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  • [4th May 2026] The Hindu OpED: AI and a gathering storm of unchecked power

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2024] Social media and encrypting messaging services pose a serious security challenge. What measures have been adopted at various levels to address the security implications of social media? Also suggest any other remedies to address the problem.Linkage: The PYQ captures the article’s concern regarding technology-driven surveillance, data control, and threats to civil liberties, now amplified by AI systems. It highlights the broader issue of balancing technological innovation with regulation and democratic accountability, central to the article’s argument.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The article highlights a critical structural shift in global governance: the concentration of power in AI corporations without commensurate democratic oversight. It raises concerns about militarisation, surveillance, erosion of accountability, and weakening of constitutional safeguards, making it highly relevant for GS Paper II (governance, rights) and GS Paper III (technology, security).

    Is AI Concentrating Power in Private Corporations at the Cost of Democracy?

    1. Corporate Dominance: Centralises decision-making in firms like OpenAI, Anthropic, Palantir; reduces state oversight.
    2. Soft Power Erosion: Weakens democratic persuasion; replaces it with algorithmic influence over societies.
    3. Policy Vacuum: Lacks binding global frameworks; relies on voluntary corporate ethics.
    4. Example: OpenAI’s internal governance frameworks (e.g., “Claude’s Constitution”) replace statutory regulation.

    How is AI Transforming Warfare and Raising Ethical Concerns?

    1. Algorithmic Warfare: Enables automated targeting and surveillance operations.
    2. Civilian Risk: Increases collateral damage due to data biases and automation errors.
    3. Example: Palantir’s Maven system used in U.S. operations in Iran; reported deaths of 175-180 civilians.
      1. Palantir’s Maven Smart System (MSS) is an AI-enabled command-and-control platform that accelerates military decision-making by integrating satellite imagery, drone feeds, and sensor data into a single interface.
    4. Ethical Gap: Absence of accountability for AI-led decisions in conflict zones.

    Does AI-Driven Surveillance Threaten Civil Liberties?

    1. Mass Surveillance: Expands profiling capabilities through data aggregation.
      1. Example: In 2025, police in India used 2,700 AI-enhanced CCTV cameras to monitor crowd density, behavioral patterns, and cross-border movements at the Maha Kumbh festival, highlighting the expansion of pervasive, automated tracking in public spaces.
    2. Predictive Policing: Normalises algorithmic bias in law enforcement.
    3. Tracking and Targeted Surveillance: Use of AI tools by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) for tracking individuals.
    4. Privacy Erosion: Weakens safeguards; data collected without adequate consent frameworks.

    Are Self-Regulatory Frameworks by AI Firms Adequate?

    1. Internal Ethics Models: Introduces corporate-led governance (e.g., Claude’s Constitution).
    2. Limitations: Lacks enforceability and transparency.
    3. Conflict of Interest: Profit motives undermine ethical commitments.
    4. Example: Anthropic’s ethical framework defines acceptable AI behaviour without legal backing.

    What are the Broader Societal Impacts of AI Expansion?

    1. Labour Disruption: Automates creative and intellectual tasks.
    2. Creative Ownership Issues: Uses copyrighted content (novels, essays) without clarity on fair use.
    3. Human Identity Question: Challenges notions of creativity, effort, and originality.
    4. Environmental Impact: High energy consumption of AI models affects climate goals.

    Is Global Governance of AI Fragmented and Inadequate?

    1. Divergent Approaches: EU AI Act vs. India’s non-binding guidelines (2025).
    2. Global Inequality: Concentrates power in technologically advanced nations.
    3. Example: Brazil’s call for regulation at AI Impact Summit (2026).
    4. Multilateral Failure: Lack of binding international law on AI governance.

    What are the Risks of Treating AI Expansion as Inevitable?

    1. Policy Paralysis: Accepts corporate dominance as unavoidable.
    2. Ideological Trap: Mirrors Thatcher’s “There is no alternative” mindset.
    3. Democratic Erosion: Reduces scope for public debate and intervention.
    4. Outcome: Normalises unchecked technological expansion.

    Conclusion

    AI represents a structural shift in power comparable to industrial revolutions but with deeper implications for democracy and sovereignty. Effective governance requires binding regulations, global cooperation, and reassertion of democratic control over technology to prevent concentration of unchecked power.

  • How dual-use satellites are blurring the lines of modern space war

    Why in the News?

    There is a critical shift in the nature of modern warfare. The dual-use satellites power civilian life, but at the same time are increasingly becoming instruments of covert warfare. There is growing weaponisation of civilian space infrastructure without physical destruction. Unlike earlier conceptions of space war involving kinetic attacks, recent developments show a shift toward cyber-attacks, signal jamming, and spoofing, as seen during the Russia-Ukraine conflict (2022) where the Viasat KA-SAT network was disrupted, crippling communications across Europe. This marks a paradigm shift, from visible destruction to invisible disruption. 

    What are Dual-use satellites?

    1. They are platforms that serve both civilian/commercial and military/national security purposes, often simultaneously or interchangeably. 
    2. These technologies, such as Earth observation or communication satellites, provide commercial services (e.g., mapping, internet) while also supplying intelligence-grade imagery, navigation, and encrypted communications for defense forces.

    How are dual-use satellites transforming the nature of warfare?

    1. Dual-use infrastructure: Enables simultaneous civilian and military utilisation of GPS, broadband, and communication systems.
    2. Military integration: Facilitates intelligence gathering, surveillance, reconnaissance, and drone targeting.
    3. Operational dependency: Increases reliance of armed forces on commercial satellite constellations.
    4. Target ambiguity: Obscures distinction between legitimate military targets and protected civilian assets.
    5. Strategic leverage: Converts civilian systems into force multipliers without dedicated military deployment
    6. Example: Civilian GPS systems enabling precision-guided military operations

    Why does modern space conflict avoid physical destruction?

    1. Non-kinetic techniques: Utilises cyberattacks, signal jamming, spoofing, and hacking
    2. Debris avoidance: Prevents creation of orbital debris that can damage own satellites
    3. Cost efficiency: Reduces financial and technological burden compared to kinetic weapons
    4. Escalation control: Maintains conflict below threshold of overt war
    5. Reversibility: Allows temporary disruption instead of permanent destruction
    6. Example: Viasat KA-SAT cyberattack disrupted communications without physical damage.

    How does the invisibility of cyber warfare weaken deterrence?

    1. Attribution uncertainty: Limits ability to conclusively identify attackers
    2. Proxy warfare: Enables operations through third-party actors and intermediaries
    3. Evidentiary challenges: Lacks visible proof compared to physical attacks
    4. Delayed response: Slows decision-making for retaliation due to ambiguity
    5. Deterrence erosion: Weakens threat of retaliation as attackers remain unidentified
    6. Outcome: Encourages repeated low-intensity attacks below war threshold

    Why is the legal framework inadequate for space cyber warfare?

    1. Outer Space Treaty gap: Focuses on physical weaponisation, excludes cyber operations
    2. UN Charter ambiguity: Article 2(4) unclear on cyber disruptions as “use of force”
    3. International Humanitarian Law (IHL) limitations: Difficulty in applying civilian-military distinction in dual-use systems.
    4. Attribution requirement: Legal responsibility contingent on high evidentiary standards.
    5. Enforcement deficit: Absence of binding mechanisms for compliance and accountability
    6. Example: Cyberattacks on satellites fall outside clearly defined war thresholds

    How is the civilian-military distinction collapsing in space?

    1. Dual-use systems: Civilian satellites routinely support military operations
    2. Legal contradiction: IHL mandates distinction, but technology merges functions
    3. Operational overlap: Commercial constellations provide services to armed forces
    4. Target legitimacy confusion: Civilian assets become potential military targets
    5. Protection erosion: Reduces safeguards for civilian infrastructure
    6. Example: Commercial satellites used for intelligence and battlefield coordination

    What risks do cyber intrusions in space systems pose to society?

    1. Critical infrastructure exposure: Financial systems, aviation, and energy depend on satellites
    2. Cascading failures: Disruption in one system triggers failures across sectors
    3. Navigation risks: GPS spoofing misguides aircraft and maritime vessels
    4. Economic disruption: Interrupts banking, stock markets, and digital payments
    5. Governance paralysis: Affects emergency services and state communication networks
    6. Example: Communication blackout due to satellite cyberattack affecting multiple countries.

    Why is there a need for enforceable norms in space governance?

    1. Normative gaps: Existing frameworks remain advisory without enforcement
    2. Threshold ambiguity: Lack of clarity on what constitutes an act of war in cyberspace
    3. Attribution mechanisms: Requires international cooperation for real-time identification
    4. Collective security: Strengthens coordinated response to cross-border cyber threats
    5. Standardisation: Establishes clear operational and legal guidelines for space conduct
    6. Outcome: Reduces ambiguity and strengthens deterrence

    Conclusion

    Space warfare is evolving into a domain defined by invisible disruption, legal ambiguity, and systemic risk. The fusion of civilian and military systems creates vulnerabilities that extend beyond conflict zones into everyday life. Strengthening legal clarity, attribution capacity, and enforceable norms remains essential for maintaining stability in the space domain.

    PYQ Relevance

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

    Linkage: The PYQ directly relates to cyber threats in critical infrastructure, now extended to space-based systems like satellites. It highlights gaps in attribution, deterrence, and regulatory frameworks, which are central to dual-use satellite warfare.

  • DAE, Power Ministry at odds over civil nuclear projects’ supervision

    Why in the News?

    India’s civil nuclear sector is undergoing a structural transition after the passage of the Sustainable Harnessing and Advancement of Nuclear Energy for Transforming India (SHANTI) Act, 2025, which for the first time permits private participation in a strategically controlled domain. This shift has triggered a sharp institutional divergence between the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and the Ministry of Power over supervisory control. This exposes concerns of conflict of interest arising from DAE’s end-to-end dominance of the nuclear supply chain. The issue assumes significance as India plans to expand nuclear capacity from 8.7 gigawatt electric (GWe) to 100 GWe by 2047. This makes regulatory clarity essential for energy security and climate commitments.

    What is the SHANTI Act and how does it transform India’s nuclear sector?

    1. Legislative Reform: Establishes a legal framework enabling private sector participation in civil nuclear energy, breaking the exclusive state control under the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE).
    2. Regulatory Strengthening: Grants statutory status to the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB), thereby enhancing its legal authority and institutional autonomy.
    3. Administrative Reconfiguration: Recognises DAE as the nodal technical authority while opening space for other ministries to play administrative roles.
    4. Investment Facilitation: Removes key barriers for private investment, including easing operational restrictions in nuclear power generation.
    5. Liability Modification: Omits the supplier liability clause present earlier, reducing long-term liability risks for equipment vendors and encouraging foreign and domestic participation.

    Why has the SHANTI Act triggered institutional conflict between the Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) and Ministry of Power?

    1. Jurisdictional Ambiguity: Creates overlap between DAE’s technical authority and Ministry of Power’s administrative jurisdiction over electricity generation.
    2. Shift in Sectoral Control: Challenges the traditional monopoly of DAE by introducing multi-agency governance in nuclear power.
    3. Private Sector Inclusion: Raises the question of whether private nuclear projects should fall under the broader power sector administered by the Ministry of Power.
    4. Policy Divergence: Reflects differing institutional perspectives on whether nuclear energy should remain a strategic domain or be integrated with commercial energy markets.
    5. Lack of Clear Framework: Absence of a clearly defined administrative structure for private projects has intensified inter-ministerial tensions.

    How does the Department of Atomic Energy’s (DAE) structure raise concerns of conflict of interest?

    1. End-to-End Control: Exercises authority over research, reactor development, fuel supply, plant operations, and waste management, creating concentration of power.
    2. Regulatory Dependence: Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) historically relied on DAE for budgetary and administrative support, limiting independence.
    3. Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) Observation (2012): Highlighted institutional conflict as AERB leadership reported to the Atomic Energy Commission, closely linked to DAE.
    4. Dual Role Issue: DAE functions both as operator and overseer, leading to potential regulatory capture.
    5. Accountability Deficit: Weak separation between promoter and regulator reduces transparency and credibility in safety oversight.

    What institutional changes have been introduced to address regulatory concerns?

    1. Statutory Empowerment: Converts Atomic Energy Regulatory Board (AERB) into a statutory body, enhancing legal independence.
    2. Expanded Oversight: Strengthens regulatory jurisdiction over nuclear power plants, including those developed by private entities.
    3. Defined Technical Authority: Retains Department of Atomic Energy (DAE) as nodal agency for technical expertise and institutional knowledge.
    4. Separation Attempt: Initiates partial separation between regulatory and operational functions to reduce conflict of interest.
    5. Governance Modernisation: Aligns India’s nuclear governance structure with international best practices of independent regulation.

    Should the Ministry of Power be given administrative control over private nuclear projects?

    1. Sectoral Integration: Aligns nuclear power with broader electricity sector planning under the Ministry of Power.
    2. Technology-Based Allocation: Suggests division where Light Water Reactors (LWR) and Pressurised Water Reactors (PWR) fall under Ministry of Power, while Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWR) remain under DAE.
    3. Efficiency Consideration: Enhances administrative efficiency by integrating nuclear energy with grid management and distribution systems.
    4. Expertise Constraint: Recognises DAE’s specialised knowledge in nuclear technology, limiting full transfer of control.
    5. Hybrid Governance Model: Indicates a possible dual framework combining technical oversight by DAE and administrative supervision by the Ministry of Power.

    What are the strategic and capacity implications of expanding nuclear energy in India?

    1. Current Capacity: India’s installed nuclear capacity stands at approximately 8.7 gigawatt electric (GWe), constituting about 1.65% of total installed capacity.
    2. Under Construction Projects: Around 6,600 megawatt electric (MWe) capacity is currently under construction.
    3. Pipeline Projects: Additional 7,000 MWe capacity is in planning and approval stages.
    4. Long-Term Target: Aims to achieve 100 GWe nuclear capacity by 2047 to support energy transition goals.
    5. Role of Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited (NPCIL): Expected to develop more than half of the targeted capacity expansion.

    Why does the government retain control over critical nuclear activities despite private participation?

    1. Strategic Sensitivity: Nuclear energy is closely linked to national security and non-proliferation commitments.
    2. Fuel Cycle Control: Retains authority over enrichment, isotopic separation, and reprocessing of spent fuel.
    3. Waste Management: Ensures safe handling and disposal of high-level radioactive waste under government supervision.
    4. Heavy Water Production: Maintains control over heavy water, a critical input for indigenous reactor technology.
    5. International Obligations: Aligns with global nuclear safety norms and safeguards under international agreements.

    Conclusion

    The SHANTI Act introduces a structural transformation in India’s nuclear sector but simultaneously exposes institutional gaps in governance. Establishing a clear separation between regulatory and operational roles, along with a coherent administrative framework, remains essential for achieving safe and scalable nuclear expansion.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] With growing energy needs should India keep on expanding its nuclear energy programme? Discuss the facts and fears associated with nuclear energy.

    Linkage: The PYQ directly links to nuclear expansion targets (100 GWe by 2047) and policy shift towards private participation under SHANTI Act. It captures core debate of governance, safety, regulatory independence, and strategic control highlighted in the DAE vs Ministry of Power conflict.

  • National Guidelines on Childhood Diabetes Care

    Why in the News

    The Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has released a national framework for childhood diabetes care, providing for universal screening, free lifelong treatment, and integrated care under the public health system.

    Key Features of the Guidelines

    • Universal Screening
      • Covers all children from birth to 18 years
      • Early identification through community level screening
    • Diagnosis and Referral
      • Immediate blood glucose testing for suspected cases
      • Referral to district level health facilities for confirmation

    Free Comprehensive Care

    • Available at public health facilities
    • Includes:
      • Insulin therapy (lifelong)
      • Glucometers and test strips
      • Regular follow up and monitoring
      • Emergency care

    Key Concept

    Diabetes Mellitus

    • A chronic disease where the body:
      • Does not produce enough insulin, or
      • Cannot effectively use insulin
    • Leads to high blood sugar (hyperglycaemia)

    “4Ts” Awareness Framework

    • Helps identify early signs of Type 1 Diabetes
      • Toilet (frequent urination)
      • Thirsty
      • Tired
      • Thin
    [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
  • Mission Drishti (OptoSAR Satellite)

    Why in the News

    India’s private space startup GalaxEye has launched Mission Drishti, the country’s largest privately developed Earth observation satellite, aboard Falcon 9 by SpaceX.

    Key Facts

    • Satellite: Mission Drishti
    • Weight: 190 kg
    • Launch site: Vandenberg, California
    • Developed by: GalaxEye (Bengaluru)
    • Category: Earth Observation Satellite

    Unique Feature

    • First satellite globally to combine:
      • Electro Optical (EO) imaging
      • Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)
    • Known as OptoSAR technology

    What is OptoSAR?

    • Integration of:
      • Optical imaging (visible spectrum)
      • Radar imaging (microwave signals)
    • Enables:
      • All weather imaging
      • Day and night observation

    Key Concepts

    Electro Optical (EO) Sensors

    • Capture images using visible and infrared light
    • Affected by cloud cover and darkness

    Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)

    • Uses radio waves
    • Works in all weather conditions and at night

    Applications

    • Defence and surveillance
    • Agriculture monitoring
    • Disaster management
    • Maritime surveillance
    • Infrastructure planning

    Institutional Context

    • Supported by IN-SPACe
    • Part of India’s growing private space ecosystem
    • Complements ISRO missions
    [2019] For the measurement/ estimation of which of the following are satellite images/remote sensing data used? 
    1. Chlorophyll content in the vegetation of a specific location 
    2. Greenhouse gas emissions from rice paddies of a specific location 
    3. Land surface temperatures of a specific location 
    Select the correct answer using the code given below. 
    [A] 1 only
    [B] 2 and 3 only
    [C] 3 only
    [D] 1, 2 and 3
  • Appointment of DGP in Tamil Nadu

    Why in the News

    The Union Public Service Commission is set to convene a panel to shortlist candidates for the post of Director General of Police (DGP) in Tamil Nadu, following Supreme Court guidelines on police reforms.

    What is DGP

    • Director General of Police (DGP) is the highest ranking police officer in a State
    • Heads the State Police Force
    • Also referred to as Head of Police Force (HoPF)

    Appointment Process

    • UPSC forms a panel of three senior IPS officers
    • Panel sent to State Government
    • State selects one officer as DGP

    Role of UPSC

    • Ensures merit based and transparent selection
    • Conducts Empanelment Committee Meeting (ECM)

    Key Supreme Court Guidelines

    (From Prakash Singh v Union of India, 2006)

    • DGP should have a minimum tenure of 2 years
    • Selection from panel prepared by UPSC
    • Officers should have minimum residual service
    • Appointment should not be made just before retirement

    Important Terms

    • Empanelment Committee Meeting (ECM): Meeting conducted by UPSC to shortlist eligible officers
    • Residual Service: Remaining service period before retirement

    Key Issues Highlighted

    • Delays in appointment process
    • Debate over extension beyond retirement
    • Ensuring independence and stability of police leadership

    Significance

    • Strengthens police reforms and accountability
    • Ensures professional and merit based appointments
    • Reduces political interference in policing
    [2019] With reference to the Chief Secretary of a state, consider the following statements: 
    1. Chief Secretary is appointed by the Governor of the state for a fixed tenure of two years. 
    2. The Central government has the power to approve extension of service of Chief Secretary for a period not exceeding six months. 
    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
  • Kailash Mansarovar Yatra and Lipulekh Dispute

    Why in the News?

    Ahead of the Foreign Secretary’s visit, Nepal has raised concerns with India and China over the Kailash Mansarovar Yatra route via Lipulekh Pass, reiterating its territorial claim over the region.

    About Kailash Mansarovar Yatra

    • Pilgrimage to:
      • Mount Kailash
      • Lake Mansarovar
    • Conducted by India in coordination with China
    • Major routes:
      • Lipulekh Pass (Uttarakhand)
      • Nathu La Pass (Sikkim)

    What is Lipulekh Pass

    • A high altitude mountain pass in the Himalayas
    • Located at the tri junction of:
      • India
      • Nepal
      • China
    • Used as a traditional route for the yatra since 1954

    Nature of the Dispute

    • Nepal claims:
      • Kalapani, Lipulekh, Limpiyadhura belong to Nepal
      • Based on Treaty of Sugauli
    • India’s position:
      • Claims not supported by historical evidence
      • Open to resolution through dialogue and diplomacy

    Key Regions Involved

    • Kalapani
    • Lipulekh
    • Limpiyadhura
    • Located near Mahakali River

    Strategic Importance

    • Important for:
      • Pilgrimage route (Kailash Mansarovar)
      • India China trade and connectivity
    • Sensitive due to:
      • Tri junction location
      • Geopolitical significance
    [2019] Consider the following pairs 
    Glacier – River 
    1 Bandarpunch – Yamuna 
    2 Bara Shigri – Chenab 
    3 Milam – Mandakini 4 Siachen – Nubra 
    5 Zemu – Manas 
    Which of the pairs correctly matched? 
    a) 1, 2 and 4 
    b) 1, 3 and 4 
    c) 2 and 5 
    d) 3 and 5
  • [2nd May 2026] The Hindu OpED: Abu Dhabi exits OPEC for an ascent of ‘peak oil’

    PYQ Relevance[UPSC 2018] 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: The UAE exit reshapes India’s relations with West Asia beyond OPEC framework. It is directly applicable to India-UAE ties, diversification, and long-term energy strategy.

    Mentor’s Comment

    The United Arab Emirates (UAE) formally exited OPEC on May 1, just before the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) meeting, an unprecedented timing that surprised global markets. This marks a sharp shift from earlier years when the UAE only threatened to leave but remained within the cartel. The move comes amid the Strait of Hormuz blockade crisis, which disrupted Gulf oil exports, and reflects growing dissatisfaction with OPEC quota restrictions.

    Why did the UAE decide to exit OPEC despite being a major beneficiary?

    1. Quota Constraints: Limits production to 3.45 mbpd despite capacity expansion. This creates 1.5 mbpd idle capacity. Example: UAE’s grievance against Saudi-led output control
    2. Strategic Autonomy: Prioritizes national interest over cartel discipline; Ensures independent pricing and production decisions
    3. Economic Diversification: Requires higher oil revenues to fund AI, data centers, and post-oil investments. Example: Technology-driven economy push
    4. Geopolitical Assertion: Signals independence from Saudi dominance. Example: UAE distancing from Riyadh’s leadership in OPEC

    How does the concept of ‘Peak Oil Demand’ shape this decision?

    Peak oil demand refers to the point in time when global consumption of oil reaches its highest level and then begins to permanently decline. Unlike the traditional concept of “peak oil” (or peak supply), which suggests the world will run out of oil because it is a finite resource, peak oil demand occurs because consumers and industries stop wanting or needing as much of it.

    1. Demand Transition: Global oil demand approaching plateau; Reduces long-term value of reserves
    2. Revenue Maximisation: Incentivizes faster extraction before demand declines; Ensures monetisation of reserves
    3. Energy Transition Pressure: Accelerates shift to renewables and alternative fuels; Example: EV adoption and climate policies
    4. Short-term Volatility: War-driven oil spikes may destroy demand; Example: Iran war causing unsustainable price surges

    What are the geopolitical dimensions behind UAE’s move?

    1. Strait of Hormuz Crisis: Blockade disrupted exports; Highlighted vulnerability of Gulf oil routes
    2. Pipeline Advantage: Abu Dhabi’s Habshan-Fujairah pipeline bypasses Hormuz; Ensures supply continuity
    3. Saudi-UAE Rift: Growing divergence in political and economic priorities; Example: Competition for regional dominance
    4. Iran Conflict Context: UAE underrepresented in Jeddah diplomacy; Exit seen as assertion of independent foreign policy.

    How does this exit impact OPEC and global oil governance?

    1. Cartel Weakening: Departure of third-largest producer reduces cohesion; Challenges collective price control
    2. Market Fragmentation: Rise of independent producers like USA, Canada, Brazil; Reduces OPEC relevance
    3. Price Volatility: Reduced coordination may increase supply unpredictability; Impacts global markets
    4. Historical Turning Point: UAE becomes first major exit since Qatar (2019); Signals beginning of OPEC decline

    What are the implications for India’s energy security?

    1. Price Advantage: Increased supply competition may reduce oil prices; Benefits import-dependent India
    2. Strategic Partnership: Strengthens India-UAE energy ties; UAE is 4th-largest crude supplier
    3. Investment Opportunities: Encourages upstream investments in India; Enhances energy security
    4. Reduced Cartel Power: Weakens OPEC’s ability to dictate prices; Ends “May Day” shocks for India.

    Conclusion

    The UAE’s exit reflects a transition from cartel-based oil governance to competitive, national energy strategies. It underscores declining OPEC influence, evolving geopolitics, and the urgency of energy transition. The move may accelerate the fragmentation of global oil markets.

  • Learning outcomes and child health are linked

    Why in the News?

    Recently, there has been POSHAN Pakhwada’s renewed focus on early childhood development (ECD) and India’s push towards human capital formation under Viksit Bharat 2047. It highlights a critical shift, from fragmented welfare delivery to integrated child development, linking nutrition, health, childcare, and learning outcomes

    Why is early childhood development (ECD) a critical policy priority in India?

    1. Critical window: Early childhood is a once-in-a-lifetime phase where brain architecture is formed through nutrition, stimulation, and caregiving.
    2. Economic returns: Investments in ECD yield higher future earnings, better learning outcomes, and lower social costs, often exceeding returns from later interventions.
    3. Policy recognition: National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 identifies Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) as a foundational stage, targeting universal pre-primary education by 2030.
    4. Persistent deficits: National surveys report high stunting, wasting, anaemia, and learning gaps, indicating systemic failure despite interventions.
      1. Stunting (Chronic Malnutrition): 35.5% of children under five are stunted (too short for age), indicating long-term undernutrition. Poshan Tracker data from October 2024 indicates 38.9% of measured children in Anganwadis are stunted.
      2. Wasting (Acute Malnutrition): 19.3% of children are wasted (low weight-for-height), a slight decrease from previous records but still high.
      3. Severe Wasting: A concerning increase in severe acute malnutrition (SAM) has been observed, with some reports noting it has increased in 13 of 36 regions/states.
      4. Underweight: 32.1%of children under five are underweight.
      5. Triple Burden: India faces a triple burden of malnutrition: undernutrition, micronutrient deficiency, and rising childhood obesity 3% of children

    Why have existing policies failed to deliver integrated child development outcomes?

    1. Sectoral fragmentation: Health, nutrition, and childcare operate in silos, leading to incomplete service delivery.
    2. Skewed priorities:
      1. Anganwadis: Focus on food supplementation.
      2. Health systems: Prioritise survival and disease control.
      3. Childcare and early learning: Receive limited attention, especially for children under 3
    3. Implementation gaps: Lack of convergence reduces effectiveness of ICDS, POSHAN Abhiyaan, and school meal programmes.
    4. Outcome neglect: Monitoring focuses on inputs (ration distribution) rather than child development outcomes.

    How does childcare access influence both child development and women’s workforce participation?

    1. Care dependency: Child outcomes depend on quality caregiving, which is constrained when childcare is unavailable.
    2. Work-care trade-off: Lack of childcare forces women into difficult choices, affecting both child development and female labour force participation.
    3. High-risk groups: Gaps are acute in informal sectors, agriculture, construction, domestic work.
    4. Case evidence:
      1. Karnataka’s Koshika Mane: Demonstrates community-based childcare benefiting children and working mothers.
      2. Mobile Creches: Shows feasibility of worksite childcare in urban informal settings.
      3. Palna Scheme: Integrates childcare into anganwadi-cum-creches.

    What administrative reforms are needed to strengthen early childhood outcomes?

    1. Platform integration:
      1. Anganwadi + health services: Enables counselling on responsive caregiving and maternal well-being.
      2. Service layering: Combines nutrition with early stimulation and caregiving support.
    2. Programme convergence:
      1. Livelihood linkage: Aligns childcare with social protection and employment programmes.
      2. Private sector role: Facilitates community-based childcare financing and delivery.
    3. Spatial targeting: Locates childcare centres near worksites, markets, and high female labour zones.
    4. Operational adjustments: Aligns anganwadi timings with working caregivers’ needs.

    Why is monitoring child development outcomes more important than input-based evaluation?

    1. Current limitation: Reviews focus on inputs (rations, beneficiaries) rather than child outcomes.
    2. Outcome-based approach:
      1. Tracks developmental indicators (cognitive, physical, social).
      2. Ensures service quality and equity benchmarks.
    3. Data utilisation: Uses existing data systems for local planning and accountability without increasing reporting burden.
    4. Systemic shift: Moves from distribution-centric governance to outcome-centric governance.

    How does integrated early childhood development contribute to India’s long-term growth vision?

    1. Human capital formation: Strengthens future workforce productivity and innovation capacity.
    2. Inclusive growth: Ensures children not only survive but thrive, reducing inequality.
    3. Demographic dividend: Converts India’s population advantage into economic gains.
    4. Strategic alignment: Supports goals of Viksit Bharat 2047 through early investment in human capabilities.

    Conclusion

    India possesses a strong policy base but lacks effective convergence and outcome-oriented implementation. Strengthening childcare systems, integrating services, and focusing on developmental outcomes is essential for transforming nutrition gains into learning and productivity gains, thereby sustaining long-term growth.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2024] Poverty and malnutrition create a vicious cycle, adversely affecting human capital formation. What steps can be taken to break the cycle?

    Linkage: This PYQ directly aligns with the article’s theme of nutrition-learning-human capital nexus. It highlights the need for integrated early childhood development and childcare reforms to break intergenerational deprivation.

  • Is the rupee back to the ‘fragile five’ days of 2013

    Why in the News?

    The Indian rupee has sharply depreciated to around ₹95 per US dollar, marking a ~12% fall over the last year-far steeper than its usual 3-4% annual decline. This sudden slide has revived concerns of a return to the 2013 ‘Fragile Five’ crisis, when India faced twin deficits and currency instability. The current situation is alarming because India is once again witnessing pressure on both current account and capital flows. This is a combination that historically triggered macroeconomic vulnerability.

    What defines the ‘Fragile Five’ and why was India included in 2013?

    1. Fragile Five Concept: Morgan Stanley identified five vulnerable emerging economies, India, Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa, Turkey, due to macroeconomic weaknesses.
    2. High Current Account Deficit: India imported more goods/services than it exported, creating external imbalance.
    3. Capital Flow Dependence: Heavy reliance on foreign investments made India vulnerable to global shocks.
    4. Quantitative Easing Impact: US Federal Reserve tapering reduced global liquidity, triggering capital outflows.
    5. Currency Depreciation Data:
      1. Indonesian Rupiah: Down 15.4%
      2. Brazilian Real: Down 17.6%
      3. South African Rand: Down 14.4%
      4. Turkish Lira: Down 19.9%

    How severe is the current rupee depreciation compared to historical trends?

    1. Sharp Depreciation: Rupee fell ~12% in 12 months vs normal 3-4% annual decline.
    2. Exchange Rate Movement: ₹60 per USD (2013) to ₹85 (2025) to ₹95+ (2026).
    3. Comparison with Peers:
      1. Indian Rupee: Down 12.09%
      2. Turkish Lira: Down 17.17%
      3. Indonesian Rupiah: Down 4.33%
    4. Contrasting Trends:
      1. Brazilian Real: Up 12.7%
      2. South African Rand: Up 9.98%
    5. Inference: India is among the worst-performing emerging market currencies currently.

    What role do current and capital account deficits play in currency weakness?

    1. Current Account Deficit (CAD): Imports exceed exports; net dollar outflow.
    2. Capital Account Deficit: Foreign investments decline or reverse; reduced dollar inflow.
    3. Twin Deficit Problem: Simultaneous CAD + capital outflow intensifies currency pressure.
    4. 2013 Scenario: India faced deficits in both accounts and hence it led to severe depreciation.
    5. 2025 Situation: Data indicates deficits emerging again in both accounts.
    6. Impact Mechanism:
      1. More dollars leaving than entering; rupee depreciation.
      2. Forex reserves used to stabilize currency; sustainability concerns.

    How does 2026 differ from the 2013 crisis despite similarities?

    1. Gradual vs Sudden Fall:
      1. 2013: Sharp fall within months
      2. 2026: Gradual but sustained depreciation
    2. Backloaded Weakness: Current fall spread across years rather than concentrated.
    3. Global Context:
      1. Then: US taper tantrum
      2. Now: Persistent global interest rate tightening
    4. Structural Improvements:
      1. Better forex reserves now
      2. Stronger inflation targeting framework

    Why is India again facing pressure on both external accounts?

    1. Export Weakness: Sluggish global demand affecting Indian exports.
      1. Goods exports fell 0.81% in February 2026, largely driven by a 40% drop in petroleum shipments.
    2. Import Dependence: High imports of oil and capital goods.
      1. India’s merchandise imports surged by 24.1% year-on-year to $63.71 billion in February 2026. This was primarily driven by a massive spike in gold and silver inflows and increased electronics demand. This widened the merchandise trade deficit for the fiscal year to over $333 billion.
    3. Manufacturing Competitiveness: Competition from China, Vietnam, Bangladesh.
      1. Competitiveness with China is impacted as it is specifically leveraging its supply chain to restrict key materials like solar inputs and rare earths (Gallium, Germanium).
    4. Capital Flight: Foreign investors reducing exposure to Indian markets.
    5. Negative FDI Trends: Indians investing abroad more than foreigners investing in India.

    What are the macroeconomic implications of sustained rupee depreciation?

    1. Imported Inflation: Higher cost of oil and imports increases inflation.
      1. A 5% depreciation in the rupee is estimated to raise inflation by approximately 15-25 basis points on an annualized basis.
    2. External Debt Burden: Dollar-denominated debt becomes costlier.
      1. Indian companies and the government face a higher cost of servicing dollar-denominated debt (External Commercial Borrowings (ECBs)).
      2. As the rupee weakens, more currency is needed to repay the same amount of principal and interest in dollars, creating severe “balance sheet stress” and reducing funds available for investment.
    3. Forex Reserve Pressure: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) actively intervenes in the foreign exchange market to manage volatility, selling billions of dollars to prevent a steeper decline. This sustained intervention reduces foreign exchange reserves, decreasing the country’s buffer against external shocks.
    4. Investment Sentiment: Currency instability deters foreign investors.
    5. Growth Impact: Higher import costs and inflation reduce consumption and investment.
    6. Wider Trade and Current Account Deficit (CAD): While a weak rupee usually helps exports, the high import dependence of Indian export-oriented sectors means that rising input costs often offset the competitive advantage. As a result, the trade deficit often widens rather than shrinks.

    Conclusion

    The rupee’s depreciation signals structural vulnerabilities in India’s external sector. While not identical to 2013, the re-emergence of twin deficits and capital flow volatility warrants policy vigilance. Strengthening exports, improving manufacturing competitiveness, and stabilizing capital flows remain critical.

    PYQ Relevance

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

    Linkage: The PYQ links global protectionism and currency manipulation to capital flows, trade balance, and exchange rate volatility, which are core drivers of Current Account Deficit and rupee depreciation. The article explains how external shocks + domestic deficits can push India towards ‘Fragile Five’-like macro instability, exactly reflected in the current rupee slide.

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