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  • Lessons for India from Brazil’s ethanol pathway

    Why in the News?

    India achieved its E20 ethanol-blending target in 2025, five years ahead of the original 2030 deadline, compressing the E5-to-E20 journey into just six years. Brazil took five decades to move from E10 to E30 blending, sequencing its mandate behind vehicle readiness and consumer price incentives at every stage.

    How does the pace of India’s ethanol-blending mandate compare with Brazil’s phased trajectory?

    1. Brazil’s blending law dates to 1931: Brazil mandated a 5% anhydrous ethanol blend in petrol in 1931. This law preceded the National Alcohol Program by over four decades.
    2. 1973 oil crisis triggered Proálcool: The 1973 global oil crisis prompted Brazil to launch the National Alcohol Program in 1975. The program aimed to cut petroleum dependence through ethanol promotion.
    3. Brazil took 50 years for E10 to E30: Brazil moved from E10 to E30 blending over five decades. The 2025 blend increase to 30% followed dedicated government studies.
    4. India compressed E5 to E20 into six years: India’s blending share rose from E5 to E20 in six years. The 10% blending milestone was reached only in 2022.
    5. India’s 20% target was front-loaded: The original 20% ethanol target was set for 2030. The government advanced this to a nationwide standard years ahead of schedule.
    6. E20 target met five years early: India reached its E20 target in 2025. Blending stood at 19.2% at that point, up from 12.1% in 2023.

    What specific Brazilian policy and institutional milestones enabled its ethanol transition?

    1. 1931 blending law set the baseline: Brazil’s first ethanol law fixed a 5% anhydrous ethanol blend in petrol. This gave the fuel market an early, low-disruption entry point for ethanol.
    2. Proálcool (1975) built institutional demand: The National Alcohol Program created sustained government-backed demand for ethanol after the 1973 oil crisis. This program anchored ethanol’s role in Brazil’s energy strategy for decades.
    3. Fiat’s 147 (1979) proved single-fuel ethanol vehicles: Italian automaker Fiat launched the 147, the world’s first vehicle powered entirely by ethanol. Volkswagen, GM and Ford followed with their own ethanol models.
    4. Flex-fuel production scaled from 2003: Volkswagen introduced Brazil’s first flex-fuel vehicle on March 23, 2003. Toyota’s flex-fuel Corolla sales rose from 48,178 units in 2003 to 1.63 million units, nearly 90% of the Brazilian car fleet, within two decades.
    5. National Biofuels Policy (2017) consolidated the regulatory framework: Brazil passed this policy to formalise its biofuel targets. It followed over four decades of incremental legislative steps.
    6. ‘Fuel of the Future’ and Mover Program (2024) targeted low-carbon vehicle technology: These laws pushed low-carbon vehicle technology and further biofuel adoption. They set the stage for the 2025 E30 mandate.

    Why has India’s flex-fuel vehicle ecosystem lagged behind its blending mandate?

    1. India has only a handful of flex-fuel models: The WagonR flex-fuel model, Toyota Hycross hybrid flex-fuel prototype, Tata Punch and Hyundai Creta flex-fuel versions form India’s flex-fuel car range. Hero and TVS have introduced flex-fuel two-wheelers.
    2. Most Indian vehicles remain unequipped for high ethanol blends: Indian roads are not geared up for handling higher ethanol blends in the fuel mix. Most cars and two-wheelers use fixed-ratio fuel systems rather than flex-fuel sensors.
    3. Flex-fuel vehicles depend on a fuel composition sensor: This sensor adjusts fuel injection and ignition timing based on the ethanol-petrol blend in the tank. It allows seamless switching between petrol, ethanol, or blends of the two.
    4. India’s E85 dispensing stations are ahead of its vehicle base: E85 fuel dispensing stations are being established nationwide. Only a few flex-fuel vehicle prototypes exist to use them.
    5. Flex-fuel certification remains an incomplete category in India: Flex-fuel vehicles require an entirely separate vehicle category and a distinct set of readiness certifications. India has completed only a fraction of this process compared with Brazil’s near-complete fleet conversion.

    Why did consumer price incentives drive Brazil’s ethanol adoption while their absence undermines India’s blending push?

    1. Brazilian pumps offer motorists a fuel choice: Nearly every Brazilian petrol pump offers a choice between blended petrol, typically E27, and E100, pure hydrous ethanol. Consumers choose whichever fuel is cheaper on a given day.
    2. Price gap made ethanol the rational choice in Brazil: E100 is typically 25-35% cheaper than lower-blended petrol in Brazil. This price gap, not the blending mandate alone, drove flex-fuel vehicle adoption.
    3. Government price support cemented flex-fuel demand: Brazilian government price support made blended fuel cheaper than petrol. Nine out of every 10 new cars sold in Brazil by the late 1980s could run on ethanol alone.
    4. Ethanol carries technical performance advantages: Ethanol improves acceleration and reduces engine knocking. This is cited as a further consumer benefit in Brazil.
    5. India offered a blending mandate without a matching price incentive or choice: Indian motorists were not offered a fuel choice at the pump. They were told performance would not be affected, without addressing fuel efficiency.
    6. Mileage was excluded from India’s performance assurance: The government’s performance assurance to motorists did not include mileage. Vehicle owners have since reported a sharp dip in fuel efficiency.

    What questions does India’s rushed ethanol rollout leave unanswered?

    1. Efficiency losses are set to increase with higher blending: Vehicle owners have noticed a fuel-efficiency dip since blending began. This efficiency loss is expected to worsen as blending increases further.
    2. Vehicle damage concerns are contested but not absent: Concerns over vehicle damage appear overstated on the whole. Plastic and rubber components in older vehicles still show degradation.
    3. India’s E20-to-E25 transition is positioned as a strategic necessity: The push to raise blending from E20 to E25, ahead of a full shift to flex-fuel vehicles and E85-E100 fuels, is described as integral to reducing fossil fuel import dependence.
    4. Import dependence frames the urgency: India imports nearly 88.5% of its crude oil requirement. This dependence exposes the country’s energy security to geopolitical disruptions.
    5. The mobility strategy remains a declared combination without a sequencing plan: An official has stated that India’s future mobility ecosystem will combine EVs, biofuels, hydrogen and renewables suited to Indian conditions. No phased sequencing comparable to Brazil’s decades-long approach has been specified.
    6. The rollout proceeded without adequate disclaimers or preparation: The blending push moved forward without adequately preparing consumers or vehicle systems. This gap, more than the blending percentage itself, is the substance of the unresolved question for India.

    Conclusion

    Brazil’s ethanol success rested on sequencing blending mandates behind vehicle readiness and consumer price incentives, sustained across five decades. India has reversed this sequence, reaching its blending target years ahead of schedule without a matching flex-fuel vehicle base or price-based consumer choice. The unresolved question is not the blending percentage itself but whether India’s vehicle certifications, fuel infrastructure and consumer disclosures can catch up to a mandate already in force.

  • Australia Repatriates Three Antiquities to India

    Why in News?

    Australia announced the repatriation of three Chola-era antiquities stolen from temples in Tamil Nadu during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit.

    Key Highlights

    • Australia will return:
      • Bronze Trident (Trishul) of Goddess Bhadrakali
      • Granite Nandi idol
      • Basalt sculpture of six-headed Karthikeya (Shanmukha)
    • The artefacts date to the 11th-12th century (Chola period).
    • They were housed in the National Gallery of Australia.

    Legal Basis

    • Repatriation is being carried out under the India-Australia Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT).
    • Investigation by the Tamil Nadu Idol Wing CID established that the artefacts were illegally removed from temples and trafficked overseas.

    Original Temples

    • Bhadrakali Trident: Sri Kasi Viswanatha Swamy Temple, Kollumangudi, Tiruvarur.
    • Karthikeya Idol: Naganathaswamy Temple, Manambadi, Thanjavur.
    • Nandi Idol: Identified as originating from a temple in Tamil Nadu.

    [2025] Who among the following led a successful military campaign against the kingdom of Srivijaya, the powerful maritime State, which ruled the Malay Peninsula, Sumatra, Java and the neighbouring islands?

    [A] Amoghavarsha (Rashtrakuta)

    [B] Prataparudra (Kakatiya)

    [C] Rajendra 1 (Chola)

    [D] Vishnuvardhana (Hoysala)

  • India-Australia Civil Nuclear & Strategic Partnership

    Why in News?

    India and Australia signed 18 agreements, including a landmark Civil Nuclear Energy Agreement enabling commercial uranium exports from Australia to India, along with pacts on defence, maritime security, critical minerals, and trade.

    Civil Nuclear Cooperation

    • Australia will commercially supply uranium for India’s civilian nuclear power plants.
    • Builds on the India-Australia Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement (2014).
    • Supports India’s clean energy and non-fossil fuel targets.

    Defence & Maritime Cooperation

    • Signed a Joint Declaration on Defence and Security Cooperation.
    • Launched the India-Australia Maritime Security Collaboration Roadmap.
    • Cooperation in Maritime law enforcement, Maritime domain awareness, Shipbuilding, repair and maintenance, Defence industrial collaboration, Interoperability and information sharing

    Critical Minerals & Technology

    • Launched the Australia-India Partnership on Cyber, Critical Technologies and Supply Chains.
    • Agreed to establish a Critical Minerals Corridor to strengthen resilient supply chains.

    Trade & Investment

    • Decided to expedite negotiations on the Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA).
    • Agreed to move forward on a Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT).

    Energy Security

    • Joint framework to ensure reliable supplies of Coal, Natural gas, Diesel and other liquid fuels

    Education

    • Approval granted for Victoria University to establish a campus in Gurugram.
    • Flinders University received a Letter of Intent to open a campus in Bengaluru.

    [2020] In India, why are some nuclear reactors kept under “IAEA safeguards” while others are not ?

    a) Some use uranium and others use thorium
    b) Some use imported uranium and others use domestic supplies
    c) Some are operated by foreign enterprises and others are operated by domestic enterprises
    d) Some are State-owned and others are privately-owned

  • Footwear Quality Control Orders (QCOs)

    Why in News?

    The Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) amended two Footwear Quality Control Orders (QCOs) to promote ease of doing business while strengthening domestic footwear manufacturing.

    Key Amendments

    • Legacy stock clearance deadline extended from 31 July 2026 to 31 July 2027.
    • Allows manufacturers, distributors, and retailers to clear existing seasonal inventory.
    • After the deadline, only BIS-certified footwear can be sold.

    R&D Import Exemption

    • Manufacturers can import up to 4,500 pairs of footwear samples annually for Research & Development (R&D).
    • Samples:
      • Must be marked “NOT FOR SALE”.
      • Cannot be sold commercially.
      • Must be disposed of as scrap after use.
      • Year-wise import records must be maintained.

    Purpose

    • Support product design, testing, and innovation.
    • Reduce compliance burden.
    • Facilitate domestic manufacturing under Make in India.
    • Strengthen India’s quality ecosystem in line with the “Zero Defect, Zero Effect” vision.

    Quality Control Orders (QCOs)

    • Issued under the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) framework.
    • Mandate compliance with prescribed Indian Standards.
    • Aim to ensure product quality, consumer safety, and curb substandard imports.

    About DPIIT

    • The Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) is a central government department under the Indian Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
    • Established in 1995, it acts as the nodal agency for formulating overall industrial policies, driving the Startup India initiative, and managing inward Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) frameworks.

    Significance

    • Improves ease of doing business.
    • Encourages innovation and R&D.
    • Enhances quality assurance.
    • Boosts competitiveness of India’s footwear industry.

    [2017] Consider the following statements:

    1. The Standard Mark of Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) is mandatory for automotive tyres and tubes.
    2. AGMARK is a quality Certification Mark issued by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

    [A] 1 only

    [B] 2 only

    [C] Both 1 and 2

    [D] Neither 1 nor 2

  • Sub-Mission on Agricultural Mechanization (SMAM)

    Why in News?

    The government highlighted the achievements of SMAM, including wider access to farm machinery, Custom Hiring Centres (CHCs), and drone-based precision farming.

    Key Facts

    • Launched in 2014-15 as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme under RKVY.
    • Promotes mechanization among small & marginal farmers, women, SC/STs, FPOs, SHGs, and rural entrepreneurs.
    • Supports:
      • Subsidies for farm machinery
      • Custom Hiring Centres (CHCs)
      • Farm Machinery Banks (FMBs)
      • Hi-Tech Hubs
      • Training, testing, and demonstrations
      • Drone-based agriculture

    Financial Assistance

    • 40% subsidy for general farmers.
    • 50% subsidy for SC/STs, small & marginal farmers, and North Eastern States.
    • Funding pattern: 60:40 (Centre:State) for most states, 90:10 for NE & Himalayan states, and 100% Central funding for UTs

    Achievements (2014-15 to 2025-26)

    • ₹9,404.47 crore central assistance.
    • 21.61 lakh farm machines distributed.
    • 27,554 CHCs established.
    • 25,608 Farm Machinery Banks created.
    • 646 Hi-Tech Hubs established.

    Drone Promotion

    • ₹52.5 crore allocated.
    • 40,928 drone demonstrations over 40,918 hectares (2023-24 to 2025-26).
    • ICAR institutes, KVKs, and SAUs receive 100% support (up to ₹10 lakh per drone).
    • FPOs receive 75% grant.

    Special Features

    • 30% of total funds earmarked for women farmers.
    • Special incentives for North Eastern States, including up to 100% subsidy for small machinery.

    Significance

    • Enhances farm productivity and efficiency.
    • Reduces labour dependence and cost of cultivation.
    • Promotes precision farming and post-harvest mechanization.
    • Improves access to modern machinery for small farmers.

    [2023] Which one of the following best describes the concept of ‘Small Farmer Large Field’?

    [A] Resettlement of a large number of people, uprooted from their countries due to war, by giving them a large cultivable land which they cultivate collectively and share the produce

    [B] Many marginal farmers in an area organize themselves into groups and synchronize and harmonize selected agricultural operations

    [C] Many marginal farmers in an area together make a contract with a corporate body and surrender their land to the corporate body for a fixed term for which the corporate body makes a payment of agreed amount to the farmers

    [D] A company extends loans, technical knowledge and material inputs to a number of small farmers in an area so that they produce the agricultural commodity required by the company for its manufacturing process and commercial production

  • [9th July 2026] The Hindu OpED: How India withstood the crisis in West Asia

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2017] The question of India’s Energy Security constitutes the most important part of India’s economic progress. Analyse India’s energy policy cooperation with West Asian countries
    Linkage: The PYQ directly examines the linkage between India’s energy security, economic growth and energy cooperation with West Asian countries. The article shows how sustained diplomatic engagement with West Asian partners, diversification of energy suppliers and strategic preparedness enabled India to maintain energy supplies and limit the economic impact of the West Asia crisis.

    Mentor’s Comment

    India’s fuel and LPG prices rose only marginally during the recent West Asia crisis even though the country imports nearly 90% of its crude oil through routes exposed to the Strait of Hormuz. This price resilience concealed a ₹74,781 crore loss absorbed by state-run Oil Marketing Companies, exposing the fiscal cost hidden behind India’s energy security architecture.

    Why did India appear structurally vulnerable to the West Asia energy shock?

    1. Import dependence: India imports almost 90% of its crude oil and is heavily dependent on the Gulf for oil, gas, and fertilizers.
    2. Third-largest oil importer: India ranks as the world’s third-largest oil importer, making it directly exposed to any disruption at the Strait of Hormuz.
    3. Historical precedent of instability: Sharp oil price increases have historically been a major source of macroeconomic instability for India, as seen in the 1973 oil shock and the 1991 balance-of-payments crisis.
    4. Sharp initial price signals: The Indian crude basket crossed $120 per barrel within weeks of the crisis. The import-linked cost of a domestic LPG cylinder rose above ₹1,600. War-risk premiums on shipping escalated sharply.
    5. Compounding risk factors: Rising freight costs and maritime risk combined with crude dependence to create the conditions for a severe external shock.

    How resilient was India’s fuel pricing compared to global peers?

    1. Petrol price comparison: Petrol prices in India rose by only 7.5% during the crisis. Germany saw a rise of nearly 14%, the U.K. 19%, the U.S. 45%, Pakistan and the Philippines over 50%, and Myanmar almost 90%.
    2. Diesel price comparison: India limited diesel price increases to just 8%. The UAE, a crude-producing country, saw diesel prices surge by about 85%.
    3. LPG affordability: A domestic LPG cylinder in India cost ₹942, and ₹642 for Ujjwala beneficiaries, despite India importing nearly 60% of its LPG requirement.
    4. Regional LPG comparison: India’s LPG price remained cheaper than in Pakistan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka, and dramatically lower than in the U.S., Australia, and Canada.

    Did India’s price stability represent genuine resilience or a deferred fiscal cost?

    1. Scale of losses: State-run Oil Marketing Companies incurred ₹74,781 crore in losses on petrol, diesel, and LPG sales up to June 30 as global crude prices surged.
    2. Absorption over pass-through: The government and public-sector OMCs chose to absorb the price shock rather than pass it fully to consumers.
    3. Trade-off exposed: Consumer price stability was protected at the direct cost of OMC balance sheets, converting a market shock into a fiscal one.
    4. Limits of the model: This absorption capacity depends on OMC financial health and government fiscal space. A prolonged or repeated shock would test the sustainability of this approach.

    What structural preparations enabled India to absorb the shock?

    1. Diplomatic relationships as energy security: Decades of engagement with Iran and Gulf partners kept communication channels open during peak tensions. Iran facilitated the movement of Indian ships and Gulf producers continued energy supplies.
    2. Supplier diversification: Energy partnerships with Russia, the U.S., Africa, and Latin America gave India flexibility to withstand disruption that was unavailable in earlier crises.
    3. A decade of energy planning: Higher ethanol blending, an expanding renewable energy base, larger strategic reserves, and stronger refining capacity built layered resilience over time.
    4. Whole-of-government coordination: The Ministries of External Affairs, Petroleum and Natural Gas, and Ports, Shipping and Waterways, along with the Indian Navy and the National Security Council Secretariat, coordinated to monitor risk, manage logistics, and protect supply.

    What does this episode signal for India’s future energy security strategy?

    1. Preparation precedes crisis: Resilience was the product of choices made years before the crisis, not of measures adopted during it.
    2. Foreign policy as an energy security tool: Diplomatic outreach functioned as a substitute for physical reserves during the acute phase of the crisis.
    3. Unresolved fiscal question: The crisis did not resolve the tension between consumer price protection and OMC financial sustainability. It only deferred that cost.
    4. Framing for national strategy: The episode is positioned as a template for future energy resilience under the government’s ‘Viksit Bharat’ framing.

    Conclusion

    India’s resilience during the West Asia crisis was not accidental. It was the outcome of a decade of supplier diversification, sustained diplomatic engagement with Iran and Gulf producers, strategic reserve-building, and whole-of-government coordination. This resilience, however, was purchased through a ₹74,781 crore fiscal absorption by public-sector Oil Marketing Companies rather than a costless outcome. The crisis therefore validates India’s energy security architecture while leaving open the question of how long consumer price insulation can be sustained through OMC losses if shocks recur or persist.

  • What is the right to be forgotten? 

    Why in the News?

    The Delhi High Court, ruling on 29 May 2026 in Laksh Vir Singh Yadav v. Union of India, laid down India’s first structured proportionality test for the right to be forgotten. The ruling forces a direct reckoning between an individual’s right to informational privacy and the constitutional commitment to open justice and free speech.

    How did the right to be forgotten emerge, and why did Indian courts arrive at it inconsistently?

    1. Origin in EU jurisprudence: The right originated in 2014 when Mario Costeja González complained to the European Court of Justice that Google continued to display an old notice about the auction of his repossessed house even after the debt was settled.
    2. Codification in General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR): The European Court ruled in his favour. This laid the groundwork for the right to erasure, later incorporated into Article 17 of the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation.
    3. Constitutional anchor in India: The Supreme Court’s judgment in K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) held that privacy is a Fundamental Right under Article 21 of the Constitution of India. This includes the right to informational privacy.
    4. Divergent High Court practice: High Courts adopted inconsistent approaches after Puttaswamy. Some permitted anonymisation in limited cases, such as the Delhi High Court’s masking of names in certain matrimonial and criminal matters.
    5. The unresolved gap: Other courts rejected similar requests on grounds of open justice. No coherent framework existed to balance these competing interests before the May 2026 judgment.

    What test did the Delhi High Court lay down, and what does it require?

    1. The core issue: The Delhi High Court ruled on a batch of over 30 consolidated petitions. The central question was whether informational privacy could justify de-indexing or masking judicial records in a system committed to open justice.
    2. Constitutional source of the right: The court held that the right to be forgotten flows from Article 21’s guarantee of dignity and informational privacy.
    3. The proportionality test: Any restriction must have a legitimate purpose. The harm to privacy must be balanced against the public interest.
    4. Preference for the least intrusive means: Masking names should be preferred over deleting the entire judgment.
    5. Procedural direction: The court prescribed a two-week deadline for legal databases to comply. It clarified that only the parties’ names should be redacted, not the facts of the case.

    Why does the right to be forgotten sit in tension with open justice and free speech?

    1. Not a stand-alone right: The right to be forgotten frequently conflicts with freedom of speech and press under Article 19(1)(a), the principle of open justice, and the public’s right to know.
    2. A high threshold for privacy: A right to privacy must be sacrificed when the public interest is of a high order, particularly in serious cases of crime.
    3. The limiting principle: The digital presence of a case should not destroy a person’s life long after the trial ends.
    4. Selective, not absolute, restriction: Judgments remain publicly accessible by case number or keyword search. Only name-based searches are restricted.
    5. The unresolved concern: For an acquitted person, a name-based search can still surface the original accusation, described as the “shadow of crime,” as the first result a user sees.

    Why does enforcement remain the weakest link in this framework?

    1. Search engine design defeats masking: Search results are still generated at the search-engine level. Removing a court’s own copy does not remove all traces.
    2. Persistence beyond the primary source: Mirrors, archived copies, and social media sharing keep the original content accessible even after a court orders removal.
    3. No coordination mechanism: Effective technical compliance requires coordination among multiple platforms. No such mechanism currently exists.
    4. Consequence for the right’s value: Without platform-level compliance, the right to be forgotten remains largely symbolic rather than enforceable.

    What is the statutory basis for erasure under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (DPDP Act), and why is it inadequate for judicial records?

    1. Limited existing statutory right: The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 offers a limited right to erasure under Section 12.
    2. Consent-based design: This statutory right is primarily based on consent. It does not explicitly address judicial records.
    3. Scope gap: The Act does not cover public archives, where the need for a right to be forgotten is most acute.
    4. Non-operational status: The Act is deficient because its rules have not been notified.
    5. Missing institution: The data protection board contemplated under the Act has not been established.

    Who should decide erasure requests, and how should that authority be structured?

    1. The efficiency-accountability trade-off: Requiring every request to be decided by a court would create significant bottlenecks. Leaving decisions entirely to technology companies raises concerns about due process and transparency.
    2. A tiered proposal: A more sensible approach would use a tiered system.
    3. First tier: platforms: Straightforward cases could be heard directly by platforms.
    4. Second tier: data protection board: Contested cases would go to the data protection board.
    5. Third tier: courts: Judicial cases, including those with constitutional questions, would be reserved for courts.

    Conclusion

    The Delhi High Court’s ruling gives the right to be forgotten its most structured judicial articulation in India, subordinating deletion to name-masking to protect dignity without eroding open justice. This framework remains judge-made and non-statutory: the DPDP Act does not cover judicial records, the data protection board does not exist, and search engines retain wide discretion over technical compliance. Until the Supreme Court settles the doctrine nationally and a statutory institution is created to adjudicate erasure requests, the right to be forgotten in India will function more as a judicial aspiration than an enforceable entitlement.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Right to privacy is intrinsic to life and personal liberty and is inherently protected under Article 21 of the constitution. Explain. In this reference, discuss the law relating to D.N.A. testing of a child in the womb to establish its paternity.

    Linkage: The article similarly examines the Right to be Forgotten as an aspect of informational privacy under Article 21 and its balance with freedom of speech, the public’s right to know and the principle of open justice.

  • The significance of Astra missiles which Indonesia will purchase

    Why in the News?

    India and Indonesia signed a deal on July 8 for the export of Astra Mk1 beyond-visual-range air-to-air missiles (BVRAAM), marking India’s first-ever export of the indigenous Astra missile system. The deal signals India’s transition from a long-standing importer of air-to-air missile technology to a credible exporter of a combat-validated strategic weapons system. The export comes months after Operation Sindoor demonstrated the missile category’s operational relevance against Pakistan.

    What does the Astra export deal reveal about the maturity of India’s indigenous BVRAAM programme?

    1. First export milestone: The deal for Astra Mk1 to Indonesia is India’s first export of an indigenous beyond-visual-range air-to-air missile. It will arm Indonesia’s Su-30 fleet.
    2. Astra Mk1 specifications: Astra Mk1 has a range of 80 to 110 km. Its altitude reach is up to 20 km. Its speed is Mach 4.5.
    3. Platform integration: Astra Mk1 is integrated with the Sukhoi-30 MKI. It is planned for future integration with the Tejas Mk1A and the Rafale.
    4. Astra Mk2 progress: Astra Mk2 has an enhanced range of 200 km, up from a previously stated 160 km. It received Acceptance of Necessity from the Defence Acquisition Council in December.
    5. Astra Mk3 development: Astra Mk3, named Gandiva, is under development. It uses a Solid Fuel Ducted Ramjet engine that sustains thrust mid-flight instead of burning out like conventional rocket motors. Its underlying SFDR technology was flight tested this year, with a potential range beyond 350 km.

    Why does the Astra export mark a shift from import dependence to strategic self-reliance in India’s air combat capability?

    1. Combat validation: Operation Sindoor, India’s operation against Pakistan last year, demonstrated the operational criticality of longer-range BVRAAM missiles.
    2. Threat benchmark: Astra is positioned as India’s answer to the PL-15, a long-range, active radar-guided BVRAAM used by both China and Pakistan.
    3. Import substitution: The Astra programme reduces India’s dependence on imported BVRAAM systems such as the Meteor and the R-77.
    4. Procurement priority: Procuring more batches of modern BVRAAM missiles is now a stated focus area for the Indian Air Force.
    5. Export as validation: Exporting Astra to Indonesia signals external confidence in an Indian-origin weapons system. Domestic deployment alone would not carry this signal.

    What do the named foreign missile systems and export destinations show about India’s position in the global BVRAAM market?

    1. China’s PL-15: An active radar-guided, long-range BVRAAM in service with both the Chinese and Pakistani air forces. It forms the primary threat benchmark for Astra.
    2. European Meteor: A BVRAAM currently operated by the IAF as an imported system. It illustrates India’s prior reliance on foreign suppliers.
    3. Russian R-77: Another imported BVRAAM in IAF service. Astra is intended to substitute this system over time.
    4. BrahMos to Southeast Asia: India is separately set to supply the BrahMos supersonic cruise missile to Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines. This indicates a broader pattern of missile exports to Southeast Asian states.

    How does the Astra-BrahMos export pattern position India in the Indo-Pacific strategic order?

    1. Common export destinations: Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines are recipients or prospective recipients of Indian missile systems. All three have unresolved maritime disputes with China.
    2. Countering PL-15 proliferation: Supplying Astra to a PL-15-exposed region extends India’s indigenous missile technology as a counterweight to Chinese-origin systems in the neighbourhood.
    3. Defence diplomacy tool: Missile exports function as an instrument of strategic partnership-building beyond conventional trade or diplomatic engagement.
    4. Manufacturer credibility: Sustained export interest from multiple Indo-Pacific states strengthens India’s credibility as a defence manufacturing hub. This supports the Atmanirbhar Bharat objective in the defence sector.

    Conclusion

    The Astra Mk1 export to Indonesia marks India’s transition from importing BVRAAM technology to supplying a combat-validated indigenous system abroad. Operation Sindoor supplied the operational proof. The PL-15 threat supplied the strategic rationale. What remains unresolved is whether India’s fighter fleet can secure adequate quantities of the higher-range Mk2 and Mk3 variants quickly enough to keep pace with the systems they are designed to counter.

  • Poshan Tracker

    Why in News?

    The Ministry of Women and Child Development (MoWCD) highlighted the achievements of the Poshan Tracker, India’s real time nutrition monitoring platform under Mission Poshan 2.0.

    What is Poshan Tracker?

    • Mobile based application launched in March 2021.
    • Developed by MoWCD with the National e-Governance Division (NeGD).
    • Digital backbone of POSHAN Abhiyaan.
    • Enables real time monitoring of nutrition, beneficiaries, and Anganwadi services.

    About POSHAN Abhiyaan

    • Launched on 8 March 2018.
    • India’s flagship National Nutrition Mission.
    • In 2021, merged with Anganwadi Services and Scheme for Adolescent Girls under Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0.

    Key Features

    • Aadhaar based beneficiary authentication.
    • Facial Recognition System (FRS) for service verification.
    • Digital home visit scheduler.
    • Poshan Calculator based on WHO Child Growth Standards.
    • Tracks stunting, wasting, underweight, SAM, MAM, and obesity.
    • Provides ECCE learning content and Poshan Helpline (1515).

    Achievements (May 2026)

    • Covers 28 States and 8 UTs.
    • 8.93 crore beneficiaries registered.
    • 7.7 crore children tracked through Aadhaar authenticated database.
    • 6.3 crore children (0 to 5 years) monitored for growth (about 94% coverage).
    • 5.5 crore beneficiaries received Supplementary Nutrition for at least 15 days.

    Significance

    • Enables evidence based nutrition governance.
    • Reduces leakages and duplicate beneficiaries.
    • Strengthens Anganwadi service delivery.
    • Supports Digital India and Viksit Bharat.

    Prelims Facts

    • POSHAN Abhiyaan: 2018.
    • Poshan Tracker: March 2021.
    • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Women and Child Development.
    • Uses WHO Child Growth Standards.
    • Operates under Mission Saksham Anganwadi and Poshan 2.0.

    [2023] Consider the following statements in the context of interventions being undertaken under Anaemia Mukt Bharat Strategy:
    1. It provides prophylactic calcium supplementation for pre-school children, adolescents and pregnant women.
    2. It runs a campaign for delayed cord clamping at the time of child- birth.
    3. It provides for periodic deworming to children and adolescents.
    4. It addresses non-nutritional causes of anaemia in endemic pockets with special focus on malaria, hemoglobinopathies and fluorosis.
    How many of the statements given above are correct?

    [A] Only one

    [B] Only two

    [C] Only three

    [D] All four

  • AISHE 2023-24: India’s Higher Education Enrolment Reaches 4.5 Crore

    Why in News?

    The Ministry of Education has released the All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) 2022-23 and 2023-24, showing that India’s higher education enrolment has reached 4.5 crore, reflecting significant improvements in access, gender parity, and participation of socially disadvantaged groups.

    Key Highlights

    • Total higher education enrolment reached 4.5 crore in 2023-24.
    • Enrolment increased by 31.5% from 3.42 crore in 2014-15.
    • Data was collected from 59,533 Higher Education Institutions (HEIs).
    • Institutional participation in the survey exceeded 90%.

    Gender Parity

    • Gender Parity Index (GPI) stood at 1.08 in 2023-24.
    • Female participation has remained higher than male participation for seven consecutive years.
    • Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER): Overall GER: 30, and Female GER: 31.2
    • Female teachers increased to 7.78 lakh, constituting 44.9% of the total teaching workforce.

    Inclusion of Marginalised Communities

    • Scheduled Castes (SC): Enrolment increased by 51.4% since 2014-15. Total enrolment reached 69.72 lakh. GER increased from 18.9 to 27.8.
    • Scheduled Tribes (ST):Enrolment increased by 75.7%. Total enrolment reached 28.83 lakh. GER increased from 13.5 to 22.8.
    • Other Backward Classes (OBC): Enrolment increased by 60.2%. Student strength rose from 1.13 crore to 1.80 crore.

    STEM Education

    • STEM enrolment crossed 1.02 crore students.
    • Female share in STEM increased from 38.4% in 2014-15 to 44% in 2023-24.
    • Total teachers in higher education increased to 17.32 lakh.

    About AISHE

    • All India Survey on Higher Education (AISHE) was launched in 2011 by the Ministry of Education.
    • It is India’s primary database on higher education.
    • Covers: Universities, Colleges, and Standalone institutions
    • Collects information on: Student enrolment, Teachers, Infrastructure, Courses, Examination results, and Finance
    • Data is self-reported by institutions through an online Data Capture Format (DCF) portal.
    • The Ministry conducts validation and scrutiny, while data accuracy is the responsibility of the participating institutions.

    Key Indicators Used in AISHE

    • Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER): Percentage of students enrolled in higher education compared to the total population in the 18 to 23 years age group.
    • Gender Parity Index (GPI): Ratio of female GER to male GER. GPI = 1 indicates equal participation. GPI > 1 indicates higher female participation.

    [2017] What is the aim of the programme ‘Unnat Bharat Abhiyan’?

    [a] Achieving 100% literacy by promoting collaboration between voluntary organizations and government’s education system and local communities.

    [b] Connecting institutions of higher education with local communities to address development challenges through appropriate technologies.

    [c] Strengthening India’s scientific research institutions in order to make India a scientific and technological power.

    [d] Developing human capital by allocating special funds for health care and education of rural and urban poor, and organizing skill development programmes and vocational training for them.