform processes.
    4. Flexible Frameworks: Allows plurilateral initiatives while ensuring integration into broader WTO norms.

    What are the risks of failure to reform WTO?

    1. Fragmentation of Trade System: Leads to competing trade blocs and regional arrangements.
    2. Marginalisation of Developing Countries: Increases vulnerability due to lack of negotiating power.
    3. Erosion of Rule-based Order: Replaces predictability with coercion and economic dominance.
    4. Global Instability: Creates uncertainty in trade flows affecting growth and development.

    How can MC14 in Cameroon become a turning point?

    1. Procedural Reforms: Updates negotiation processes to overcome consensus paralysis.
    2. Institutional Modernisation: Aligns WTO rules with digital, climate, and technological realities.
    3. Collective Political Will: Ensures shared responsibility among members for sustaining multilateralism.
    4. Rebalancing Trade Governance: Restores equilibrium between power and principles in global trade.

    Conclusion

    WTO reform represents a systemic necessity to preserve rule-based global trade. MC14 offers a critical opportunity to restore institutional credibility, prevent fragmentation, and ensure equitable participation in an increasingly complex global economy.

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