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  • [25th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: PACOM, the deeper meaning behind a dropped prefix 

    Mentor’s Comment

    The United States military renamed its Indo-Pacific Command from “US INDOPACOM” to “US PACOM,” reverting to the pre-2018 designation. The rename signals a deliberate U.S. retreat from the Indo-Pacific strategic framework that has anchored India’s external and maritime policy since 2018. The significance lies not in the name but in the concurrent withdrawal of Indo-Pacific language from the U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth’s Shangri-La Dialogue speech in May 2026.

    What Does the PACOM Rename Actually Signal?

    1. Reversal of 2018 doctrine: The 2018 renaming recognised the strategic importance of the Indian Ocean, the Indian subcontinent and India. The reversal withdraws that recognition.
    2. Disappearance of Indo-Pacific language: Hegseth’s 2025 Shangri-La speech referred to the Indo-Pacific over 30 times. His 2026 speech omitted it entirely.
    3. Unchanged area of responsibility: PACOM’s jurisdiction remains unchanged, extending from the U.S. West Coast to India’s western border. The change is strategic framing, not geography.
    4. Signal of U.S.-China accommodation: The rename reflects Trump’s effort to reduce tensions with China, which has long criticised the Quad and the Indo-Pacific concept.
    5. Three geographies at risk: India’s strategic position is affected across the Indo-Pacific, West Asia and South Asia.

    How Has U.S. Outreach to China Weakened the Quad?

    1. Trump’s G-2 framing: Trump’s references to a “G-2” suggest a U.S.-China-led order that conflicts with India’s vision of multipolar Asia.
    2. Diplomatic signals of accommodation: Trump’s Beijing visit and Xi Jinping’s planned U.S. visit indicate a preference for managing competition.
    3. Quad omitted from U.S. National Defense Strategy: The January 2026 National Defense Strategy does not mention the Quad, reducing its doctrinal significance.
    4. Quad agenda pared down: Cooperation is now limited to maritime security, economic prosperity, critical minerals and disaster response.
    5. Internal setbacks within a reduced agenda: U.S. restrictions on Anthropic’s AI models weakened Quad technology cooperation despite the Pax Silica and Critical Minerals Initiative Framework.
    6. India denied Quad Summit hosting rights: India has sought to host the summit since 2024. The grouping risks being reduced to a Foreign Ministers’ forum.
    7. Maritime security incidents within the Quad framework: Incidents involving IRIS Dena and attacks on ships carrying Indians exposed gaps in maritime domain awareness.

    What Does the U.S.-Iran Settlement Mean for India’s West Asia Position?

    1. U.S. ceasefire signals fatigue with regional allies: The ceasefire indicates reduced U.S. willingness to remain deeply engaged in West Asian conflicts.
    2. Islamabad MoU: Paragraph 4: The U.S. proposes withdrawing forces near Iran within 30 days of a final agreement.
    3. Islamabad MoU: Paragraph 5: Iran and Oman will help shape the future administration of the Hormuz Strait after demining.
    4. Islamabad MoU: Paragraph 6: Regional allies will contribute at least $300 billion for Iran’s reconstruction, strengthening Iran’s regional leverage.
    5. Regional realignment against India’s interests: Oman and Qatar have moved closer to Iran, while Saudi Arabia is diversifying its security partnerships.
    6. India’s West Asia policy is now misaligned: India may need to reassess its approach to Iranian oil, Chabahar and its regional balancing strategy.

    Why Does the Floundering Quad Require India to Build Alternative Maritime Architecture?

    1. Australia-India-Japan trilateral must be revived: Upcoming engagements with Japan, Indonesia, Australia and New Zealand provide an opportunity to strengthen alternative maritime partnerships.
    2. Maritime domain awareness is now India’s responsibility: India must expand bilateral and minilateral maritime cooperation as the Quad’s role diminishes.
    3. The Quad’s founding premise has reversed: Built to balance China under Trump 1.0, the Quad faces reduced relevance as Trump 2.0 pursues accommodation.

    Where Does the U.S.-China Competition Most Directly Threaten India’s Neighbourhood?

    1. South Asia as a new competitive theatre: The U.S. is expanding its strategic engagement across South Asia to compete with China.
    2. U.S. attempt at supra-entity status in South Asia: Washington increasingly seeks a broader regional role beyond India-Pakistan relations.
    3. Gor’s travels signal breadth of U.S. engagement: Visits to Kathmandu, Thimphu, Dhaka and Colombo reflect wider U.S. regional outreach.
    4. SAARC and BIMSTEC are constrained: Political tensions with Pakistan and Bangladesh limit the effectiveness of both regional organisations.
    5. China has already built South Asia mechanisms: Beijing has expanded regional cooperation platforms that bypass India.
    6. India’s multilateral opportunities: India can reinforce its leadership through IORA, BIMSTEC, SCO and potentially a revived SAARC.

    What Does the Central Tension Reveal About India’s Strategic Position?

    1. The surface-level bonhomie conceals structural divergence: Diplomatic warmth contrasts with U.S. policy shifts that challenge India’s interests across three regions.
    2. India’s strategic calculus was built on a U.S. Indo-Pacific commitment that no longer holds: The assumptions underpinning India’s post-2018 strategy are being simultaneously questioned.
    3. The G-2 world order conflicts with India’s multipolar vision: A U.S.-China-led order reduces India’s strategic space in Asia.
    4. India must plan beyond rhetoric: New Delhi must respond to evolving U.S. policies rather than symbolic diplomatic gestures.

    Conclusion

    The PACOM rename is a diagnostic signal, not a trivial semantic change. The U.S. has shifted from the Indo-Pacific framework toward a U.S.-China bilateral accommodation, leaving the Quad without doctrinal support, India’s West Asia position exposed by the Islamabad MoU, and South Asia under direct U.S.-China competitive pressure. India’s response cannot be confined to diplomatic optics. It requires simultaneous action: reviving alternative maritime coalitions such as the Australia-India-Japan trilateral, revising its West Asia policy on Iranian oil and Chabahar, and reasserting pan-regional leadership through BIMSTEC, SAARC, and the Indian Ocean Rim Association before both the U.S. and China entrench positions that leave India peripheral to its own neighbourhood.

  • In dry monsoon, a test of resilience

    Why in the News?

    India’s 2025 monsoon season is forecast to be the weakest in a decade, with 77% of the country’s land area already recording more than 20% rainfall deficit as of June 24. The season has exposed a structural tension: India’s agricultural and energy systems remain deeply dependent on monsoon rainfall. At the same time, the government’s own investments in renewables, rainwater harvesting, and rural employment infrastructure suggest the country may now be better placed to absorb the stress than in any previous deficit year.

    What Has Made the 2025 Deficit Structurally Different from Past Deficits?

    1. Scale of the deficit: As of June 24, 537 of 740 districts recorded over 20% rainfall deficit. Only eight of 36 States/UTs showed no deficiency. IMD forecast low to moderate rainfall across nearly half of India’s landmass.
    2. El Niño is not the primary cause: El Niño emerged in early June, too late to explain the June deficit because its impact on the Indian monsoon occurs with a lag. The dominant driver is the Madden Julian Oscillation (MJO).
    3. MJO as the proximate driver: A moving system of winds and clouds that alternately enhances or suppresses rainfall. In June, its rain-suppressing phase remained over India, with a shift expected in early July.
    4. June is ordinarily a high-rainfall month: IMD had forecast at least 92% of the Long Period Average (LPA) rainfall for June. The actual deficit of over 40% marks a significant departure from expectations.
    5. The La Niña lag: La Niña’s favourable impact on the Indian monsoon also occurs with a lag and was unlikely to influence June rainfall. This raises the possibility of a drier-than-expected monsoon season.

    What Is the Nature of India’s Dependence on the Monsoon and What Has Reduced It?

    1. The baseline dependence: The southwest monsoon provides nearly 75% of India’s annual rainfall. It supports irrigation, groundwater recharge, reservoirs, hydropower, agriculture, food security, rural incomes and economic growth.
    2. Infrastructure investments over a decade: India has expanded irrigation, rainwater harvesting, water storage and conservation. Official reports also show improving groundwater levels.
    3. Renewable energy as the decisive structural shift: Solar and wind power have reduced dependence on hydropower, which relies on reservoir storage. This helps preserve water for irrigation and drinking purposes.
    4. The residual dependence: Better resilience reduces stress but does not eliminate the need for planning and policy intervention.
    5. Rural employment as a demand buffer: MGNREGS has created water conservation and storage assets while providing income support to rural households during rainfall deficits, helping stabilise rural demand.

    What Existing Strengths Make Absorption of the 2025 Deficit Possible?

    1. Major reservoirs at good storage levels: Good rainfall over the last two years has kept reservoir storage comfortable, reducing immediate pressure on irrigation, drinking water and hydropower.
    2. Improvement in groundwater situation: Better groundwater levels provide an additional irrigation source where reservoir supplies become constrained.
    3. Renewable energy reducing reservoir pressure: Expansion of solar and wind power lowers dependence on hydropower, allowing reservoirs to conserve water despite weak monsoon inflows.
    4. Pre-monsoon rainfall altering farmer behaviour: Early forecasts encouraged many farmers to sow kharif crops using pre-monsoon showers, reducing exposure to the subsequent rainfall deficit.
    5. The limits of absorption: Resilience has improved but remains incomplete, requiring continued policy intervention.

    Where Does Resilience End and Vulnerability Begin? 

    1. The central tension: India has strengthened resilience, but climate change is making monsoon deficits more frequent, prolonged and unpredictable, testing existing adaptation measures.
    2. Quantitative unpredictability now exceeds planning assumptions: Climate change is making even good monsoon years less predictable, weakening the idea of a stable “normal monsoon.” The 2025 deficit could represent a recurring pattern rather than an exception.
    3. Hydropower remains a structural vulnerability: Solar and wind reduce dependence on hydropower but cannot replace it entirely. Reservoir shortages during weak monsoons can still affect electricity generation and grid stability.
    4. Agricultural productivity remains rainfall-sensitive: Investments in water conservation reduce drought impacts but cannot fully break agriculture’s dependence on monsoon performance, leaving food security vulnerable during prolonged deficits.
    5. Rural demand suppression risk persists: Poor monsoons lower farm incomes and rural demand. MGNREGS mitigates this impact but cannot fully offset a season-long rainfall deficit.

    What Must India Do That It Has Not Yet Done?

    1. The policy direction is defined: Developing greater climate resilience remains the only long-term solution, as monsoon behaviour cannot be controlled
    2. Quantitative rainfall forecasting must improve: More accurate district-level and sub-seasonal forecasts are essential for planning crop calendars, reservoir operations and water storage.
    3. The transition from input-side to output-side resilience: Investments in storage, groundwater recharge and renewables must translate into stable farm output, rural incomes and food prices during rainfall shocks.
    4. Climate adaptation must be recalibrated to current trajectories, not historical averages: Adaptation must continuously evolve because climate conditions are changing faster than the historical benchmarks used for planning.

    Conclusion

    India’s improved groundwater levels, major reservoir storage, and renewable energy capacity mean that a decade-worst monsoon need not produce a decade-worst crisis. However, the reduction in monsoon dependence is partial. Hydropower reliance persists, agricultural productivity remains rainfall-sensitive, and climate change is making deficits more frequent, longer, and harder to predict. Resilience built for last decade’s weather is already being outpaced by this decade’s climate.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Why is the South-West monsoon called ‘Purvaiya’ (easterly) in Bhojpur Region? How has this directional seasonal wind system influenced the cultural ethos of the region?

    Linkage: The PYQ tests understanding of the South-West Monsoon and its significance. The article moves beyond monsoon mechanics to examine how changing monsoon behaviour is reshaping India’s climate resilience.

  • After Op Sindoor freeze, a thaw in India-Turkey ties

    Why in the News?

    India-Turkey foreign office consultations resumed in April 2026 after a four-year suspension, coinciding with India’s extradition of fugitive narcotics trafficker Salim Dola from Turkey. The resumption follows a period of severe diplomatic rupture triggered by Turkey’s explicit condemnation of Operation Sindoor and Ankara’s role as Pakistan’s lone West Asian ally during the conflict.

    What is the historical trajectory of India-Turkey bilateral ties, and where did the relationship begin to fracture?

    1. Pre-2019 trajectory: After Erdogan assumed power in 2002, bilateral ties expanded across trade, culture and people-to-people contacts. Bilateral trade grew from $700 million (2002) to $13.82 billion (2022).
    2. First rupture-Article 370: Erdogan’s criticism of India’s 2019 Article 370 decision at the UN marked the first major diplomatic faultline. Kashmir became a structural irritant in bilateral ties.
    3. Escalation-military hardware: Turkey’s military supplies to Pakistan deepened India’s mistrust by directly affecting its security interests.
    4. Rock-bottom-Pahalgam and Sindoor: After the April 2025 Pahalgam terror attack, Turkey became the only West Asian country to explicitly condemn Operation Sindoor. This pushed bilateral ties to their lowest point.
    5. Four-year gap: Foreign Office Consultations remained suspended for four years before resuming in April 2026, reflecting the depth of the diplomatic rupture.

    What concrete costs did India impose on Turkey following Operation Sindoor, and what did these signal diplomatically?

    1. Drone evidence as trigger: Reports of Pakistan using Turkish-supplied drones during the Sindoor conflict turned India’s response into a security-driven retaliation rather than a diplomatic protest.
    2. Air India contract cancellation: Air India terminated its multibillion-dollar aircraft maintenance contract with a Turkish firm, imposing direct economic costs.
    3. University MoU suspensions: Leading Indian universities suspended MoUs with Turkish institutions, weakening educational and soft-power ties.
    4. Airport security revocation: India revoked the security clearance of a Turkish company operating at nine airports, signalling national security concerns.
    5. Trade and tourism contraction: Bilateral trade declined, while Indian tourist arrivals in Turkey fell by nearly 37%.
    6. Cyprus pivot: India Prime Minister’s first post-Sindoor foreign visit was to Cyprus, signalling support for a country locked in a territorial dispute with Turkey.

    Why is Turkey strategically valuable to India despite the Pakistan alignment, and what does India stand to gain from managing rather than severing the relationship?

    1. Islamic world leverage: Turkey enhances India’s outreach in the Islamic world due to its NATO membership and influence across Muslim-majority countries.
    2. Market gateway: Turkey provides access to Europe and Central Asia. Bilateral trade exceeds $10 billion, with India exporting about $6 billion in textiles, chemicals, auto components and machinery.
    3. Infrastructure expertise: Turkey’s construction and infrastructure capabilities can support India’s development priorities.
    4. Strategic hedge: Continued engagement prevents the consolidation of a Turkey-Pakistan-China axis without Indian diplomatic presence.
    5. Capital and tourism flows: Turkey gains Indian investment and tourists, while India imports marble, machinery and agricultural products, sustaining commercial interdependence.

    What has driven Turkey’s recalculation, and on what terms is Ankara willing to re-engage?

    1. Economic insulation rationale: Turkey seeks to shield its Asian economic interests from its Pakistan policy, given the value of its $10 billion-plus trade with India.
    2. Military assistance clarification: Turkey maintained that no fresh military assistance was provided during Sindoor and attributed drone use to existing defence ties.
    3. Law enforcement cooperation signal: The extradition of Salim Dola reflects Turkey’s willingness to restore operational cooperation despite political differences.
    4. Diplomatic phrasing: Ambassador Muktesh Pardeshi described the consultations as satisfactory and stressed dialogue over disagreement, signalling cautious engagement rather than full normalisation.

    What is the structural tension that the thaw cannot resolve/Can India-Turkey ties be decoupled from Turkey’s relationship with Pakistan?

    1. The structural constraint: Turkey’s “brotherly” ties with Pakistan are structural and unlikely to change. The current thaw seeks to work around this reality.
    2. The decoupling premise: The rapprochement assumes Turkey can maintain close ties with Pakistan while sustaining functional relations with India. This remains untested during active conflict.
    3. Kashmir as the residual test: India expects a more balanced Turkish position on Kashmir. Ankara’s restraint on this issue will determine the durability of the thaw.
    4. The limits of economic interdependence: Trade grew from $700 million (2002) to $13.82 billion (2022), yet failed to prevent the 2025 rupture. Economic ties alone cannot ensure political stability.
    5. What the thaw does not resolve: It leaves unresolved Turkey’s military support to Pakistan, its Article 370 position, and Erdogan’s continued use of Muslim solidarity as a foreign policy instrument.

    Conclusion

    India-Turkey ties are not normalising, they are being renegotiated on a new premise. Both sides now acknowledge that Turkey’s relationship with Pakistan is structural and unlikely to change. The rapprochement attempts to insulate bilateral economic and geopolitical interests from that alliance through trade interdependence, security cooperation, and Turkish restraint on Kashmir. That insulation remains incomplete and conditional. The next stress test will arrive with the next India-Pakistan security flashpoint, and Turkey’s response to it will determine whether the decoupling holds or collapses again. 

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Critically analyse India’s evolving diplomatic, economic and strategic relations with the Central Asian Republics (CARs) highlighting their increasing significance in regional and global geopolitics.

    Linkage: The PYQ examines how India balances strategic, economic and geopolitical interests in managing complex bilateral relationships. The article analyses India’s pragmatic re-engagement with Turkey despite enduring strategic differences over Pakistan and Kashmir, reflecting the balancing of diplomacy with national security.

  • Criminal Cases Among Rajya Sabha MPs (ADR Report)

    Why in News?

    A report by the Association for Democratic Reforms and National Election Watch found that 31% of sitting Rajya Sabha MPs have declared criminal cases, while 16% have declared serious criminal cases in their election affidavits.

    Key Findings

    • Analysis covered 226 of 233 Rajya Sabha MPs.
      • 4 seats (West Bengal) were vacant.
      • 3 MPs were excluded as affidavits were unavailable.
    • 69 MPs (31%) declared criminal cases.
    • 36 MPs (16%) declared serious criminal cases.
    • Serious offences include:
      • 1 MP with a murder case.
      • 4 MPs with attempt to murder cases.
      • 4 MPs with crimes against women.

    Party-wise Criminal Cases

    • BJP: 28 of 107 MPs (26%), Congress: 12 of 29 MPs (41%), AITC: 2 of 9 MPs (22%), DMK: 2 of 8 MPs (25%), SP: 2 of 4 MPs (50%), TDP: 3 of 4 MPs (75%), BRS: 3 of 3 MPs (100%), CPI(M): 3 of 3 MPs (100%), RJD: 2 of 3 MPs (67%), AIADMK: 1 of 4 MPs (25%), NCP: 1 of 4 MPs (25%), and AAP: 1 of 3 MPs (33%)

    Wealth Profile

    • 31 MPs (14%) declared assets exceeding ₹100 crore.
    • Major parties: BJP: 7 MPs, Congress: 6 MPs, YSRCP: 2 MPs, TDP: 2 MPs, BRS: 2 MPs, and NCP: 2 MPs

    About ADR

    • The Association for Democratic Reforms (ADR) is a non-governmental, non-partisan organization established in 1999.
    • It works to promote:
      • Electoral transparency.
      • Political and electoral reforms.
      • Informed voting through analysis of candidates’ affidavits.
    • ADR uses disclosures mandated by the Supreme Court and the Election Commission of India.

    Constitutional and Legal Background

    • Article 80: Composition of the Rajya Sabha.
    • Representation of the People Act, 1951
      • Section 8: Disqualification upon conviction for specified offences.
    • Mere pendency of criminal cases does not disqualify a candidate unless a conviction attracts disqualification under law.
    • Candidates must disclose criminal antecedents in nomination affidavits following Supreme Court judgments.

    [2020] Consider the following statements:

    1. According to the Constitution of India, a person who is eligible to vote can be made a minister in a State for six months even if he/she is not a member of the Legislature of that State. 

    2. According to the Representation of People Act, 1951, a person convicted of a criminal offence and sentenced to imprisonment for five years is permanently disqualified from contesting an election even after his release from prison. 

    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

  • SAIL Supplies Defence Grade Steel for Indian Navy Warships

    Why in News?

    The Steel Authority of India Limited (SAIL) supplied 5,700 tonnes of indigenous defence grade steel for three Indian Navy ships, INS Dunagiri, INS Agray, and INS Sanshodhak, commissioned on 21 June 2026. The move strengthens India’s defence indigenisation under Atmanirbhar Bharat and Make in India.

    Key Highlights

    • SAIL supplied 100% of the special steel requirement (5,700 tonnes) for INS Dunagiri (Stealth Frigate), INS Agray (ASW Shallow Water Craft), and INS Sanshodhak (Survey Vessel)
    • Steel supplied DMR 249A grade hot rolled sheets and plates (Defence grade steel).
    • Manufactured at Bokaro Steel Plant, Bhilai Steel Plant, and Rourkela Steel Plant
    • Production of DMR grade plates has been expanded, especially at the Special Plate Plant, Rourkela, to meet defence needs.

    What is DMR 249A Steel?

    • DMR (Defence Metallurgical Research) 249A is a high strength, low alloy steel developed for naval warships.
    • Features: High tensile strength, Excellent weldability, High toughness, Corrosion resistance in marine environments, and Better survivability under combat conditions.
    • Other Major Naval Platforms Using SAIL Steel: INS Vikrant, INS Nilgiri, INS Himgiri, INS Udaygiri, INS Ajay, INS Nistar, and INS Anjadeep

    Significance

    • Enhances self reliance in defence manufacturing.
    • Reduces dependence on imported naval steel.
    • Strengthens India’s indigenous shipbuilding capability.
    • Supports strategic maritime security and blue water naval ambitions.
    • Demonstrates collaboration between public sector steel manufacturing and defence production.

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

    [A] Amphibious warfare ship

    [B] Nuclear-powered submarine

    [C] Torpedo launch and recovery vessel

    [D] Nuclear-powered aircraft carrier

  • Index of Services Production (ISP)

    Why in the news?

    The Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) will launch the Index of Services Production (ISP) in July 2026 as India’s first monthly indicator to measure short term growth in the services sector.

    What is ISP?

    • Index of Services Production (ISP) is a monthly high frequency indicator that measures changes in the real output (volume) of the formal services sector relative to a base year.
    • It is the services sector counterpart of the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).

    Key Highlights

    • Nodal Ministry: Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI).
    • Base Year: 2024-25.
    • First Trial Release: 14 July 2026 (for 2025-26 and April 2026).
    • Release Frequency: Monthly, with a 60 day time lag.
    • Compiled using a fixed weight Laspeyres Volume Index.
    • Weights are based on Gross Value Added (GVA) of service sectors.

    Objectives

    • Complement the Index of Industrial Production (IIP).
    • Provide high frequency data on the services sector.
    • Improve economic forecasting and business cycle analysis.
    • Strengthen evidence based policymaking.

    Coverage

    • Included Sectors: Wholesale and retail trade, Transport, Banking and insurance, Telecommunications, Hotels and restaurants, Real estate, Professional, scientific and technical services, Arts, entertainment and recreation
    • To be Included Later: Health services and Education services (after availability of ASISSE data).

    Data Sources

    • Administrative data: Air Transport, Railways, Banking and Insurance.
    • GST (GSTR-1 outward supplies): Most service industries.
    • Annual Survey of Incorporated Services Sector Enterprises (ASISSE): Health and Education.

    Why is ISP Important?

    • Services contribute over 50% of India’s Gross Value Added (GVA) since 2013-14.
    • Provides timely tracking of service sector performance.
    • Enables faster policy response and economic monitoring.
    • Aligns India with international statistical practices.

    Limitations

    • Covers only the formal services sector.
    • Excludes: Public administration and defence, Government health and education, Social work without accommodation, Household services, Activities of extraterritorial organisations, Gambling and betting, Other predominantly non market and informal services.

    What is the proposed compilation formula?

    • ISP is proposed to be compiled using a fixed-weight Laspeyres Volume Index
      • Measures changes in output using fixed base year weights.
      • Widely used for indices such as IIP due to ease of comparison over time.

    [2020] Consider the following statements:
    1.The weightage of food in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) is higher than that in the Wholesale Price Index (WPI).
    2.The WPI does not capture changes in the prices of services, which the CPI does.
    3.The Reserve Bank of India uses WPI as its key measure of inflation to decide changes in policy rates.
    Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

    [A] 1 and 2 only

    [B] 2 and 3 only

    [C] 1 and 3 only

    [D] 1, 2 and 3

  • [24th June 2026] The Hindu OpED: India’s next challenge — from invention to global scale

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2025] “India aims to become a semiconductor manufacturing hub. What are the challenges faced by the semiconductor industry in India? Mention the salient features of the India Semiconductor Mission”
    Linkage: The PYQ is directly linked to the India Semiconductor Mission as a key initiative for building integrated manufacturing ecosystems (similar to TSMC) to achieve global industrial leadership

    Mentor Comment

    This article highlights the shift from “innovation-led growth” to “innovation-led global leadership.” For UPSC, do not restrict the discussion to R&D or startups. Link it with Atmanirbhar Bharat, Make in India, Startup India, India Semiconductor Mission, National Quantum Mission, IndiaAI Mission, Digital Public Infrastructure (UPI, Aadhaar, ONDC), Ease of Doing Business, and Industrial Policy.

    Why in the News?

    India is launching major technology missions in semiconductors, artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and space. India’s prior experience with early-mover technologies — semiconductors in the 1970s, indigenous computing in the 1980s, and the Simputer in 1998 — shows a consistent pattern of abandoning innovations before they reach global commercial scale.

    Why has early technological leadership repeatedly failed to produce globally dominant Indian industries?

    • SCL and the semiconductor gap: India established Semiconductor Complex Limited (SCL) in the 1970s, but limited capital, small manufacturing scale, inconsistent policies, and a public sector focus prevented the creation of a competitive semiconductor ecosystem.
    • ECIL and the strategic-commercial divide: Established in 1967, ECIL developed indigenous computers and control systems under technology embargoes. However, its emphasis on strategic self reliance rather than market competition limited industrial expansion.
    • Simputer and ecosystem constraints: The Simputer (1998) anticipated many smartphone features, but inadequate venture capital, weak component supply chains, limited software platforms, and a small consumer market prevented global scaling.
    • Structural pattern: The recurring challenge was not a lack of innovation but weak commercialisation, insufficient capital mobilisation, and underdeveloped innovation ecosystems.
    • Apple as a counterfactual: Apple converted a similar computing vision into a global technology leader through integrated hardware, software, and supply chain capabilities, highlighting the scaling infrastructure India lacked.

    Where has India demonstrated successful technology scaling, and what conditions enabled it?

    • Pharmaceuticals: India emerged as the “pharmacy of the world” and a leading vaccine producer through process innovation, cost efficiency, and export orientation.
    • Supercomputing (PARAM): The PARAM programme showed that sustained public investment with clear performance goals can build globally recognised indigenous capabilities.
    • Aadhaar and UPI: Built for nationwide scale, these digital public infrastructures transformed identity and payments, promoted financial inclusion, and became global models.
    • Scaling mechanism: Success came when technologies were designed for mass adoption rather than limited institutional use, creating ecosystems that generated industries and global impact.
    • Frugal innovation advantage: Missions like Chandrayaan and Mangalyaan proved that cost effective engineering can deliver world class outcomes, offering a strong model for future AI, semiconductor, and quantum technologies.

    What do international examples reveal about the institutional conditions required to convert technological invention into dominant industries?

    • Taiwan (TSMC): Taiwan created a dedicated semiconductor foundry model backed by sustained state industrial policy, long-term capital, and export-orientation from the outset. TSMC now holds over 50% of the global foundry market — built on the same window India identified in the 1970s.
    • South Korea (Samsung): South Korea used state-directed credit, mandatory technology transfer conditions in foreign investment, and chaebol-scale domestic investment to build Samsung’s semiconductor and electronics empire. Strategic intent was matched with commercial ambition.
    • United States (AI and space commercialisation): The US transitioned defence and research investments into commercial platforms through procurement policy, deep venture capital markets, and university-industry linkages. NASA’s Commercial Crew Programme is an example of public mission enabling private scaling.
    • The common design feature: In each case, the state defined a commercial outcome — not only a technical capability — as the measure of success. Public funding was structured to de-risk private investment rather than substitute for it.
    • Limitation of the comparison: These examples developed within large domestic or allied-market demand bases. India’s scaling challenge is to build global demand for Indian-origin platforms, which requires a different export and partnership strategy.

    What institutional and policy conditions must India establish for the current technology missions to produce globally competitive enterprises rather than repeating the earlier pattern?

    • Redefine the success metric: Public technology missions must measure success by commercial market share and global deployment, not by indigenous capability certificates or pilot completions.
    • Capital architecture: Venture capital, patient institutional capital, and public de-risking mechanisms must operate together. Scientific excellence funded without a commercialisation pathway reproduces institutional silos.
    • Ecosystem design from day one: Supply chains, software platforms, developer communities, and consumer or enterprise markets must be designed into missions at inception, not added after technical milestones are achieved.
    • Mandate commercial accountability in public institutions: Institutions such as C-DAC, ISRO’s commercial arm, and any new semiconductor entity must carry explicit commercial performance obligations alongside strategic mandates.
    • Quantum and healthcare applications: For quantum computing, the competitive advantage lies in reducing infrastructure costs and developing practical applications in drug discovery, materials science, and climate modelling domains, where India has existing scientific depth.

    Conclusion

    India’s technology history does not reveal a failure of scientific capability. It reveals a consistent failure to build the commercial ecosystems, capital structures, and institutional mandates required to scale invention into globally competitive industries. The countries that will lead the next technological era may not be those that invent first. They will be those that scale fastest. India’s current missions in AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, and space represent a second opportunity to claim the leadership positions it identified and then vacated in earlier technology cycles. Seizing that opportunity requires replacing the measure of self-reliance — from technical capability achieved to global market position built.

  • Centre Tightens FCRA Rules for NGOs

    Why in News?

    The Union Government amended the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Rules, 2011, introducing stricter norms for NGOs receiving foreign funds under the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act (FCRA), 2010.

    New Registration Requirements

    • NGOs must register under one or more of five categories: Social, Economic, Educational, Cultural, and Religious
    • Must specify: Exact purpose of foreign contribution. State/UT-wise area of operation.
    • Separate fee payable for each category and each State/UT.

    Enhanced Disclosure

    • NGOs must disclose: Websites, Social media accounts, Publications (books, magazines, newspaper articles), and Annual activities and geographical scope.

    Expanded Definition of “Key Functionary”

    • Now includes: Office-bearers, Directors, Trustees, Partners, Karta/Head of Hindu Undivided Family (HUF), Governing body members, and Any person controlling or managing the organization.

    Restrictions

    • NGOs with foreign nationals (except Persons of Indian Origin) as key functionaries will generally not be eligible unless specifically permitted by the Central Government.
    • Educational and cultural activities must remain strictly non-political.
    • Religious activities exclude proselytisation.

    Penalties

    • Minimum fine: ₹1 lakh.
    • Misuse of foreign funds or use for unapproved purposes/States: 30% of the amount involved or ₹1 lakh, whichever is higher.
    • Similar penalties for Excess administrative expenditure, Speculative investments, and Unauthorized receipt or utilization of foreign contributions.

    Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010 (FCRA)

    • Regulates acceptance and utilization of foreign contributions and hospitality by individuals, associations, and NGOs.
    • Administered by the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA).
    • Objectives: Ensure foreign funds do not adversely affect Sovereignty and integrity of India, National security, Public interest, and Democratic institutions

    [2021] At the national level, which ministry is the modal agency to ensure effective implementation of the scheduled Tribes and Other Traditional Forest Dwellers (Recognition of Forest Rights) Act, 2006?

    [A] Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change

    [B] Ministry of Panchayati Raj

    [C] Ministry of Rural Development

    [D] Ministry of Tribal Affairs

  • NITI Aayog Trade Watch Quarterly (Q4 FY 2025-26)

    Why in News?

    NITI Aayog released the 8th edition of “Trade Watch Quarterly” (Jan-Mar 2026), highlighting India’s trade performance and focusing on the pharmaceutical sector.

    India’s Trade Performance

    • Total merchandise and services trade: $1.84 trillion in FY 2025-26 (↑5.4% YoY).
    • Exports: Grew by 4.2%.
    • Imports: Grew by 6.5%.
    • Services exports: Increased by 9.0%, maintaining a strong services surplus.
    • India remained the 8th largest services exporter in 2025.
    • Services exports recorded a CAGR of 10.3% (2015-2025), higher than the global average.

    Pharmaceutical Sector

    • Global pharmaceutical and API market estimated at $1.3 trillion (2025).
    • India’s pharmaceutical and API exports reached $35.8 billion.
    • India is a leading supplier of Generic medicines, Vaccines, and Essential therapeutics

    Challenges

    • Export basket remains concentrated in generic formulations and retail medicaments.
    • Limited presence in biologics, biosimilars, immunologicals, and advanced therapeutics.
    • Continued dependence on imported Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs) and intermediates, especially from China.

    Leading Pharmaceutical States

    • Telangana, Gujarat, and Maharashtra
    • These states lead in production, exports, and integration into global pharmaceutical value chains.

    Way Forward

    • Expand into high-value pharmaceutical segments.
    • Strengthen domestic API manufacturing.
    • Increase investments in R&D, technology, and skill development.
    • Improve regulatory efficiency and market access.

    Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API)

    • The biologically active component of a medicine responsible for its therapeutic effect.
    • APIs are combined with excipients to produce the final dosage form.

    Biologics

    • Medicines produced from living organisms or biological processes.
    • Examples include monoclonal antibodies, vaccines, and recombinant proteins.

    [2021] With reference to international trade of India, which of the following statements are correct:
    1.The Top 3 export destinations of India are – USA, UAE, China.
    2.The Top 3 exports from India include – Petroleum Products, Drug Formulations, Agricultural Products.
    3.Agricultural exports have consistently risen from 2016-17 to 2021-22.
    4.India’s merchandise exports are less than its merchandise imports.
    Select the correct code from the options given below:

    [A] 1 and 4

    [B] 1 and 3

    [C] 2 and 4

    [D] 1, 2, 3 and 4

  • VOC Port: Model for Green Maritime Growth

    Why in News?

    Union Minister Sarbananda Sonowal highlighted V. O. Chidambaranar Port Authority as a model for sustainable maritime development, releasing its first Sustainability Report and launching several green and digital initiatives.

    Key Highlights

    • Net carbon emissions reduced by 45%.
    • Renewable energy offsets nearly 94% of the port’s energy consumption equivalent.
    • Carbon intensity per tonne of cargo reduced by nearly 50% over the last four years.
    • Recognized as a Scope-2 Emission Free Port for its transition to clean energy.

    Green Hydrogen Initiative

    • Hosts India’s first Green Hydrogen pilot project at a major port.
    • Featured in an Indian Institute of Management Calcutta case study titled “The Hydrogen Pivot”.

    Education & Innovation

    • Kendriya Vidyalaya, VOC Port commenced academic activities for the 2026-27 session.
    • MoU signed with Gati Shakti Vishwavidyalaya for Maritime logistics research, Skill development, Sustainable port operations, and Centre of Excellence in Maritime Logistics & Port Management.

    Digital Transformation

    • Launched PortGPT, making VOC Port the first major port in India to introduce an enterprise-grade generative AI mobile application for Operational efficiency, Knowledge management, and Data-driven decision-making.

    Scope-2 Emissions

    • Indirect greenhouse gas emissions from purchased electricity, steam, heating, or cooling consumed by an organization.
    • Defined under the Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Protocol.

    Green Hydrogen

    • Produced through electrolysis of water using renewable energy.
    • Emits zero carbon dioxide during production.
    • Key pillar of India’s National Green Hydrogen Mission.

    [2023] Consider the following pairs :
    Port—–Well known as
    1.Kamarajar Port—-First major port in India registered as a company
    2.Mundra Port—–Largest privately owned port in India
    3.Visakhapatnam—-Largest container port in India

    [A] Only one pair

    [B] Only two pairs

    [C] All three pairs

    [D] None of the pairs