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Type: Explained

These Newscards correspond to the explained section of various newspapers. They become immensely important for both prelims and mains and special attention needs to be paid to them

  • Relief to digital fraud victims: How losses upto 50K can be recovered

    Why in the News?

    The RBI notified a revised compensation framework for victims of digital payment fraud, effective 1 January 2027. Under the scheme, victims can recover part of losses up to ₹50,000 through a state-supported fund. The move follows a sharp rise in fraud value despite fewer reported cases.

    Why did the RBI intervene now, and what does the scale of digital fraud reveal about the existing liability framework?

    1. Rising fraud value: Fraud cases fell to 10,114 in FY26, but the amount involved increased 46% to ₹48,021 crore, indicating fewer but larger frauds.
    2. Consumer liability gap: The earlier framework placed the burden of proof and recovery on customers. Banks faced limited liability unless negligence was established
    3. Electronic Banking Transactions (EBTs) as the primary vector: EBT are a digitally initiated banking transaction, including NEFT, RTGS, UPI, and card-based payments. They became the primary fraud channel, exposing a liability gap.
    4. State absorption of residual risk: The new framework makes the RBI the majority loss-bearer for unrecovered fraud amounts. This signals that the regulator treats digital fraud loss as a systemic risk requiring regulatory underwriting, not merely a bilateral consumer-bank dispute.

    What is the consumer entitlement under the new framework, and what conditions govern eligibility?

    1. Maximum compensation ceiling: A victim is eligible for compensation of up to 85% of net loss amount or ₹25,000, whichever is less. This applies to gross fraudulent EBT losses up to ₹50,000.
    2. Lifetime cap: The compensation is available once during the lifetime of the account holder. Repeat claims for subsequent fraud events are not covered under this mechanism.
    3. Complaint filing window: Victims must lodge a complaint regarding the fraud within five calendar days of the event. Claims filed beyond this window are ineligible regardless of the loss amount.
    4. Loss verification standard: The loss must be established in accordance with the internal processes set out in the victim’s bank’s policy. The framework does not prescribe a uniform evidentiary standard across banks, leaving verification to individual bank procedures.
    5. Threshold-based compensation rate: For losses below ₹29,412, the victim receives 85% of the amount lost. For losses between ₹29,412 and ₹50,000, the victim receives a flat ₹25,000 (the ceiling).

    How is the cost of compensation shared between the RBI, the victim’s bank, and the beneficiary bank?

    1. Domestic fraud (below ₹29,412): RBI bears 65% of compensation. The victim’s bank and beneficiary bank contribute 10% each.
    2. Domestic EBT fraud between ₹29,412 and ₹50,000 (₹25,000 flat compensation): The RBI contributes ₹19,118 (76.5%). The victim’s bank and the beneficiary bank each contribute ₹2,941 (approximately 12% each).
    3. Cross-border EBT fraud (elevated bank contribution): In cross-border cases, the victim’s bank’s contribution rises to 20% for frauds below ₹29,412, and to ₹5,882 for frauds in the ₹29,412-₹50,000 band.
    4. Multiple beneficiary banks (proportionate allocation): Where more than one beneficiary bank receives the fraudulent amount, each bank’s share of the compensation is proportionate to the amount credited to its accounts.
    5. Numerical illustration (official example): If fraud loss is ₹40,000 and ₹15,000 is recovered, the net compensable loss is ₹25,000. The victim receives 85% of ₹25,000 = ₹21,250. The RBI contributes ₹16,250; victim’s bank and beneficiary bank contribute ₹2,500 each. If nothing is recovered, the victim receives ₹25,000 (ceiling), distributed in the same proportion.

    What standard of bank negligence triggers full bank liability, and what are the banks’ procedural obligations?

    1. Full bank liability for own negligence: Where fraud arises from the bank’s own negligence, the bank must compensate the victim entirely. The RBI cost-sharing mechanism does not apply in such cases.
    2. Safety and security failures: Failing to ensure proper safety and security mechanisms for EBTs constitutes negligence. This includes system malfunctions and security breaches.
    3. Alert failures: Failing to send mandatory transaction alerts for EBTs above ₹500 is classified as negligence. The alert obligation is non-discretionary.
    4. Complaint handling failures: Failing to provide 24×7 channels for customer complaints and failing to act diligently on received complaints both constitute negligence. Banks cannot limit complaint access to business hours.
    5. Complaint resolution timelines: Banks must resolve fraudulent EBT complaints within 45 calendar days for domestic EBTs and within 60 calendar days for cross-border EBTs. Breach of these timelines has implications for bank liability assessment.
    6. Post-complaint containment obligation: On receipt of any fraudulent EBT complaint, a bank must take prompt steps to prevent further unauthorised EBTs in the customer’s account. This is a proactive duty, not a passive acknowledgment obligation.

    Does the framework resolve the consumer’s structural vulnerability to digital fraud, or does it shift the problem without eliminating it?

    1. Consumer protection: The framework guarantees time-bound compensation and imposes liability for proven bank negligence.
    2. Limited bank incentives: RBI bears most compensation costs. Banks usually contribute only 10-20%, reducing incentives to strengthen fraud prevention.
    3. Procedural burden: Victims must report fraud within five days and satisfy bank-specific verification standards.
    4. Source of fraud: The framework compensates losses but does not strengthen EBT security standards or regulate payment intermediaries.
    5. Residual reporting: Victims must also report fraud to the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal or Cyber Crime Helpline. This supports record-keeping, not recovery.
    6. Coverage mismatch: The compensation cap is ₹25,000, whereas average fraud value in FY26 was about ₹4.75 crore per case, limiting relevance to small-value consumer fraud.

    Conclusion

    The RBI framework introduces the first regulatory mechanism for sharing consumer losses from digital fraud. It reduces immediate customer losses but leaves banks with limited financial incentives to prevent fraud. Large-value frauds, security standards and accountability of payment intermediaries remain unresolved.

  • India’s eastern border affected by flow of opium from Myanmar

    Why in the News?

    The Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) released its 2026 annual report on 27 June 2026, tabled by Home Minister Amit Shah. The report documents Myanmar’s emergence as the primary global opium source following the Taliban’s 2022 ban on drug cultivation in Afghanistan. Infact, India’s northeastern border corridor is identified as the most direct and porous entry point for this expanding production base. 

    What change in the global narcotics supply chain has created new pressure on India’s northeastern borders?

    1. Taliban-imposed ban: The Taliban government’s 2022 ban on drug cultivation in Afghanistan eliminated the world’s largest opium producer from the supply chain, creating a vacuum in global opium supply.
    2. Myanmar’s replacement role: Myanmar filled this vacuum rapidly. The NCB’s 2026 annual report identifies Myanmar as the alternative global opium source, with consequences already visible along India’s eastern borders.
    3. Scale of cultivation expansion: Myanmar’s illicit opium cultivation expanded by approximately 56% between 2021 and 2023. The area under poppy cultivation reached 45,200 hectares.
    4. Golden Triangle transformation: Myanmar’s Golden Triangle has expanded beyond its traditional opiate role. Shan State now produces both opium and methamphetamine (Yaba), making it a major poly-drug hub.
    5. Manipur corridor as primary entry point: National Highway-102 through Manipur is the main land route for heroin and methamphetamine into India.
    6. Secondary corridor via Mizoram: Champhai in Mizoram provides the second major trafficking route via Myanmar’s Chin State. Drugs are routed through Assam’s Barak Valley via Aizawl and adjoining road networks.

    How have India’s northeastern states been transformed from transit zones into active narcotics staging grounds?

    1. Porous border mechanisms: The Free Movement Regime (FMR) along the India-Myanmar border and unfenced border stretches have converted the Northeast from a transit route into a distribution hub.
    2. States bearing frontline exposure: The NCB report specifically identifies that Manipur, Mizoram and Nagaland face the highest exposure due to increased drug production in Myanmar.
    3. Mizoram’s seizure data: Mizoram seized 1,477 kg of amphetamine-type stimulants (ATS) in 2025 out of the national total of 3,485 kg.
    4. Manipur’s seizure data: Manipur accounted for 535 kg in recoveries from other reported states. Delhi (454 kg), Gujarat (308 kg), and Karnataka (164 kg) reported significant quantities, demonstrating that narcotics originating from the northeast are penetrating deep into the hinterland.
    5. Distribution geography: Drugs move through the Barak Valley to Punjab, Gujarat and Maharashtra, making the Northeast a distribution node rather than a consumption centre.

    What does the drone-based trafficking data reveal about the operational maturity of trafficking networks?

    1. Five-fold increase from Pakistan border: Drone-based drug trafficking from across the Pakistan border into India has increased five-fold over the past five years, particularly in Punjab, demonstrating aerial circumvention of border controls.
    2. Incident trajectory (NCB data): Drone trafficking incidents surged from 3 in 2021 to 35 in 2022, 28 in 2023, 178 in 2024, and 305 in 2025, This is a 100-fold increase in incident count over five years.
    3. Seizure volume in 2025: In 2025, drone-related cases resulted in the seizure of 468 kg of narcotics, a 96% increase in quantity over 2024. Punjab recorded 298 cases and 461 kg seized.
    4. UAV sophistication: Trafficking networks are using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) to circumvent traditional border controls, the NCB stated.
    5. Additional reporting states: Geographical spread: Rajasthan and Jammu & Kashmir also reported drone-related trafficking incidents.

    Where does the structural vulnerability in India’s border architecture lie and why cannot existing mechanisms address it?

    1. The FMR design conflict: The FMR facilitates movement of border communities. This objective conflicts with effective narcotics interdiction.
    2. Unfenced stretches: Drugs are smuggled through unfenced and porous stretches of the border.
    3. Geographic chokepoint: National Highway No. 102 through the Manipur corridor, the Champhai route in Mizoram carry both legal trade and illicit narcotics, making interception difficult.
    4. Ethnic armed group control: The poly-drug production in Myanmar is primarily concentrated in areas controlled by ethnic armed groups in Shan State. These groups operate outside the reach of both the Myanmar state and Indian border enforcement, making source-side interdiction impossible.
    5. South Asian arm of Afghan trade: The NCB specifically identifies that the South Asian arm of the Afghan drug trade flows through Pakistan into India via both the land frontier (Punjab, Rajasthan) and the maritime frontier (Gujarat, Maharashtra coastlines).

    Conclusion

    Myanmar’s rise as the world’s alternative opium supplier has created a structural narcotics challenge for India. The Northeast has become an active distribution hub rather than merely a transit corridor. Drone-enabled trafficking further weakens conventional border controls. Addressing the challenge requires technology-driven surveillance, calibrated reforms to the FMR and stronger cooperation with Myanmar.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2018] India’s proximity to two of the world’s biggest illicit opium-growing states has enhanced its internal security concerns. Explain the linkages between drug trafficking and other illicit activities such as gunrunning, money laundering, and human trafficking. What countermeasures should be taken to prevent the same?

    Linkage: The PYQ examines the internal security implications of cross-border drug trafficking and its nexus with organised crime. The article explains how Myanmar-origin narcotics trafficking through India’s northeastern border has become a major cross-border security challenge.

  • 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.

  • No one should own the law: why government standards should be public

    Why in the News?

    The issue is in the news following a proposal under the Jan Vishwas framework to centrally publish all government edicts and treat any non publicly accessible edict as null and void. The debate has also gained attention after the Indian Roads Congress (IRC) issued a takedown notice against the public sharing of its road safety standards, raising questions about whether government standards and safety regulations should be freely accessible as part of the law and public knowledge.

    What are government edicts? 

    Government Edicts: Government edicts are legally binding instruments issued by the State, including laws, rules, regulations, notifications, circulars, guidelines, standards, SOPs, and government orders that govern citizens and institutions.

    Why should they be public?

    • Rule of Law: Citizens cannot obey laws they cannot access. Eg: Public access to Indian Roads Congress (IRC) standards.
    • Legal Transparency: Prevents hidden or “shadow” regulations. Eg: Central publication of government notifications.
    • Democratic Accountability: Enables public scrutiny of government actions. Eg: Citizens reviewing road safety standards.
    • Access to Justice: Ensures equal knowledge of legal obligations. Eg: MSMEs accessing compliance standards without barriers.
    • Citizen Empowerment: Creates an informed citizenry and participatory governance. Eg: Engineers and researchers using public standards.

    Why is public access to safety standards important for democracy?

    • Public Safety: Open standards improve compliance and reduce risks. Eg: Helmet and building safety standards.
    • Right to Information: Citizens have a right to know rules affecting their lives. Eg: Free access to drinking water quality standards.
    • Transparency: Prevents arbitrary enforcement of technical regulations. Eg: Publicly available road construction norms.
    • Ease of Doing Business: Reduces compliance costs for businesses. Eg: MSMEs accessing manufacturing standards.
    • Inclusive Governance: Eliminates information asymmetry. Eg: Contractors and citizens following the same safety norms.

    How can the Jan Vishwas framework improve legal transparency?

    • Centralized Repository: All government edicts available on one digital platform. Eg: Expansion of India Code.
    • Removal of Shadow Instruments: Makes regulations, circulars, guidelines, and SOPs publicly accessible. Eg: Publishing notifications and standards.
    • Null and Void Principle: Unpublished edicts should have no legal force. Eg: Citizens cannot be penalized under inaccessible rules.
    • Digital Governance: Creates searchable and regularly updated legal databases. Eg: Online repository of standards and regulations.
    • Regulatory Certainty: Improves predictability and compliance. Eg: Uniform interpretation of safety standards.

    Which global practices can India adopt for open government standards?

    • Open Government Doctrine: Laws belong to the public domain. Eg: U.S. Supreme Court principle, “No one should own the law.”
    • Public Interest Access: Mandatory safety standards should be freely accessible. Eg: European Union constitutional jurisprudence.
    • Open Licensing: Government information can be reused without restrictions. Eg: UK Open Government Licence.
    • Works of Government Policy: Government publications should not be subject to restrictive copyright. Eg: U.S. federal government works are in the public domain.
    • Digital Legal Repository: Ensures centralized access to legal materials. Eg: Government portals providing free legal documents.

    What are the implications of making government standards freely accessible?

    • Strengthened Rule of Law: Ensures equal access to legal obligations. Eg: Public availability of BIS and IRC standards.
    • Improved Public Safety: Promotes better implementation of technical standards. Eg: Compliance with building and road safety norms.
    • Economic Growth: Lowers compliance costs and encourages innovation. Eg: Support for Make in India and MSMEs.
    • Greater Transparency and Accountability: Reduces regulatory opacity. Eg: Open access to government notifications and guidelines.
    • Enhanced Democratic Participation: Creates informed stakeholders. Eg: Researchers, civil society, and courts using open government standards.
    • Knowledge as a Public Good: Publicly funded information should benefit everyone. Eg: BIS making Indian Standards freely available online.

    Conclusion

    Government edicts and mandatory safety standards are public goods that form the foundation of the rule of law, transparency, and democratic accountability. Ensuring their free and universal accessibility through the Jan Vishwas framework can strengthen legal certainty, public safety, ease of doing business, and citizen empowerment, reaffirming the principle that “no one should own the law.”

  • Guardrails in AI growth to protect developing nations

    Why in the News?

    The United Nations General Assembly established a Global Dialogue on AI and an Independent International Scientific Panel on AI, marking the first attempt to create a global scientific body dedicated to this technology. This development has exposed a core tension: AI governance is simultaneously moving toward global coordination and fragmenting into competing national regulatory frameworks. The asymmetry between AI-capable and AI-dependent nations determines who controls both the risks and the benefits of this transition.

    What is the current global AI governance landscape and why is it structurally insufficient?

    1. Parallel and voluntary structures: Most existing frameworks have voluntary participation, varying legal force, and focus on specific aspects, safety, ethics, or standards, with no common binding floor.
    2. EU AI Act 2024: The most comprehensive binding framework to date. It prioritises safe, transparent, non-discriminatory, and environmentally friendly AI. Its extraterritorial reach is limited to EU-market participants.
    3. UN Global Dialogue on AI: UNGA invited every country to participate. An Independent Scientific Panel makes periodic assessments to inform the Dialogue. It lacks enforcement authority.
    4. Annual global AI summits: The most recent edition was held in New Delhi in February 2025. Outcomes remain consultative and have not produced enforceable international agreements.
    5. Regulatory fragmentation: Each country developing its own framework forces companies to satisfy differing requirements across geographies, creating pressure to favour permissive jurisdictions.
    6. Innovation slowdown risk: Companies may roll out services only in regulatory-friendly markets, deepening access inequality for developing nations.

    What makes global AI governance necessary?

    1. Cross-border technology: AI systems operate across jurisdictions and affect multiple countries simultaneously.
    2. Regulatory fragmentation: Different national regulations increase compliance costs and slow innovation.
    3. Unequal regulatory capacity: Many developing countries lack the expertise and institutions needed to regulate AI effectively.
    4. Global public impact: AI influences economic growth, governance, healthcare, education, and security.
    5. Need for common standards: Shared principles can improve safety, interoperability, and trust.

    How does regulatory fragmentation produce asymmetric harm for developing nations?

    1. Infrastructure concentration: A few countries already possess the computing, talent, and financial resources to support the entire AI ecosystem, before global rules are set.
    2. Regulatory capacity deficit: Many countries in Asia and Africa lack institutions to frame robust domestic AI regulations or protect their national interests in international negotiations.
    3. Data sovereignty trap: Insisting that all AI development remain within national boundaries accelerates power concentration rather than distributing it.
    4. Digital colonisation risk: Developing countries become consumers of AI systems designed elsewhere, with no input into their values, benchmarks, or constraints.
    5. Denial of transformative benefits: AI is a technology of the order of the steam engine. Excluding developing nations from its benefits is a disservice to humanity, not merely to affected countries.
    6. Minimum regulatory floor: A globally agreed set of minimum standards is the only mechanism that ensures developing countries benefit from AI advances without surrendering domestic policy space.

    Does global AI regulation resolve the equity problem or does it risk replicating the nuclear non-proliferation trap?

    The equity problem refers to the structural exclusion of predominantly the Global South from the economic benefits, decision-making processes, and capacity building surrounding artificial intelligence.

    1. Non-proliferation analogy: Global AI regulation could restrict unrestricted AI development to only certain countries or companies, creating a permanent hierarchy between technology producers and users.
    2. Nuclear regime parallel: This outcome embeds existing power differentials into binding international law, replicating a governance structure that legitimises asymmetry rather than correcting it.
    3. Biological and chemical weapons treaties: Existing international agreements already control dangerous dual-use technologies. Proposals may extend this logic to AI models and to the infrastructure required to build them.
    4. Logic of restriction: The case for restricting AI capable of enabling next-generation biological or chemical weapons is logically defensible. The risk is who draws the boundary and in whose interest.
    5. Political capture risk: “Responsible AI” defined by incumbent powers locks in first-mover advantage and treats developing nations as permanent recipients rather than co-producers of governance norms.

    What do international governance models demonstrate about the feasibility of a globally agreed AI floor?

    1. EU AI Act: binding regulatory precedent: Demonstrates that comprehensive, legally enforceable AI governance is achievable at supranational scale. Sets de facto global standards through market leverage.
    2. UN Global Dialogue: universalist participation model: Universal country invitation distinguishes it from club-based governance. Participatory architecture is its most relevant design feature for developing nations.
    3. Google AI Commons: private open-access precedent: Demonstrates that large AI actors can adopt open-access norms voluntarily. Lacks enforceable accountability.
    4. Trusted AI Commons: India-hosted hybrid model: A one-stop repository of tools, benchmarks, datasets, and protocols for testing AI deployment, with liberal licensing. Significant as a Global South-led governance mechanism.
    5. Limits of existing models: None produces a binding universal minimum floor. The EU Act covers only its market; the UN Dialogue lacks enforcement; Commons models are voluntary. The gap between architecture and enforceable standards remains open.

    What is the Trusted AI Commons and does it constitute an adequate institutional response to the governance deficit?

    1. Definition: A repository of tools, benchmarks, datasets, and protocols needed to develop and deploy AI systems safely and responsibly. Functions as a one-stop shop for AI testing and deployment support.
    2. Institutional origin: Main outcome of the New Delhi AI Impact Summit, February 2026. Hosted and managed by India through India’s AI Mission.
    3. Licensing design: Open, accessible, with liberal licensing. Aggregates tools already developed worldwide, including by IIT Madras, rather than commissioning new ones.
    4. Practical function (example): A country testing an AI system for agriculture can use the Commons to locate available tools, benchmarks, datasets, and protocols in one place, without needing domestic AI infrastructure to find or validate them.
    5. Adequacy gap: Addresses the access and deployment deficit. Does not create a binding minimum floor. Does not build regulatory capacity in developing nations. Necessary but insufficient.
    6. India’s strategic significance: Hosting the Commons positions India as a norm-setter rather than a norm-follower, consistent with its broader foreign policy of strategic autonomy: the ability to act independently of major power blocs in international affairs. 

    The Trusted AI Commons

    1. It is an open, federated, and voluntary global platform designed to serve as a consolidated repository for AI safety benchmarks, evaluation tools, standards, and deployment frameworks.
    2. The initiative was integrated into the New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact.

    Core Objectives & Utility: The platform is designed to act as a “one-stop shop” for developers, researchers, and regulators to access non-proprietary resources.

    1. Open Accessibility: Provides tools under liberal, open-source licensing to prevent safety mechanisms from being locked behind big-tech barriers.
    2. Standardised Evaluation: Hosts cross-jurisdictional benchmarks to test AI behavior against bias, misalignment, and operational errors before deployment.
    3. Global Interoperability: Fosters cross-border collaboration by mapping technical safety frameworks across different international standards.

    Hosting and Management

    1. Initial Leadership: The Trusted AI Commons is initially hosted and managed by India under the auspices of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) and the IndiaAI Mission.
    2. Collaborative Network: Rather than building every mechanism from scratch, it aggregates tools from leading global research bodies, such as the Centre for Responsible AI (IIT Madras), the UK AI Security Institute, and Mozilla

    Conclusion

    Fragmented national AI regulation concentrates power in AI-capable nations and denies developing countries both protection and access. A globally agreed minimum regulatory floor is the necessary condition for equity but if framed through non-proliferation logic, it encodes existing power hierarchies into international law. The Trusted AI Commons addresses the access deficit but does not substitute for binding global governance. The central unresolved precondition is universal participation in the design of global AI rules, not merely in their implementation.

  • Biochar offers a way to turn India’s farm smoke into black gold

    Why in the News?

    Punjab and Haryana burn over 20 million tonnes of paddy straw annually because no commercially viable alternative exists for farmers with short post-harvest windows. This mass burning releases greenhouse gases and fine particulate matter while destroying soil organic carbon that depleted soils urgently need. At this time, biochar can come as a solution to India’s twin challenges of stubble burning and declining soil health.

    Why does India’s biomass abundance produce soil poverty rather than soil wealth?

    1. Paradox of abundance: India generates large volumes of crop residue after each harvest. This biomass contains organic carbon that could restore depleted soils. Instead, it is burned in the field.
    2. Structural driver of burning: Short post-harvest intervals between kharif and rabi crops leave farmers with insufficient time to incorporate residue into soil. The absence of affordable alternatives makes open burning the default.
    3. Dual consequence of burning: Burning releases greenhouse gases and fine particulate matter. It also eliminates organic matter that would otherwise improve soil structure, water retention, and microbial activity.
    4. Soil organic carbon crisis: Agricultural soils across India suffer from low soil organic carbon, poor water-holding capacity, and rapid nutrient loss. Low organic carbon reduces crop productivity independently of fertiliser inputs.
    5. Climate vulnerability: Degraded soils with low water-holding capacity make crops more vulnerable to moisture stress. Soil health is therefore a climate adaptation variable, not only a productivity variable.

    What is biochar and what does it do to soil that conventional crop management does not?

    1. Definition: Biochar is the carbon-rich solid produced when organic material is heated at high temperature in a low-oxygen environment through pyrolysis: the thermal decomposition of material in the absence of oxygen.
    2. Persistence: Biochar resists biological decomposition and remains locked in soil for centuries. Conventional compost decomposes quickly, releasing carbon back into the atmosphere.
    3. Porous structure: Biochar is highly porous. This aggregates soil particles, increases water-holding capacity by 10% to 25%, and creates microhabitats for beneficial soil microorganisms.
    4. Productivity gains: Studies indicate biochar addition to degraded soils improves crop productivity by 10% to 30%, particularly in nutrient-poor soils.
    5. Field evidence from India: Biochar from maize stalks applied to black soils in Akola, Maharashtra improved soil organic carbon and overall soil fertility in field trials. Kerala research on coconut leaf stalk biochar showed improved soil quality across cropping systems.
    6. Integration pathway: Biochar can be incorporated into natural farming, soil health management, and carbon farming programmes without requiring farmers to change cropping systems.

    What problem does biochar seek to solve?

    1. Crop residue burning: Punjab and Haryana burn over 20 million tonnes of paddy straw annually due to short harvesting windows and limited alternatives.
    2. Air pollution: Residue burning releases greenhouse gases and fine particulate matter.
    3. Loss of soil nutrients: Burning destroys organic matter that could have been returned to agricultural soils.
    4. Declining soil quality: Many Indian soils suffer from low soil organic carbon, poor water retention, and nutrient depletion.
    5. Resource inefficiency: Agricultural biomass is treated as waste instead of being recycled into productive use.

    Why is biochar relevant for India’s climate and sustainability goals?

    1. Climate adaptation: Healthy soils improve resilience against droughts, heatwaves, and erratic rainfall.
    2. Reduced input dependence: Better nutrient retention lowers reliance on external inputs.
    3. Support for natural farming: Biochar complements natural farming and soil health initiatives.
    4. Carbon sequestration: It removes carbon from the atmosphere and stores it in soils.
    5. Circular economy: Agricultural waste is converted into a productive resource.

    How do carbon credits convert biochar from an agronomic input into an economic model for farmers and cooperatives?

    1. Carbon credit mechanism: Biochar sequesters carbon dioxide in stable form. Verified sequestration earns carbon credits tradeable on voluntary and compliance carbon markets.
    2. Rigorous eligibility of biochar carbon: Biochar carbon satisfies rigorous stability criteria for long-term sequestration. It is classifiable as persistent carbon dioxide removal under accepted accounting standards.
    3. Quantified yield per tonne: The VM0042 methodology from Verra quantifies both avoided emissions from residue burning and long-term soil carbon sequestration. Each tonne of certified biochar generates 2.2 to 2.8 tonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent credits.
    4. Revenue pathway: Certified biochar can be sold on carbon markets at prevailing prices. This provides additional income for project developers, farmers, and cooperatives with no current economic return on residue management.
    5. Policy packaging: The government can package biochar production and carbon registry registration into a single programme. This creates a strong economic incentive for mass adoption among farmers who currently default to burning.
    6. KISAN kiln test case: The KISAN kiln developed at IIT-Kharagpur is being tested in projects that allow smallholder farmers to monetise farm waste through certified biochar production. This confirms the income model is operationally feasible at the farm level.

    What do international examples reveal about the conditions required for biochar to scale beyond pilot projects?

    1. Kenya: rice husk conversion: Kenya has turned rice husks into certified biochar that improves soil pH and phosphorus content. This shows locally available residue can generate internationally certifiable credits without high-cost imported technology.
    2. Thailand: national policy integration: Thailand has pushed biochar adoption through national initiatives linking soil rehabilitation to carbon management. This shows mass adoption requires government-coordinated demand creation, not supply-side technology promotion alone.
    3. Brazil: Embrapa sugarcane biochar: Brazil’s Embrapa Institute has reported high carbon retention and large yield gains from on-farm biochar generated from sugarcane bagasse. National carbon registry access created a direct policy-to-market pipeline sustaining farmer incentives.
    4. Common design feature: All three cases combine decentralised pyrolysis with strong MRV: measurement, reporting, and verification, the process of quantifying emissions reductions to qualify for carbon credits. No country achieved scale without certified MRV.
    5. Implication for India: India possesses similar feedstock diversity and agricultural scale. The gap is the absence of a certified MRV framework linking farm-level production to a national carbon registry accessible to smallholders.

    Why does biochar’s proven effectiveness at the plot level not automatically translate into national adoption?

    1. Pilot trap: Biochar in India remains confined to research trials and pilot projects and is alien to most farmers. A technically proven intervention can remain permanently at pilot scale when the economic incentive structure and delivery ecosystem are absent.
    2. Residue as disposal problem, not resource: Agricultural residues are seen only as a disposal problem in India. This framing prevents investment in the infrastructure needed to treat residue as a revenue-generating raw material.
    3. Carbon market access gap: Accessing carbon markets requires certified MRV, registry registration, and linkage to buyers. Smallholder farmers lack the institutional capacity to navigate this individually. Cooperative aggregators are necessary intermediaries that do not yet exist at scale.
    4. Market linkage absent: Carbon credit revenue requires market linkages, entrepreneurship, and cost-effective technology access. These supply-chain components are absent in most states. The value of biomass can only be realised through an integrated ecosystem linking innovation, investment, and markets simultaneously.
    5. Not a knowledge problem: Pyrolysis technology, carbon accounting methodology, and agronomic evidence all exist. The constraint is consistent failure to assemble the institutional and market infrastructure needed to execute at scale.

    How does expanding biochar feedstock to urban organic waste extend both the circular economy potential and the climate benefit?

    1. Urban feedstock volume: India generates around 62 million tonnes of municipal solid garbage per year. More than 50% is biodegradable. Sewage sludge and crop residues can also be converted into biochar.
    2. Circular economy rationale: Converting urban organic waste into biochar is consistent with circular economy: an economic model that keeps materials in use, regenerates natural systems, and designs out pollution. Waste diverted from landfills stops producing methane and becomes a useful product instead.
    3. Waste-stream conversion: Biochar production from urban organic waste turns large waste streams into a product with economic value. This reduces municipal waste management costs while providing soil amendment supply for agriculture.
    4. Climate mitigation contribution: Urban biochar production combines landfill methane avoidance with long-term soil carbon sequestration. Both effects are separately quantifiable and certifiable, adding to India’s climate mitigation commitments.

    Conclusion

    India’s parallel crises of air pollution and soil degradation share a single root: the treatment of biomass as waste rather than as a resource. Biochar resolves this at the technical level. The unresolved problem is institutional: no integrated ecosystem linking decentralised pyrolysis, certified carbon markets, national registry access, and farmer income pathways currently exists at scale. Even if pyrolysis technology proliferates and carbon credit prices appreciate, these gains cannot reach smallholder farmers without cooperative aggregation structures, state-backed MRV frameworks, and policy packaging that makes the full farm-to-market pipeline accessible. The next step is not more pilots. It is building the infrastructure that converts proven plots into national scale.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] What is Integrated Farming System? How is it helpful to small and marginal farmers in India?

    Linkage: UPSC asks about sustainable and resource-efficient farming systems that improve productivity and resilience for small and marginal farmers. Biochar strengthens Integrated Farming Systems by improving soil fertility, water retention, and nutrient efficiency, thereby enhancing farm sustainability and incomes.

  • The key hurdle to climate targets: Electrification

    Why in the News?

    At the Bonn climate talks, Turkey proposed raising the global electrification target to 35% by 2035, ahead of hosting COP31 in Antalya with Australia in November. Electricity meets only a small fraction of the world’s energy needs, and most of that electricity is itself generated from fossil fuels. This exposes a gap between rising clean electricity generation and the much slower pace at which economies actually switch their energy consumption to electricity.

    Where does electrification fit among existing global climate goals?

    1. Paris Agreement temperature targets: The 2015 Paris Agreement commits the world to limiting the rise in global temperatures within 2 degrees Celsius, preferably 1.5 degrees Celsius, from pre-industrial times.
    2. Renewable capacity target: Annual COP meetings have produced the goal of increasing the installed capacity of renewable energy.
    3. Net-zero target: COP meetings have also produced the goal of achieving a global net-zero emissions target.
    4. Climate finance target: Mobilising climate finance is a further goal that has emerged from COP meetings.
    5. Electrification as a new addition: The 35% electrification target, if agreed upon, would be one more addition to this existing set of climate-related global goals, all aimed at reducing the world’s dependence on fossil fuels and speeding up the energy transition.

    How is the progress of the energy transition measured?

    1. Total Primary Energy Supply (TPES): A measure of all energy available for use in an economy, including energy consumed in producing, transforming and transporting energy itself.
    2. Final Energy Consumption (FEC): A measure of energy ultimately used by end-consumers. It excludes energy burnt to produce electricity, energy used in refining petroleum, diesel burnt in transporting fuel, and transmission and distribution losses.
    3. Structural difference between fossil fuels and renewables: Fossil fuels are direct sources of energy and only require to be burnt to produce energy, whereas renewable sources such as solar, wind, nuclear or hydropower have to be converted into electricity before they can be put to use.
    4. Why electrification rate is the relevant metric: Because renewable sources require conversion into electricity before use, every final use of energy would have to be electrified for a complete transition away from fossil fuels to be possible.

    Why does electrification remain limited despite rising electricity demand?

    1. Slow movement in FEC share: Electricity’s share in FEC rose only from 17.7% in 2015 to 21% in 2025, a modest increase over a decade.
      1. Global electricity share in FEC: Electricity accounted for only 21% of total final energy consumption (TFEC) in 2025, according to the IEA.
      2. India’s electricity share in FEC: The corresponding figure for India is about 23%, according to government data.
    2. Rising generation volumes: Global electricity generation increased from about 24 terawatt-hours (TWh) in 2015 to over 32 TWh in 2025, a rise of nearly 33%.
    3. Generation growth has outpaced consumption-side electrification: Electricity output rose by a third over the decade while its share of final consumption rose by only about 3 percentage points.
    4. Hard-to-electrify sectors persist: Shipping, aviation, heavy-duty and long-haul trucks, high-temperature industrial processes in iron, steel, cement and ceramics, and many residential needs like heating remain largely unelectrified and cannot run on renewables.

    Which sectors remain difficult to electrify?

    1. Aviation: Long-distance air travel lacks commercially viable large-scale electric alternatives.
    2. Shipping: Heavy maritime transport depends on high-energy-density fuels.
    3. Heavy Industry: Steel, cement and chemicals require high-temperature industrial processes.
    4. Long-Haul Freight: Heavy trucks face battery and charging limitations.
    5. Energy-Intensive Manufacturing: Several production processes remain dependent on fossil fuels.

    Why does renewable energy success not automatically translate into climate success?

    1. Steady rise in clean generation share: The share of non-fossil sources (renewables, hydro and nuclear) in electricity generation rose from 33.6% in 2015 to 42.6% in 2025, according to the IEA.
    2. Electricity itself is still the majority fossil: In 2025, only about 42% of all electricity generated worldwide came from non-fossil sources, meaning most electricity generated is still fossil-based.
    3. Compounding effect on total energy use: Only 21% of total final energy consumption is met through electricity, and only about 42% of that electricity is clean.
    4. The reality-check figure: This means just over 8% of total energy consumed in the world is currently clean.
    5. Three decades of policy effort, limited consumption-side result: Nearly three decades of favourable policies, financial incentives and technology innovation to promote cleaner fuels have left more than 90% of current global energy use still dependent on fossil fuels.

    How ambitious is the proposed 35% electrification target?

    1. IRENA’s threshold for 1.5°C: The International Renewable Energy Agency states that a 35% electrification rate by 2035 is the minimum needed to keep any realistic hope of staying on the 1.5-degrees Celsius pathway.
    2. Investment requirement: Achieving that level of electrification requires about $1.2 trillion to be pumped into electricity systems every year.
    3. Accompanying requirements: Rapid expansion in renewables and battery storage systems must also happen alongside this investment.
    4. Scale of the gap from current trajectory: The IEA projects electricity’s share of global FEC will rise to only about 24% by 2030, against a target of 35% by 2035, even as non-fossil sources (renewables plus hydro and nuclear) are projected to supply nearly half of global electricity by 2030.

    What risks could derail even this limited trajectory?

    1. Geopolitical uncertainty: It is unclear how wars and geopolitical tensions will affect the pace of energy transition.
    2. Two opposing pressures: Greater uncertainty in fossil fuel supplies and rising oil prices may push some countries toward renewables, while the economic fallout of conflicts may squeeze budgets available for new technologies and infrastructure.
    3. Risk of reverting to convenient fuels: Countries may be tempted to use whatever energy source is easily available, regardless of its climate impact.

    What do international targets indicate about the future direction of climate policy?

    1. COP28 Consensus: Countries agreed to accelerate the global energy transition.
    2. IRENA Roadmap: The agency proposes raising electrification to 35% by 2035.
    3. Net-Zero Pathways: Most credible decarbonisation scenarios require major electrification gains.
    4. Renewables-Electrification Link: Renewable expansion and electrification must progress together.
    5. Long-Term Transition: Climate targets increasingly depend on transforming energy consumption patterns, not merely energy production.

    Conclusion

    Clean electricity generation has scaled steadily, but the constraint on climate targets has shifted to how much of total energy consumption is electrified, not how clean the electricity supply is. Only about 8% of global energy consumption is currently clean, and electricity’s FEC share is projected to reach just 24% by 2030 against a 35% by 2035 target. Hence, climate progress will remain limited unless transport, industry and buildings convert their direct fossil-fuel use to electricity at a much faster pace.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2022] Do you think India will meet 50 per cent of its energy needs from renewable energy by 2030? Justify your answer.

    Linkage: The question examines India’s renewable energy transition and the feasibility of achieving climate commitments. The article argues that renewable energy expansion alone is insufficient; achieving climate goals also requires rapid electrification of final energy consumption.

  • Right of way

    Why in the News?

    The Supreme Court has reaffirmed that the right to walk safely on demarcated footpaths is part of Article 21 and therefore a fundamental right. The judgment highlights the gap between constitutional recognition of pedestrian rights and the absence of adequate pedestrian infrastructure.

    What has the Supreme Court held on the right to walk?

    1. Article 21 Protection: The Court held that safe access to footpaths forms part of the right to life and personal liberty.
    2. Pedestrian Dignity: Walking is not merely a mode of transport. It is a constitutional entitlement linked to safety and dignity.
    3. State Responsibility: Governments must ensure safe pedestrian infrastructure and cannot treat pedestrians as secondary road users.
    4. Compensation Jurisprudence: The ruling emerged from a case involving the death of a five-year-old child who was hit by a tanker lorry in Karnataka.

    Why Does India Lack Functional Pedestrian Infrastructure?

    1. No central law: No national law governs pedestrian rights or safety.
    2. Vehicle-Centric Planning: Urban transport systems prioritise road expansion and vehicle movement.
    3. Fragmented responsibility: Responsibility for pedestrian safety is split across municipal laws, town-planning statutes, and street design guidelines, with no single accountable authority.
    4. Minimal safety standard: Current practice treats pedestrians as safe if they face no immediate physical harm, not if they have usable, continuous infrastructure.
    5. Physical encroachment: Existing footpaths are frequently encroached by parking, vendors, utilities, and construction debris.
    6. Competing infrastructure priorities: Road-widening projects compete with footpath space, with roads typically winning.

    Why is recognition of a right insufficient by itself?

    1. Rights Need Infrastructure: A right becomes ineffective when the supporting public infrastructure is absent.
    2. Implementation Deficit: India often struggles with execution rather than legal recognition.
    3. Administrative Neglect: Urban local bodies frequently delay or abandon pedestrian projects.
    4. Funding Priorities: Public expenditure remains concentrated on road widening and motorised transport.
    5. Behavioural Norms: Motorists often view pedestrians as obstacles rather than legitimate road users.

    What Tension Does the Ruling Expose Between Rights Recognition and State Capacity?

    1. Right without infrastructure is hollow: If the state does not build footpaths, the citizen’s right to walk on them carries no practical content.
    2. Compensation is not prevention: A right enforced only through post-tragedy compensation does not change the conditions that caused the harm.
    3. Conflict with the Street Vendors Act: The new judgment is likely to generate disputes with the 2014 Act, since reclaiming footpaths for pedestrians can mean removing vendors the 2014 Act protects.
    4. Risk of gentrification: A state acting on this ruling could use it to clear footpaths of informal commercial activity, criminalising the survival strategies of the urban poor under the cover of a pedestrian-rights judgment.

    Does India’s Experience with Rights-Based Legislation Suggest that Legal Recognition Alone Is Insufficient?

    1. Street Vendors Act, 2014: The Act protects vendors’ right to trade under Article 19(1)(g). Implementation has lagged because surveys, Town Vending Committees, and vending zones remain incomplete. Municipalities continue eviction drives despite legal protection.
    2. Cigarettes and Other Tobacco Products Act 2003: Public smoking declined through sustained enforcement, social messaging, and small immediate penalties. Behaviour changed because legal recognition was backed by continuous implementation.
    3. Swachh Bharat and Waste Segregation Laws: Citizens are required to segregate waste. Municipal systems often fail to collect segregated waste. The absence of supporting infrastructure weakens compliance.
    4. Implementation Gap: Rights and duties succeed only when governments create the institutions, incentives, and enforcement mechanisms needed to support them.
    5. Lesson for the Right to Walk: Pedestrian rights will remain symbolic unless cities build continuous, unobstructed footpaths and protect them from encroachment.

    What Precondition Determines Whether the Right Produces Real Change?

    1. Pedestrian Infrastructure as the Missing Link: Constitutional recognition cannot improve pedestrian safety unless cities build continuous and unobstructed footpaths.
    2. Funding Redirection as the Binding Constraint: The ruling’s success depends on shifting public expenditure towards pedestrian infrastructure rather than treating the judgment as a compensation mechanism.
    3. Risk of Legal Tokenism: If the right remains usable only for post-tragedy compensation claims, it produces no change in pedestrian mobility or safety.
    4. Cultural Internalisation of Right of Way: Pavements must be socially recognised as pedestrian space. Judicial declaration alone cannot alter road-use behaviour.

    What must change for the right to walk to become meaningful?

    1. Dedicated Pedestrian Infrastructure: Cities must invest in continuous and obstruction-free footpaths.
    2. Pedestrian-First Urban Design: Walking must become the foundation of street planning.
    3. Clear Space Allocation: Urban authorities must balance pedestrian access and vendor livelihoods.
    4. Municipal Accountability: Local bodies must be assessed on pedestrian safety outcomes.
    5. Stable Funding: Budget allocations must shift towards non-motorised transport infrastructure.

    Conclusion

    The Supreme Court has expanded constitutional protection for pedestrians, but rights alone cannot create safe streets. India’s challenge is not recognising the right to walk but building the footpaths, governance mechanisms and urban priorities that make that right real. The success of the judgment depends on shifting public investment and administrative attention towards pedestrian infrastructure rather than merely providing legal remedies after accidents.

  • Is India producing more graduates than what the economy can absorb?

    Why in the News?

    India’s higher education system continues to expand rapidly, producing millions of graduates each year. Yet graduate unemployment remains high, exposing a growing disconnect between educational output and labour market absorption, especially in the age of AI, automation, and capital-intensive growth.

    Why is graduate unemployment rising despite expanding economic opportunities?

    1. Rapid Expansion of Higher Education: Engineering colleges and universities have increased graduate output faster than job creation.
    2. Sectoral Transition: IT services no longer absorb engineering graduates at earlier levels. New opportunities are emerging in banking, finance, defence, aerospace, semiconductors and space sectors.
    3. Mismatch in Skills: Employers seek practical and industry-ready skills that many graduates lack.
    4. Changing Nature of Jobs: New opportunities increasingly require specialised and interdisciplinary competencies.
    5. Weak Industry Exposure: Many students graduate without sufficient laboratory, manufacturing, or real-world experience.
    6. Industry-led Training: Companies increasingly run internal training programmes because many graduates lack industry-ready skills.
    7. Additional Training Burden: Firms often need to retrain recruits before deployment.

    Has AI and technological change widened the employability gap?

    1. Changing Skill Requirements: AI increases demand for problem-solving, analytical, and digital skills.
    2. Curriculum Lag: Universities cannot redesign programmes at the pace of technological change.
    3. Mid-Course Labour Market Shift: Many graduates entered college before AI became mainstream. The labour market changed faster than university curricula.
    4. New Competency Requirements: Employers seek AI literacy, data interpretation, and systems thinking.
    5. Transition Shock: Graduates trained under older curricula enter a rapidly evolving labour market.

    Why is economic growth not translating into proportionate job creation?

    1. Capital-Intensive Investments: Semiconductors and advanced manufacturing generate high output with fewer workers.
    2. Automation of Production: Robotics and digital manufacturing reduce labour requirements.
    3. Automation of Manufacturing: Manufacturing previously absorbed engineers in supervisory and operational roles. Robotics and digital production systems have reduced demand for such middle-level positions.
    4. Limited Labour Absorption: Manufacturing expansion no longer guarantees mass employment.
    5. Output-Employment Decoupling: Factory output can rise significantly without a proportional increase in workforce requirements.

    Is India facing a graduate surplus or a skills mismatch?

    1. Not a Numerical Surplus Alone: Several sectors continue to demand skilled professionals.
    2. Quality Gap: Available graduates often do not possess industry-required competencies.
    3. Design and R&D Shortage: Advanced sectors need specialised talent that remains limited.
    4. Employability Deficit: The issue lies more in readiness than in educational attainment.

    Is India’s employment challenge a problem of graduate surplus or skill deficit?

    1. Graduate Expansion: Higher education enrolment has expanded rapidly, producing graduates faster than formal job creation.
    2. Skill Mismatch: Many graduates lack industry-ready, practical and interdisciplinary skills despite holding degrees.
    3. Dual Reality: Graduate unemployment coexists with shortages of specialised talent in sectors such as AI, semiconductors, finance and advanced manufacturing.
    4. Changing Demand Structure: The economy increasingly rewards digital literacy, problem-solving and applied technical competencies over generic credentials.
    5. Underemployment Trap: Many graduates accept jobs below their qualifications or enter informal and gig work due to limited suitable opportunities.
    6. Core Challenge: India’s employment problem is a structural mismatch between educational output and labour market demand rather than a pure shortage of jobs or graduates.

    Why does manufacturing versus innovation present a false choice?

    1. Manufacturing Needs Innovation: Modern industry depends on design, research, and technology.
    2. Innovation Creates High-Value Jobs: R&D and product development generate skilled employment.
    3. Global Value Chains Reward Innovation: Countries capturing design and intellectual property gain more value.
    4. Balanced Strategy Required: Manufacturing and innovation must advance together.

    Has India developed indigenous technological capabilities?

    1. Growing Corporate Capability: Firms such as Mahindra and Tata Motors have strengthened engineering capacity.
    2. Corporate Capability Building: Indian firms have moved beyond assembly and increasingly participate in engineering, design and product development.
    3. Increasing Design Competence: Indian engineers contribute to complex product development.
    4. Progress in Indigenous Systems: Domestic technological capabilities have expanded across sectors.
    5. Capability Gap Persists: Advanced R&D opportunities remain fewer than the number of graduates produced.

    Can entrepreneurship absorb the growing graduate workforce?

    1. Job Creation Beyond Wage Employment: Startups can become major employment generators.
    2. Need for Risk Capital: Venture funding remains critical for innovation-led firms.
    3. Technology Entrepreneurship Opportunity: Deep-tech sectors offer long-term employment potential.
    4. Ecosystem Constraints: Financing and scaling challenges continue to limit startup growth.

    What must change in higher education?

    1. Industry-Academia Integration: Universities and firms must collaborate closely.
    2. Co-created Curricula: Universities should develop programmes jointly with industry instead of designing courses in isolation.
    3. Practical Learning: Greater emphasis on laboratories, internships, and projects.
    4. Skill Development: Education must prioritise employability alongside academic credentials.
    5. Continuous Upgradation: Institutions must adapt faster to technological change.

    Conclusion

    India’s problem is not an excess of graduates but a growing mismatch between educational outcomes and labour market requirements. AI, automation, and capital-intensive growth have altered the nature of employment faster than universities have adapted. The solution lies in aligning education, industry, innovation, and entrepreneurship so that graduate creation and job creation move in the same direction.

    PYQ Relevance

    [UPSC 2023] Skill development programs have succeeded in increasing human resource supply to various sectors. In the context of the statement, analyze the linkages between education, skill and employment.

    Linkage: The PYQ examines the link between education, skills and employability in India’s labour market. The article highlights how weak alignment between education, skills and industry demand has contributed to rising graduate unemployment despite expanding higher education.