WSDP Bulletin (27-07-2022)

(Newspapers, PIB and other important sources)

Prelim and Main

  1. Explained| Power tariff revisions and the state of DISCOMs READ MORE
  2. Generation of unique disability IDs ramped up READ MORE
  3. India adds five more Ramsar sites, ups tally to 54 READ MORE
  4. Bangladesh seeks $4.5bn IMF loan as forex reserves shrink: Report READ MORE
  5. Russia says it will quit the International Space Station after 2024 READ MORE
  6. NASA releases first pieces of the multispectral maps of Mars READ MORE
  7. Non Performing Assets of Scheduled Commercial Banks in country declined in last four years: Govt READ MORE
  8. UN lays down guidelines to protect children displaced by climate change READ MORE

Main Exam

GS Paper- 1

  1. India’s Population Prospects: Demographic constraints will continue to weigh down on growth and development. READ MORE

GS Paper- 2

POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

  1. Seeking to destroy India’s civil society: Government is slowly chipping away at the rights of civil society groups using laws such as FCRA, PMLA READ MORE
  2. India needs not just more police, but better policing READ MORE
  3. Make bail the norm, not jail READ MORE
  4. Court appointments: Vacancies must be filled to clear backlog of cases READ MORE
  5. Understanding the Gaps in the Anti-Defection Law READ MORE

SOCIAL ISSUES

  1. Hope for Hungry READ MORE

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

  1. The U.S.’s search for a new role in West Asia: Realpolitik may have trumped the Biden administration’s rather vocal positions on principles in the region READ MORE
  2. India’s role READ MORE

GS Paper- 3

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

  1. Whose GDP is it anyway? READ MORE
  2. Why rapid economic growth may follow high inflation READ MORE
  3. Avoid aggressive management of rupee READ MORE
  4. Curb imports to check China trade gap READ MORE
  5. Kick-start economy with migrant workers READ MORE
  6. National agricultural market: New facility will boost trade on e-NAM READ MORE

ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

  1. Glaciers Vanishing at Record Rate in Alps Following Heatwaves READ MORE
  2. Extreme heat exposure worsens child malnutrition in Africa: Study READ MORE
  3. Climate Change: When Does Planting Trees Make Sense? READ MORE

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

  1. A path to global connectivity: Integrating terrestrial 5G networks with LEO satellite networks is the next step in communication infrastructure READ MORE

GS Paper- 4

ETHICS EXAMPLES AND CASE STUDY

  1. How to curb AI-driven human rights risks READ MORE
  2. FLUX AND CONSTANCY OF HUMAN NATURE READ MORE
  3. Trial by media: Justice Ramana’s concerns are valid READ MORE

Questions for the MAIN exam

  1. The government is slowly chipping away at the rights of civil society groups using laws such as FCRA and PMLA. Comment on the statement in the light of the recent ruling by the Government.
  2. ‘FCRA and PMLA are potent weapons for subduing the pluralistic nature of Indian society that is at the heart of India’s democracy’. Examine the statement.

QUOTATIONS AND CAPTIONS

  • Bad decisions made with good intentions are still bad decisions.
  • It is time for political leaders to clamour for an overhaul of India’s economic performance measurement framework.
  • GDP growth has turned into a misleading and dangerous indicator that portrays false economic promises, betrays people’s aspirations and hides deeper social problems.
  • The Russia-Ukraine war and its implications have shown that the U.S.’s somewhat tenuous relations with countries in the West Asia will continue despite underlying concerns about human rights and political freedom.
  • FCRA and PMLA are potent weapons for subduing the pluralistic nature of Indian society that is at the heart of India’s democracy.
  • Forex intervention by RBI has actually contained rupee depreciation. But the benefits of heavy intervention are not very clear.
  • The Supreme Court has drawn new red lines around bail jurisprudence and underlined the importance of preserving a person’s liberty in two separate instances over the past week.
  • The challenge is how to win back the confidence of migrant workers. The rural and farm economy has to be strengthened. Post-corona a new model is needed.
  • The launch of the “Platform of Platforms” (POP) would now ensure hassle-free out-of-mandi trading of farm goods across the country through the e-NAM portal, thereby making it a truly common national agricultural market.
  • As a regional power with an Act East Policy in place, India must not be found missing in action in Myanmar.
  • The Tenth Schedule needs to be amended to add more tensile strength against defectors, and the Supreme Court has to come up with a robust and unambiguous decision to clear all doubts.
  • Principles of natural justice are violated when a person becomes a judge of themselves.

50 WORD TALK

  • The suspension of 23 Opposition MPs from two Houses of Parliament in two days is alarming. Democracy means government by discussion, not suspensions. The government’s excuse for not holding discussions on price rise and a GST rate hike is untenable. The opposition has a vital role in parliamentary democracy. Their voices shouldn’t be throttled.
  • By executing democracy activists, Myanmar’s junta is tipping the country’s political opposition deeper into armed struggle. The junta’s already inflamed insurgencies engendered economic collapse. Fearful of giving China an opportunity, New Delhi muted its criticism. India must work with ASEAN countries to warn the junta against marching Myanmar towards disintegration.
  • The Constitution and law sought to protect minority communities and mandated equal rights and protection from the state to persons of all faiths and identities. According to that idea of India, these rights were deemed essential for the consolidation of the Indian state, where citizens needed to feel a sense of belonging. Even though civil society organisations have contributed to the constitutional frame, they undoubtedly need to be regulated to defend those values.

Things to Remember:

  • For prelims-related news, try to understand the context of the news and relate with its concepts so that it will be easier for you to answer (or eliminate) from given options.
  • Whenever any international place will be in news, you should do map work (marking those areas on maps and exploring other geographical locations nearby including mountains, rivers, etc. same applies to the national places.)
  • For economy-related news (banking, agriculture, etc.), you should focus on terms and how these are related to various economic aspects; for example, if inflation has been mentioned, try to relate with prevailing price rises, shortage of essential supplies, banking rates, etc.
  • For main exam-related topics, you should focus on the various dimensions of the given topic, the most important topics which occur frequently and are important from the main point of view will be covered in ED.
  • Try to use the given content in your answer. Regular use of this content will bring more enrichment to your writing.



Day-253 | Daily MCQs | UPSC Prelims | GEOGRAPHY

[WpProQuiz 297]




TOPIC: WHY DOES THE GULF MATTER FOR INDIA?

THE CONTEXT: Recently, the ruling party suspended its national spokesperson and expelled its Delhi spokesperson, following comments they had made about Islam and the Prophet. The move came after three countries in the Gulf region had summoned the Indian ambassadors to their nations to register their protest and demanded a public apology from India.It underlines the significance of the Gulf region for India. This article explains in detail the relations between India and the Gulf countries.

WHAT IS THE PERSIAN GULF REGION?

  • The lands around the Persian Gulf are shared by eight countries- Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.
  • These countries are major producers of crude oil and natural gas and thereby contribute critically to the global economy and to their own prosperity.
  • The area has approximately two-thirds of the world’s estimated proven oil reserves and one-third of the world’s estimated proven natural gas reserves.
  • This factor has added to their geopolitical significance.
  • A considerable amount of sea trade passes through the Gulf, leading to heavy traffic in the region.

WHY IS THE GULF REGION IMPORTANT FOR INDIA?

India has enjoyed centuries of good relations with countries like Iran, while smaller gas-rich nation Qatar is one of India’s closest allies in the region. India shares good relations with most of the countries in the Gulf. The two most important reasons for the relationship are oil and gas and trade. Two additional reasons are the huge number of Indians who work in the Gulf countries and the remittance they send back home.

FOUR PILLARS OF INDIA-GULF RELATIONS

TRADE RELATIONS

UAE: The UAE was India’s third-largest trading partner in 2021-2022 and second largest for both exports ($28 billion) and imports ($45 billion) when these are counted individually.

  • In terms of total trade volume, the UAE ($72.9 billion) was behind the United States ($1.19 trillion) and China ($1.15 trillion).
  • The UAE accounted for 6.6% of India’s total exports and 7.3% of imports in the last financial year, up 68.4% since the previous year when international trade was impacted by the pandemic.

Saudi Arabia: At a total volume of $42.9 billion in 2021-22, Saudi Arabia was India’s fourth-largest trading partner.

  • While exports were low at $8.76 billion (2.07% of India’s total exports), imports from Saudi Arabia were the fourth largest at $34.1 billion (7%), up 50% from the previous year. Most of it was crude oil.

Iraq: It was India’s fifth-largest trading partner in 2021-22 at $34.3 billion.

Qatar: The total trade was $15 billion, accounting for just 1.4% of India’s total trade, but the country is India’s most important supplier of natural gas.

  • Qatar accounts for 41% of India’s total natural gas imports. The UAE accounts for another 11%.

Oman: For Oman, India was the 3rd largest (after UAE and China) source for its imports and 3rd largest market (after UAE and Saudi Arabia) for its non-oil exports in 2019.

  • Major Indian financial institutions have a presence in Oman. Indian companies have invested in Oman in sectors like iron and steel, cement, fertilisers, textile etc.

OIL IMPORTS

  • The 239 million tonnes of oil petroleum imports were worth USD 77 billion and accounted for nearly one-fifth of the country’s total imports in 2021.
  • The share of Persian Gulf countries in India’s crude imports has remained at around 60% over the last 15 years.
  • In 2021-2022, the largest exporter of oil to India was Iraq, whose share has gone up from 9% in 2009-2010 to 22%.
  • Saudi Arabia has accounted for 17-18% of India’s oil imports for over a decade.
  • Kuwait and UAE remain major oil exporters to India. Iran used to be the second-largest oil exporter to India in 2009-2010; its share went down to less than 1% in 2020-21 due to US sanctions.

INDIAN DIASPORA

  • Counting only the 13.4 million non-resident Indians (NRIs), the Gulf has the largest numbers. The UAE (3.42 million), Saudi Arabia (2.6 million) and Kuwait (1.03 million) together account for over half of all NRIs.

REMITTANCES

  • According to Ministry of External Affairs data, more than 13.46 million Indian citizens work abroad.
  • Counting only the 13.4 million non-resident Indians (NRIs), the Gulf has the largest numbers. The UAE (3.42 million), Saudi Arabia (2.6 million) and Kuwait (1.03 million) together account for over half of all NRIs.
  • In terms of remittances from abroad, India was the largest recipient in 2020 at $83.15 billion, according to World Bank data. This was near twice the remittances to the next highest recipient, Mexico, at $42.9 billion.
  • The largest contributor is the huge Indian diaspora in the Gulf. In a bulletin in November 2018, it’s last on this subject, the Reserve Bank of India said the GCC countries accounted for more than 50% of the total $69 billion in remittances received by India in 2016-17.
  • The UAE accounted for 26.9%, Saudi Arabia for 11.6%, Qatar for 6.4%, Kuwait for 5.5% and Oman for 3%. Beyond the GCC, remittances from the US accounted for 22.9%, second only to the UAE.

GRAPHICAL REPRESENTATION OF INDIA-GULF TRADE RELATIONS

EFFORTS BY THE INDIAN GOVERNMENT

SPECIAL FOCUS

  • Since coming to power in 2014, the present Government has kept a special focus on maintaining or enhancing India’s relations with most of the countries in the region.

VISITS TO THE REGION

  • The Indian Prime Minister (PM) has visited the region several times since 2014.
  • He visited the UAE in 2015, 2018 and 2019, and Abu Dhabi’s crown prince came to India in 2017 and 2018.
  • Visits were made to Qatar and Iran in 2016 and Saudi Arabia in 2016 and 2019.
  • In 2018, he went to Jordan, Palestine and Oman, besides UAE, and became the first Indian Prime Minister to visit the Palestinian territory of Ramallah.
  • He visited Bahrain in 2019.
  • There have been similar reciprocal visits by leaders from these countries during these eight years.
  • Even during the pandemic, Indian and Gulf region leaders maintained regular contact.

HIGHEST CIVILIAN HONOUR

  • Palestine, Iran, Saudi Arabia, UAE and Jordan have excellent relations with India and Maldives, and Bahrain have bestowed their highest civilian honour on India’s Prime Minister.

GIVING IMPORTANCE TO THEIR RELIGION

  • On his visits, PM visited some of the most popular mosques in those countries, including the Sheikh Zayed Grand Mosque in Abu Dhabi in 2015 and the Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque in Muscat in 2018.

 INDIA’S PRIORITIES IN THE GULF

  • Securing long-term energy supply is of primary importance for India in the region.
  • India is currently the fourth largest energy-consuming country in the world, and it may go up to the third position in the next couple of decades.
  • India’s annual GDP growth at the rate of eight per cent would require further industrial growth, which would demand more energy supply for the country.
  • The growing energy necessity has undoubtedly dictated India’s initiative of building up a ‘strategic energy partnership’ with the region to secure long-term energy supply for the country.
  • The Gulf countries look at India as a fast-growing economy which holds the potential to compete with the major world economies.
  • Realising the trade potential of the Gulf countries, India has entered into a negotiation with the GCC to finalise a Free Trade Agreement.
  • The Gulf countries have huge potential for investing in different sectors in India as FDI for mutual benefit.

THE WAY FORWARD:

  • There is a need to focus on the new and long-term possibilities for economic cooperation with the Gulf countries, which are looking at a future beyond oil.
  • The Gulf states have embarked on massive economic diversification and are investing in a variety of new projects, including renewable energy, higher education, technological innovation, smart cities, and space commerce.
  • With the rise of Khaleeji capitalism, the Gulf countries today deliver economic and security assistance to friendly states, build ports and infrastructure, acquire military bases and broker peace between warring parties and states.
  • The UAE currently chairs the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) and has been eager to work with India in developing joint infrastructure projects.
  • India needs to bring scale and depth to its regional initiatives on connectivity and security in the Indian Ocean.
  • Avoiding any such conflicts, there must be a clear synergy between India and the GCC countries, consolidating their traditional areas of cooperation — energy, trade and investment.
  • They need to adopt an integrated and cohesive approach to develop ties in diverse areas — renewables, water conservation, food security, digital technology and skills development.

THE CONCLUSION: The Government and the diplomatic establishment can never underestimate the power of hurt sentiment, religious sensitivities in foreign policy, or the speed of social media. Many have questioned whether the reaction would have been as tough if the Government had taken the controversy and protests more seriously domestically and engaged with the problem much earlier. It was a lesson the US learned in 2012 after protests over a movie on Prophet Muhammad turned violent and led to the terrorist attack on the US embassy in Benghazi in which the US Ambassador was killed. The attacks on Charlie Hebdo and cartoonists in Europe in 2007 were another case in point- clearly, the sensitivities over a religious matter are important- as is protecting freedom of speech and ensuring no violence or harm comes to anyone.

Value Addition

What is GCC?

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is a political and economic alliance of six countries in the Arabian Peninsula: Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Established in 1981, the GCC promotes economic, security, cultural and social cooperation between the six states and holds a summit every year to discuss cooperation and regional affairs.

All current member states are monarchies, including three constitutional monarchies (Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain), two absolute monarchies(Saudi Arabia and Oman), and one federal monarchy (the United Arab Emirates).

Structure:

The GCC comprises six main branches that carry out various tasks, from the preparation of meetings to the implementation of policies. They are- the Supreme Council, Ministerial Council, Secretariat-General, Consultative Commission, Commission for the Settlement of Disputes and the Secretary-General.

Role of GCC today:

Whether the GCC still has a relevant function and role in the region is questionable. Though it was created for the purpose of solidifying union ranks, the blockade imposed on Qatar by its neighbours has largely annulled these principles.

The Gulf states have in the past differed in their views on several issues that have unfolded in the region over the past two decades. The role of the GCC has also been diminishing ever since the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, with the six states illustrating various approaches to the war and its consequences. This has been enhanced during the wave of protests that swept the Middle East in 2011, known as the Arab Spring. Saudi Arabia has gained a dominant role within the GCC today.

Question for mains examination:

  1. Critically analyse India’s relations with the Gulf countries.
  2. In the 21st century, India needs to weigh the relationship with the Gulf countries not merely through an economic but strategic prism. Discuss.



DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (JULY 26, 2022)

THE INDIAN POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

1.THE LATEST GUIDELINES ON ARRESTS AND BAIL ORDERS

THE CONTEXT: Recently, a division bench of the Supreme Court of India in Satender Kumar Antil vs CBI laid down fresh guidelines on arrests in order to have strict compliance with the provisions of Section 41 and 41A of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • These guidelines are in addition to the earlier ones which the apex court had already laid down in the case of Arnesh Kumar vs State of Bihar (2014). The Court in the present case has also emphasised upon separate legislation on the law relating to bail and has also issued specific directions in this regard.
  • Also, recently the Chief Justice of India (CJI) cautioned against “hasty and indiscriminate arrests”. He further commented on the delay in bails and the plight of undertrial prisoners.

How is a person arrested?

  • Arrest in its simplest form is defined as, “when one is taken and restrained from his liberty”. The police has wide powers to arrest under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973. In the Joginder Kumar (1994) verdict, the Court had stated that “arrest and detention in police lock-up of a person can cause incalculable harm to the reputation and self-esteem of a person”.
  • Further, in the case of Arnesh Kumar, the apex Court had rightly observed that “arrest brings humiliation, curtails freedom and cast scars forever”. In recent times, there have been several controversies regarding the arrest and subsequent bail of accused persons.

What are Sections 41 and 41A of the Code of Criminal Procedure?

  • Section 41 of the Code provides for the circumstances in which arrest can be made by the police without a warrant and mandates for reasons to be recorded in writing for every arrest and non-arrest.
  • Section 41A of the Code provides for the requirement of a notice to be sent by the investigating agencies before making an arrest in certain conditions prescribed by the Code. The Court stated that any dereliction on the part of the agencies has to be brought to the notice of the higher authorities by the court followed by appropriate action.

The Bench further said that the courts will have to satisfy themselves on the compliance of Section 41 and 41A. Any non-compliance would entitle the accused for grant of bail.

What are the guidelines with respect to bail?

  • As part of the new guidelines, it is clearly stated that there need not be any insistence on a bail application while considering the application under Sections 88, 170, 204 and 209 of the Code. The Court said that “there needs to be a strict compliance of the mandate laid down in the judgment of this court in Siddharth”( Siddharth vs State of U.P., 2021).
  • It is a clear direction of the Court that bail applications ought to be disposed of within a period of two weeks except if the provisions mandate otherwise — the exception being an intervening application. The Court also said that “applications for anticipatory bail are expected to be disposed of within a period of six weeks with the exception of any intervening application”.

VALUE ADDITION:

Types of Bail in India

Depending upon the sage of the criminal matter, there are commonly three types of bail in India:

  1. Regular bail- A regular bail is generally granted to a person who has been arrested or is in police custody. A bail application can be filed for the regular bail under sections 437 and 439 of CrPC.
  2. Interim bail– This type of bail is granted for a short period of time and it is granted before the hearing for the grant of regular bail or anticipatory bail.
  3. Anticipatory bail– Anticipatory bail is granted under section 438 of CrPC either by session court or High Court. An application for the grant of anticipatory bail can be filed by the person who discerns that he may be arrested by the police for a non-bailable offence.

What is default bail?

  • Also known as statutory bail, this is a right to bail that accrues when the police fail to complete the investigation within a specified period in respect of a person in judicial custody. This is enshrined in Section 167(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure where it is not possible for the police to complete an investigation in 24 hours, the police produce the suspect in court and seek orders for either police or judicial custody. This section concerns the total period up to which a person may be remanded in custody prior to the filing of the charge sheet.
  • For most offences, the police have 60 days to complete the investigation and file a final report before the court. However, where the offence attracts a death sentence or life imprisonment, or a jail term of not less than 10 years, the period available is 90 days. In other words, a magistrate cannot authorise a person’s judicial remand beyond the 60-or 90-day limit.
  • At the end of this period, if the investigation is not complete, the court shall release the person “if he is prepared to and does furnish bail”.

THE ENVIRONMENT, ECOLOGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

2.TOLL OF HUMAN-ANIMAL CONFLICT ON TIGERS, ELEPHANTS AND PEOPLE

THE CONTEXT: According to the Ministry of Environment, forest, and climate change between 2018-19 and 2020-21, 222 elephants were killed by electrocution across the country, 45 by trains, 29 by poachers and 11 by poisoning. Among tigers, too, 29 were killed by poaching between 2019 and 2021, while 197 tiger deaths are under scrutiny.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Among human casualties of conflict with animals, elephants killed 1,579 humans in three years — 585 in 2019-20, 461 in 2020-21, and 533 in 2021-22. Odisha accounted for the highest number of these deaths at 322,followed by Jharkhand at 291 (including 133 in 2021-22 alone), West Bengal at 240, Assam at 229, Chhattisgarh at 183, and Tamil Nadu at 152.
  • Tigers killed 125 humans in reserves between 2019 and 2021. Maharashtra accounted for nearly half these deaths, at 61. For tiger deaths caused by human activity.
  • Among the 222 elephant deaths caused by electrocution, Odisha accounted for 41, Tamil Nadu for 34 and Assam for 33. Odisha (12 out of 45) also had the highest number of elephant deaths caused by trains, followed by West Bengal (11) and Assam (9). Poaching deaths were highest in Meghalaya (12 out of 29) while poisoning deaths were highest in Assam (9 out of 11, including 8 in 2018-19 alone).
  • As a result of concerted efforts made for protection and conservation of wildlife, the population of several wildlife species like Tigers, Elephants, Asiatic Lion, Rhino etc. in the country has increased”.
  • “Assessments of human-wildlife conflicts indicate that the main causes of human wildlife conflict include habitat loss, growth of population of wild animals, changing cropping patterns that attract wild animals to farmlands, movement of wild animals from forests area to human dominated landscapes for food and fodder, movement of human beings to forests for illegal collection of forest produce, habitat degradation due to growth of invasive alien species, etc.

VALUE ADDITION:

About Project REHAB:

  • Project RE-HAB stands for Reducing Elephant-Human Attacks using Bees. It is an initiative of the Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC).
  • The project has been launched as a sub-mission of KVIC’s National Honey Mission.
  • It intends to create “bee fences” to thwart elephant attacks in human habitations using honeybees.
  • Bee boxes have been placed on the ground as well as hung from the trees.
  • The boxes are connected with a string so that when elephants attempt to pass through, a tug causes the bees to swarm the elephant herds and dissuade them from progressing further.
  • This idea stems from the elephants’ proven fear of the bees.
  • The project aims to mitigate Human– elephant conflicts in the country.
  • It was launched as a pilot project launched on the periphery of Nagarhole National Park in Karnataka.

National Honey Mission:

  • Launched by Khadi and Village Industries Commission(KVIC)
  • To provide sustainable employment and income to rural and urban unemployed youth.
  • To conserve the honeybee habitat and tapping untapped natural resources.
  • Promote beekeeping for increasing crop productivity and pollination services avenue for beekeepers and farmers.

3.CLEARANCE OF GENETIC ENGINEERING APPRAISAL COMMITTEE (GEAC) MANDATORY FOR THE ENVIRONMENTAL RELEASE OF GENETICALLY MODIFIED (GM) CROPS

THE CONTEXT: According to the Ministry of Environment, Ecology and Climate Change the Clearance of Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) Mandatory for the Environmental Release of Genetically Modified (GM) Crops.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) is the statutory committee constituted under the “Rules for the Manufacture, Use/Import/Export and Storage of Hazardous Micro Organisms/Genetically Engineered Organisms or Cells (Rules, 1989)” framed under Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • Applications are considered by GEAC as per the provisions of the Rules, 1989 and amendments thereafter. Every set of application has specific form and pre-requisite documents along with recommendations, wherever needed.

About the Clearance:

  • Clearance of Genetic Engineering Appraisal Committee (GEAC) is mandatory for the environmental release of Genetically Modified (GM) crops. As per the ‘’Rules 1989’’, State/UT Biotechnology Coordination Committees and District Level Committees are responsible for monitoring instances of illegal cultivation of GM crops and taking appropriate action under Environment (Protection) Act, 1986.
  • The Chief Secretary of State/UT is the Chairperson for the State Biotechnology Coordination Committee (SBCC). Any complaints that come to the notice of GEAC secretariat are sent to the Chief Secretary.
  • For the consideration of any application related to confined field trials of Genetically Modified (GM) crops by GEAC, NOC from the State/UT Government is required.

For Genetically Modified Crop

  • Bt cotton is the only GM crop which has been approved for commercial cultivation in India. The Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) conducted study during (2012 -2015) on impact of Bt cotton on 2700 cotton growing farmers belonging to 18 major cotton growing districts of Maharashtra and it was observed that the average seed cotton yield increased after the adoption of Bt Cotton.
  • Also, ICAR has done the feeding studies of Bt cotton on various animals viz., broiler chickens, lambs, cows and goat which was found to be safe.

4.INDIA DESIGNATES 5 NEW RAMSAR SITES

THE CONTEXT: India has designated five (5) new wetlands of International importance, which include three wetlands (Karikili Bird Sanctuary, Pallikaranai Marsh Reserve Forest & Pichavaram Mangrove) in Tamil Nadu, one (Pala wetland) in Mizoram and one wetland (Sakhya Sagar) in Madhya Pradesh, making a total of 54 Ramsar sites in the country.  The Ramsar sites have been increased from 49 to 54 Ramsar sites.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • India has the largest number of Ramsar sites in Asia, according to data available with the Environment Ministry. A wetland is an ecosystem flooded by water, seasonally or permanently.
  • Under the Ramsar Convention, an intergovernmental treaty for the conservation of wetlands, contracting parties are expected to identify and place suitable wetlands onto the ‘list of wetlands of international importance’, also known as the Ramsar List.
  • The convention has several mechanisms to help parties designate their most significant wetlands as Ramsar Sites, and to take the steps necessary to manage them effectively by maintaining their ecological character.

Criteria for declaring the wetlands

  • “Ramsar Sites are designated because they meet the criteria for identifying wetlands of international importance. The first criterion refers to sites containing representative, rare or unique wetland types, and the other eight cover sites of international importance for conserving biological diversity. These criteria emphasize the importance the convention places on sustaining biodiversity,” the convention’s website states.
  • The Pichavaram mangrove, for instance, which got the Ramsar tag on April 8, 2022 is one of the largest mangrove ecosystems in India with littoral and swamp forest habitats, located between the estuaries of the Vellar and Kollidam rivers. Trees here are permanently rooted under a few feets of water.

THE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

5.THE PRIVATE SECTOR BOOST IN INDIA’S SPACE INDUSTRY

THE CONTEXT: Recently, Principal Scientific Advisor stated earlier this month that the government would soon come up with a new space policy that could initiate the rise of India’s own “SpaceX-like ventures”.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • He also stated that the proposed move would increase private sector participation in the industry. Consultations have already been held and the final version of the policy would soon be referred to the Empowered Technology Group for further examination.
  • According to him, India has not tapped into its complete potential in this sector. “In 2022, the space sector is witnessing what the information technology sector experienced in the 1990s. We will have our own SpaceX (SpaceX is Elon Musk’s private space transportation company) in the next two years”.

Why is development in the space sector important?

  • Enhancing space technology would be beneficial to bolster connectivity and combat climate-related implications through a more secure and effective means.
  • Satellites provide more accurate information on weather forecasts and assess (and record) long-term trends in the climate and habitability of a region. For example, by monitoring the long-term impact of climate change at regional, territorial, and national scales, governments would be able to devise more pragmatic and combative plans of action for farmers and dependent industries.
  • Additionally, they can also serve as real-time monitoring and early-warning solutions against natural disasters such as earthquakes, tsunamis, floods, wildfires, mining etc. Real-time tracking can also serve multiple purposes in defence.
  • As for connectivity, satellite communication can reach more remote areas where conventional networks would require a heavy complimenting infrastructure.
  • Additionally, as to reliability, the World Economic Forum had stated (in September 2020) that satellite communication can help connect 49% of the world’s unconnected population. In this light, it must be noted that satellite communications, which are used to facilitate telecommunication services, are among the major categories for investment in the space technology sector. Other prominent categories include spacecraft and equipment manufacturing.

Where does India stand in the global space market?

  • As per SpaceTech Analytics, India is the sixth-largest player in the industry internationally having 6% of the world’s space-tech companies (as of 2021). U.S. holds the leader’s spot housing 56.4% of all companies in the space-tech ecosystem. Other major players include U.K. (6.5%), Canada (5.3%), China (4.7%) and Germany (4.1%).
  • The Indian Space Industry was valued at $7 billion in 2019 and aspires to grow to $50 billion by 2024. The country’s standout feature is its cost-effectiveness. India holds the distinction of being the first country to have reached the Mars’ orbit in its first attempt and at $75 million — way cheaper than Western standards.
  • India’s total budgetary allocation for FY 2022-23 towards the Department of Space was ₹13,700 crore. Further, as per Tracxn data, funding into the sector’s start-ups (in India) nearly tripled to $67.2 million on a year-over-year basis in 2021.

How is the private sector’s involvement regulated in India?

  • In June 2020, the Union government announced reforms in the space sector enabling more private players to provide end-to-end services.
  • An announcement for the establishment of the Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe) was made. It was mandated the task of promoting, authorising and licensing private players to carry out space activities. As an oversight and regulatory body, it is responsible for devising mechanisms to offer sharing of technology, expertise, and facilities free of cost (if feasible) to promote non-government private entities (NGPEs).
  • Additionally, constituted in March 2019, NewSpace India Ltd (NSIL), is mandated to transfer the matured technologies developed by the ISRO to Indian industries. All of them are under the purview of the Ministry of Defence.
  • Private sector’s involvement in the long term, as with other commercial sectors, is believed to help spur investment and expertise in the realm which is capital-intensive and demands high technology.

 THE GOVERNMENT SCHEMES AND INITIATIVES IN NEWS

6.VOCAL FOR LOCAL IN FOOD PROCESSING SECTOR

THE CONTEXT: As part of Atmanirbhar Bharat Abhiyan – Vocal for Local Initiative in food processing sector, Ministry of Food Processing Industries (MoFPI) is implementing a centrally sponsored PM Formalisation of Micro food processing Enterprises (PMFME) Scheme” for providing financial, technical and business support for setting up / upgradation of micro food processing enterprises in the country.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The scheme is operational for a period of five years from 2020-21 to 2024-25 with an outlay of Rs. 10,000 Crore. Scheme primarily adopts One District One Product (ODOP) approach to reap the benefit of scale in terms of procurement of inputs, availing common services and marketing of products. It provides the framework for value chain development and alignment of support infrastructure.
  • As per the Annual Survey of Industries, 2015-16 and 73rd Round Survey of National Sample Survey Organisation (NSSO), there are about 25 lakh unregistered/ unincorporated food processing enterprises in the country. The details of State-wise number of unregistered/unincorporated enterprises in the country are at Annexure-I.

ABOUT THE SCHEME:

The PMFME scheme is designed to address the challenges faced by the micro enterprises and to tap the potential of groups and cooperatives in supporting the upgradation and formalization of these enterprises. The scheme aims to enhance the competitiveness of new and existing individual micro-enterprises in the unorganized segment of the food processing industry and promote formalization of the sector.

The details of assistance available to Micro Food Processing Enterprises under PMFME Scheme:

  1. Support to Individual / Group Category Micro Enterprises: Credit-linked capital subsidy @35% of the eligible project cost, maximum ceiling Rs.10 lakh per unit;
  2. Support to SHGs for seed capital: Seed capital @ Rs. 40,000/- per member of SHG engaged in food processing for working capital and purchase of small tools subject to maximum of Rs. 4 lakh per SHG Federation.
  3. Support for Common Infrastructure: Credit linked capital subsidy @35% subject to maximum of Rs. 3 crore to support FPOs, SHGs, Cooperatives and any Government agency for setting up of common infrastructure. The common infrastructure will also be available for other units and public to utilize on hiring basis for substantial part of the capacity.
  4. Branding and Marketing Support: Grant upto 50% for Branding and Marketing to groups of FPOs/ SHGs/ Cooperatives or an SPV of micro food processing enterprises.
  5. Capacity Building: The scheme envisages training for Entrepreneurship Development Skilling (EDP+): program modified to meet the requirement of food processing industry and product specific skilling.
  6. Capacity building and training is a critical component of the scheme in technical upgradation and formalization of micro food processing enterprises. The focus areas for capacity building are entrepreneurship development, compliance of Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) standards and general hygiene and other statutory compliances. District Resource Persons (DRPs) have been entrusted to provide handholding support to micro food processing enterprises for the compliance of FSSAI and other statutory requirements.

VALUE ADDITION:

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CENTRALLY SPONSORED SCHEMES AND CENTRAL SECTOR SCHEMES




Today’s Important Articles for Sociology (26-07-2022)

  1. India’s Population Prospects: Demographic constraints will continue to weigh down on growth and development. READ MORE
  2. Hope for Hungry READ MORE



Ethics Through Current Development (26-07-2022)

  1. How to curb AI-driven human rights risks READ MORE
  2. FLUX AND CONSTANCY OF HUMAN NATURE READ MORE
  3. Trial by media: Justice Ramana’s concerns are valid READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Geography (26-07-2022)

  1. Backsliding on climate action: Western nations have started reinterpreting the Paris deal and look to downgrade their commitments READ MORE
  2. India new home for the cheetah READ MORE
  3. Freshwater plunge~II READ MORE
  4. Mangroves are unique, extraordinary and under threat. ‘Floating plantation’ can save them READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Pub Ad (26-07-2022)

  1. Reform bail law, but make the right diagnosis first: Any reimagination of the law needs to examine the exact nature of what is causing large-scale undertrial incarceration READ MORE
  2. Democratise Radio News in India READ MORE



WSDP Bulletin (26-07-2022)

(Newspapers, PIB and other important sources)

Prelim and Main

  1. SC collegium recommends 35 names for appointment as judges in six HCs READ MORE
  2. A year on, only four States adopt Model Tenancy Law READ MORE
  3. Direct tax collection rises by 41% to ₹3.54 lakh cr. in Q1 FY23 READ MORE
  4. Droupadi Murmu takes oath as 15th President of India READ MORE
  5. Telling Numbers: Toll of human-animal conflict on tigers, elephants and people READ MORE
  6. Explained: India’s plan to bring cheetahs from Africa to Madhya Pradesh READ MORE
  7. Study sheds light on prey-predator relationship in Himachal READ MORE

Main Exam

GS Paper- 1

  1. India’s Population Prospects: Demographic constraints will continue to weigh down on growth and development. READ MORE

GS Paper- 2

POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

  1. Reform bail law, but make the right diagnosis first: Any reimagination of the law needs to examine the exact nature of what is causing large-scale undertrial incarceration READ MORE
  2. Democratise Radio News in India READ MORE

SOCIAL ISSUES

  1. Hope for Hungry READ MORE

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

  1. A global order caught up in a swirl of chaos: The Ukraine-Russia conflict is only one of the many strands altering the contours of world governance READ MORE
  2. Russia is Gaining an Indo-Pacific Foothold Through Myanmar READ MORE

GS Paper- 3

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

  1. What a Potential US Recession Will Mean for the Indian Economy READ MORE
  2. Resist Neo-liberal Offensive of New Labour Codes READ MORE
  3. The sinking rupee and its fallout READ MORE

ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

  1. Backsliding on climate action: Western nations have started reinterpreting the Paris deal and look to downgrade their commitments READ MORE
  2. India new home for the cheetah READ MORE
  3. Freshwater plunge~II READ MORE
  4. Mangroves are unique, extraordinary and under threat. ‘Floating plantation’ can save them READ MORE

SECURITY

  1. Theatre of reform: India needs joint commands & it needs a CDS. The two are linked, & both are much-delayed READ MORE

GS Paper- 4

ETHICS EXAMPLES AND CASE STUDY

  1. How to curb AI-driven human rights risks READ MORE
  2. FLUX AND CONSTANCY OF HUMAN NATURE READ MORE
  3. Trial by media: Justice Ramana’s concerns are valid READ MORE

Questions for the MAIN exam

  1. ‘Population growth has both opportunities and challenges for Indian policy makers’. Comment on the statement and suggest how India can avoid those challenges and cash opportunities?
  2. ‘Businesses must make AI and its actions more transparent, and ensure adequate human intervention and oversight’. In the light of this statement discuss why there is need to curb AI-driven human rights risks?

QUOTATIONS AND CAPTIONS

  • Some of the brightest minds in the country can be found on the last benches of the classroom.
  • The government’s control over the program content on radio is a major obstacle to achieving an independent media ecosystem.
  • The digital revolution is a reality, resulting in umpteen online media platforms. The free flow of information is considered one of the characteristics of the internet age.
  • Using colonial laws to run media in modern democracy is a severe concern.
  • The slowdown and decline in population growth over the century will be a major gain for India but the huge population density and the ageing population will weigh down development efforts.
  • The NHRC accreditation is a serious process and only if it becomes more effective, more trust will be built in these NHRIs by Indian civil society.
  • AFSPA is a child of Parliament and the parent of violence aimed at enabling the armed forces to protect India from its enemies.
  • The comity of nations must now hope that hunger and starvation will eventually be addressed amidst the clash of shields and wartime rhetoric.
  • A responsible, independent media is an indispensable tool of democracy that makes elected representatives and public servants accountable.
  • Businesses must make AI and its actions more transparent, and ensure adequate human intervention and oversight.
  • Related to the eradicated smallpox virus, monkeypox is suspected to have amplified due to reduced immunity against the smallpox virus.
  • The power to grant bail is largely based on the court’s discretion and depends on the facts of each case. The Supreme Court has time and again laid down principles for guiding the exercise of such discretion by courts in deciding bail applications.
  • There is an urgent need for bail reform but it would be counterproductive to undertake a reform exercise without first developing the empirical basis to understand and diagnose the problem at hand.

ESSAY TOPIC

  • The trust between the government and its people is the core of modern democracy.
  • Democracy is government by discussion.

50 WORD TALK

  • The right to be forgotten, also known as the right to erasure, was established in the European Union in 2014. In India, the Personal Data Protection Bill provides for a mechanism to implement this concept, though it is by no means an absolute right. Such a law will go a long way in addressing genuine cases, but only with sound evaluation guidelines in place.

Things to Remember:

  • For prelims-related news try to understand the context of the news and relate with its concepts so that it will be easier for you to answer (or eliminate) from given options.
  • Whenever any international place will be in news, you should do map work (marking those areas in maps and exploring other geographical locations nearby including mountains, rivers, etc. same applies to the national places.)
  • For economy-related news (banking, agriculture, etc.) you should focus on terms and how these are related to various economic aspects, for example, if inflation has been mentioned, try to relate with prevailing price rises, shortage of essential supplies, banking rates, etc.
  • For main exam-related topics, you should focus on the various dimensions of the given topic, the most important topics which occur frequently and are important from the mains point of view will be covered in ED.
  • Try to use the given content in your answer. Regular use of this content will bring more enrichment to your writing.



Day-252 | Daily MCQs | UPSC Prelims | POLITY

[WpProQuiz 296]




TOPIC: USA COURT RULING AND THE ISSUE OF ABORTION IN THE 21ST CENTURY

THE CONTEXT: In a significant step backwards for women’s rights in the US,the Supreme Court overturned the landmark Roe v. Wade judgement of 1973, which gave women in America the right to have an abortion before the foetus is viable outside the womb or before the 24–28-week mark.Abortion rights, which have been available to women for over two generations — will now be determined by individual States. In this write up we will analyze in detail the implications of the USA court ruling and the issue of abortion in the 21st century.

WHAT IS ROE V. WADE JUDGEMENT?

  • The case is sometimes referred to simply as “Roe”, the listed name of the 22-year-old plaintiff, Norma McCorvey. Wade was the State of Texas District Attorney where this case was filed in 1969.
  • Roe struck down laws that made abortion illegal in several states, and ruled that abortion would be allowed up to the point of foetal viability, that is, the time after which a foetus can survive outside the womb.
  • Foetal viability was around 28 weeks (7 months) at the time of the Roe judgment; experts now agree that advances in medicine have brought the threshold down to 23 or 24 weeks (6 months or a little less), and newer studies show this could be further pegged at 22 weeks. An average pregnancy lasts about 40 weeks.
  • Abortion laws across the world rely on this metric but those opposing abortions argue that this is an arbitrary timeframe that legislation and the court in Roe adopted.

Foetal viability: It is often seen as the point at which the rights of the woman can be separated from the rights of the unborn foetus. The length of a pregnancy is commonly calculated from the start of a person’s most recent menstrual period. Since many people identify pregnancy only after the sixth week, pre-viability timelines leave women with very little time and opportunity to make a decision to abort.

MISSISSIPPI LAW ON ABORTION

The Mississippi law makes most abortions illegal after 15 weeks of pregnancy, about two months earlier than Roe and later decisions allow. Most experts estimate fetal viability to be about 24 weeks. The law was enacted in 2018 by the Republican-dominated Mississippi Legislature but never went into effect because of an immediate legal challenge that led to a federal appellate court blocking its enforcement. The law bans abortions if “the probable gestational age of the unborn human” is determined to be more than 15 weeks, with narrow exceptions for medical emergencies or “a severe fetal abnormality.”

WHAT IS THE DEBATE REGARDING ABORTION?

The abortion debate is the ongoing controversy surrounding the moral, legal, and religious status of induced abortion. The sides involved in the debate are the self-described “pro-choice” and “pro-life” movements.

  • Pro-choice emphasizes the woman’s choice of whether to terminate a pregnancy.
  • The pro-life position stresses the humanity of both the mother and foetus, arguing that a fetus is a human person deserving of legal protection.

Ethical questions raised

(1) The primary questions:

The moral debate about abortion deals with two separate questions:

  • Is abortion morally wrong?
  • Should abortion be legal or illegal?

(2) The secondary questions:

But those two questions don’t end the debate.If we conclude that abortion is not morally wrong, that doesn’t mean that it’s right to have an abortion; We need to ask whether having an abortion is the best thing (or least bad thing) to do in each particular case. If we conclude that abortion is morally wrong, that doesn’t mean that it’s always impermissible to have an abortion; we need to ask whether having an abortion is less wrong than the alternatives.

IMPACT OF THE JUDGEMENT?

  • Regardless of what happens in the US, reproductive rights in other nations have always been insecure. It is a constant battle to increase and maintain abortion access due to the power of those who are opposed. This will continue even without the influence of the US.
  • The fall of Roe is a significant boost to the global anti-abortion movement. It will encourage this movement to pursue additional routes to power and influence in other nations and pan-national organizations.

ABORTION LAWS IN OTHER COUNTRIES

In approximately 16 countries around the world, abortion is entirely prohibited and even criminalized. But several Catholic majority nations, such as Ireland and Mexico have decriminalized abortion in the last decade.

  • France, the UK, Austria, Ethiopia, Italy, Spain, Iceland, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Switzerland and even Nepal allow for termination beyond 20 weeks on the diagnosis of foetal abnormalities.
  • Some countries go beyond even these limits with laws in 23 countries-Canada, Germany, Vietnam, Denmark, Ghana, and Zambia-allowing for abortion at any time during the pregnancy at the request of the mother.
  • In UK, abortions are allowed at up to 24 weeks, with abortion guidelines formulated by the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists including procedures for termination of pregnancies older than 20 weeks. It also states that, in pregnancy older than 21 weeks and 6 days, an injection to cause foetal death is given before the foetus is evacuated.

ABORTION LAWS IN INDIA 

The nature of Indian Laws on Abortion (i.e Focused on Abortion or Population control):

The history of abortion rights in India is traced back to the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act of 1971 (MTPA). It is often regarded as a landmark moment in India’s social legislation, opening the doors, as many would say, to social reform. The passage of the MTPA as early as the 1970s is frequently pitted against the West, wherein abortion rights continue to remain a debated issue. The politics surrounding the Act shows that it was less a product of the women’s movement in India and more of a means to control the expanding population of the country. The Act’s wording and the arguments made in its favour remains heavily criticized by Indian feminists.

Is Indian law based on the Pro-choice or Pro-life Approach?

  • Abortion was a criminal offence according to Section 312 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC), 1860, carried on from the British legacy. It only allowed abortion in extreme emergency cases where the woman’s life was endangered.
  • Voluntary abortion puts a woman in jail for three years. This changed in the 1960s when the government set up a committee led by Shantilal Shah 1964 to suggest changes in the abortion law of India. In 1971, upon the recommendations of the Shah Committee, the Parliament passed the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act (MTP). It did legalize abortion, but with many conditions such as the pregnancy being a danger to life, when risk is involved in the birth of the child when pregnancy results from rape or depending upon the socio-economic context of the family. However, unmarried women could not abort their pregnancies if none of the criteria was met.
  • In the MTP Amendment Act of 2021, one of the biggest changes was the inclusion of all women, whether married or unmarried and the increase in the limit of terminating pregnancies from 12 weeks to 20 weeks with advice from doctors and special categories where women could abort up to the 24th week.
  • The pro-choice stance which has evolved in India shows a changing attitude towards women and their bodies. Most developed countries have legalized abortion, whereas a number of developing nations either have restrictive laws or completely banned abortion. India has become a beacon of progressive, liberal ideas among rising countries when developed countries like the US are regressing.

How did abortion laws come about in India?

  • In the 1960s, in the wake of a high number of induced abortions taking place, the Union government ordered the constitution of the Shantilal Shah Committee to deliberate on the legalization of abortion in the country.
  • In order to reduce maternal mortality owing to unsafe abortions, the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act was brought into force in 1971. This law is an exception to the Indian Penal Code (IPC) provisions of 312 and 313 and sets out the rules of how and when a medical abortion can be carried out.
  • Under Section 312 of the IPC, a person who “voluntarily causes a woman with child to miscarry” is liable for punishment, attracting a jail term of up to three years or fine or both, unless it was done in good faith where the purpose was to save the life of the pregnant woman.
  • This section effectively makes unconditional abortion illegal in India. Section 313 of the IPC states that a person who causes the miscarriage without the consent of the pregnant woman, whether or not she is in the advanced stages of her pregnancy, shall be punished with life imprisonment or a jail term that could extend to 10 years, as well as a fine.

How has the MTP Act evolved from 1971 to 2021?

  • The latest amendment to the MTP Act was made in 2021. Before that, new rules were introduced in 2003 to allow the use of the newly discovered abortion medicine misoprostol to medically terminate a pregnancy up to seven weeks into it. Broader amendments to the original Act were introduced in 2020 and the amended Act came into force in September 2021.
  • Under the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (Amendment) Act, 2021, abortion is permitted after medical opinion under stipulated circumstances. The 2021 Act increased the upper limit of the gestation period to which a woman can seek a medical abortion to 24 weeks from 20 weeks permitted in the 1971 Act. But this renewed upper limit can only be exercised in specific cases. Gestational age, calculated in weeks, is the medical term to describe how far along the pregnancy is and is measured from the first day of the woman’s last menstruation or period.

THE MEDICAL TERMINATION OF PREGNANCY (AMENDMENT) ACT, 2021

Under the 2021 Act, medical termination of pregnancy is permitted if it is backed by medical opinion and is being sought for at least one of the following reasons —

  • If the continuation of the pregnancy would involve a risk to the life of the pregnant woman
  • If its continuation would result in grave injury to the woman’s physical or mental health (if the pregnancy is a result of rape or failure of contraceptive used by the pregnant woman or her partner to limit the number of children or to prevent pregnancy, the anguish caused by its continuation would be considered to be a grave injury to the mental health of the pregnant woman)
  • In the case of a substantial risk that if the child was born, it would suffer from a serious physical or mental abnormality

The pregnancy can be terminated up to 24 weeks of gestational age after the opinion of two registered medical practitioners under these conditions —

  • If the woman is ​​either a survivor of sexual assault or rape or incest
  • If she is a minor
  • If her marital status has changed during the ongoing pregnancy (i.e. either widowhood or divorce)
  • If she has major physical disabilities or is mentally ill
  • On the grounds of foetal malformation incompatible with life or if the child is born, it would be seriously handicapped
  • If the woman is in humanitarian setting or disaster, or emergency situation as declared by the government
  • Besides, if the pregnancy has to be terminated beyond the 24-week gestational age, it can only be done on the grounds of foetal abnormalities if a four-member Medical Board, as set up in each State under the Act, gives permission to do so.
  • The law, notwithstanding any of the above conditions, also provides that where it is immediately necessary to save the life of the pregnant woman, abortion can be carried out at any time by a single registered medical practitioner.
  • Under the 2021 Act, Unmarried women can also access abortion under the above-mentioned conditions because it does not mention the requirement of spousal consent. If the woman is a minor, however, the consent of a guardian is required.

 IS TERMINATING A PREGNANCY A CRIMINAL OFFENCE IN INDIA?

  • Voluntarily terminating a pregnancy is a criminal offence under the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC). The Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act of 1971 authorizes medical doctors (with specific specialization) to abort a pregnancy on certain grounds. Pregnancy can be terminated at any time up to 12 weeks if one doctor agrees and up to 20 weeks if two doctors agree. Only where the pregnancy’s continuation will endanger the pregnant woman’s life, cause grave harm to her mental or physical health (including rape and refusal to utilize birth control), or result in foetal abnormalities is it permissible to terminate the pregnancy. Termination is also permitted at any time during the pregnancy if it is necessary to save the life of the woman concerned.
  • MTPA 2021 alters the MTPA 1971 to raise the upper limit for abortion from 20 to 24 weeks for certain types of women, removes the limit in cases of significant foetal abnormalities, and establishes state-level Medical Boards. According to Bill’s Statement of Objects and Reasons, multiple cases have been brought in the Supreme Court and different High Courts requesting authorization to terminate pregnancies at stages beyond the Act’s 20-week restriction based on foetal abnormalities or pregnancies in cases of rape. It also adds that as medical technology advances, the maximum limit for terminating pregnancies may be raised, particularly for vulnerable women.

ISSUES IN THE PRESENT LAW

  • The MTP Act, first enacted in 1971 and then amended in 2021, certainly makes ‘medical termination of pregnancy’ legal in India under specific conditions. However, this Act is framed from a legal standpoint to primarily protect medical practitioners because under the Indian Penal Code, “induced miscarriage” is a criminal offence.
  • This premise points to a lack of choice and bodily autonomy of women and rests the decision of abortion solely on the doctor’s opinion. The MTP Act also only mentions ‘pregnant woman’, thus failing to recognize that transgender persons and others who do not identify as women can become pregnant.
  • As the law does not permit abortion at will, critics say that it pushes women to access illicit abortions under unsafe conditions. Statistics put the annual number of unsafe and illegal abortions performed in India at 8,00,000, many of them resulting in maternal mortality.
  • The acceptance of abortion in Indian society is situated in the context of population control and family planning. But, most importantly, after more than 50 years of the MTP Act, women and transgender persons face major obstacles in accessing safe abortion care.

These are seven examples:

  1. They may not even be aware that abortion is legal or know where to obtain one safely;
  2. Since the MTP Act does not recognize abortion as a choice, they need the approval of medical professionals even in the first few weeks of the pregnancy;
  3. Unmarried and transgender people continue to face stigma and can be turned away from health facilities, forcing them to resort to unsafe care;
  4. Fourth, mandatory reporting requirements under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Bill (POCSO), 2011 law against child sexual offences, impact privacy and hinder access of adolescents to safe abortion services;
  5. Many are still coerced into agreeing to a permanent or long-term contraceptive method as a prerequisite for getting abortion services;
  6. Health-care providers may impose their own morality by insisting on ‘husbands’ or ‘parental’ consent for abortion. Even women seeking abortion care in health facilities are often mistreated and not provided medications for pain relief;
  7. Despite laws prohibiting sex determination, the illegal practice persists. The mushrooming of unregulated ultrasound clinics in India continues to facilitate the illegal practice of sex determination, resulting in unsafe abortions and female foeticide.

JUDICIAL INTERVENTIONS IN CASES OF ABORTIONS

  • In the landmark 2017 Right to Privacy judgement in the Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India and others, the Supreme Court had held that the decision by a pregnant person on whether to continue a pregnancy or not is part of such a person’s right to privacy as well and, therefore, the right to life and personal liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution.
  • Several women annually approach the apex court and High Courts when medical boards reject their application to access MTP beyond the gestational upper limit (now 24 weeks), seeking permission to abort a pregnancy, mostly in cases where it is a result of sexual assault or when there is a foetal abnormality.

WHAT ARE THE CRITICISMS AGAINST THE ABORTION LAW IN INDIA?

  • According to a 2018 study in the Lancet, 15.6 million abortions were accessed every year in India as of 2015. The MTP Act requires abortion to be performed only by doctors with specialization in gynaecology or obstetrics. However, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare’s 2019-20 report on Rural Health Statistics indicates that there is a 70% shortage of obstetrician-gynaecologists in rural India.
  • As the law does not permit abortion at will, critics say that it pushes women to access illicit abortions under unsafe conditions. Statistics put the annual number of unsafe and illegal abortions performed in India at 8,00,000, many of them resulting in maternal mortality.

THE WAY FORWARD

  • Rolling back the right to abortion is like rolling back modernity. Without legally accessible and medically safe abortions, women would be in greater danger and have much harder lives. It pushes women into an unsafe dark zone if faced with an unwanted pregnancy where forced motherhood could alter the very trajectory of their life.
  • In Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) vs. the Union Of India And Others (2017), the court recognized the constitutional right of women to make reproductive choices as a part of personal liberty under Article 21 of the Indian Constitution, which, despite laying a robust jurisprudence on reproductive rights and the privacy of a woman, does not translate into a fundamental shift in power from the doctor to the woman seeking an abortion.
  • The government needs to ensure that all norms and standardized protocols in clinical practice to facilitate abortions are followed in health care institutions across the country.
  • Along with that, the question of abortion needs to be decided on the basis of human rights, the principles of solid science, and in step with advancements in technology.

THE CONCLUSION: There is an urgent need in our country to shift the discourse on abortions from just being a family planning and maternal health issue to one of sexual health and reproductive rights issue. The situation in India shows that one law alone is insufficient and we must raise the bar on reproductive justice. We must improve our health systems to ensure good quality and respectful abortion care. As the focus on abortion rights in the US rages, we call upon all to self-reflect and to stand in solidarity with people in the US and other places where reproductive rights are in jeopardy. Reproductive injustice anywhere is a threat to the lives of people everywhere.

QUESTION FOR MAINS EXAMINATION:

  1. Critically analyze the Medical Termination of Pregnancy(MTP) (Amendment) Act, 2021.
  2. In the light of the recent judgement of the USA Supreme Court on abortion. Discuss the pro-life and pro-choice angles on abortion.



DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (JULY 25, 2022)

THE INDIAN POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

1.HOW WILL SC RULING ON ABORTION IMPACT WOMEN?

THE CONTEXT: Recently, the Supreme Court of India allowed an unmarried woman to end her pregnancy at 24 weeks, after the Delhi High Court refused to allow it, citing the provisions of the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act.
THE EXPLANATION:
The top court said if a medical board assessed that the pregnancy could be terminated without any harm to the mother, then she could go ahead and have an abortion.
What is the case?
• The 25-year-old unmarried woman came to the Supreme Court on appeal after the Delhi High Court turned down her plea to allow her to have a medical termination of her pregnancy because the terms of her relationship with her partner had changed.

What was the Delhi High Court’s position?
• The Delhi High Court had taken the view that she was unmarried and since the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act allowed only married women to terminate the pregnancy after 20 weeks, she would not be eligible to get an abortion. The Court said it would amount to killing the foetus, since she was in the 23rd week of her pregnancy. “As of today, Rule 3B of the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Rules, 2003 stands, and this court, while exercising its power under Article 226 of the Constitution of India, 1950, cannot go beyond the statute.
• The MTP Act which was amended in 2021 has the word partner instead of husband, exhibiting the intention of the law of the land to not confine it to only marital relationships. The judges said that the petitioner cannot be denied the benefit of the law, on the ground that she was unmarried, and that doing so would be contrary to the ‘object and spirit’ of the legislation.

What lies ahead?
• As per the MTP Act, all women are allowed to get a medical termination of pregnancy before 20 weeks. But only certain categories of women are allowed to have an abortion between 20 and 24 weeks — survivors of rape, minors, and a married woman whose relationship status has altered during this period.
• The Supreme Court’s expansion of the law to include unmarried women as part of the MTP Act has given women in similar circumstances an option now to access healthcare services without having to travel the long legal route to the top court every time.
• The Supreme Court of India allowed an unmarried woman to end her pregnancy at 24 weeks, after the Delhi High Court refused to allow it, citing the provisions of the Medical Termination of Pregnancy (MTP) Act.
VALUE ADDITION:
Medical Termination of Pregnancy (Amendment) Act, 2021:

Time limit and grounds for terminating a pregnancy: The Act specifies the grounds for terminating a pregnancy and specifies the time limit for terminating a pregnancy. The Bill amends these provisions.
Termination due to failure of contraceptive method or device: Under the Act, a pregnancy may be terminated up to 20 weeks by a married woman in the case of failure of contraceptive method or device. The Bill allows unmarried women to also terminate a pregnancy for this reason.
Medical Boards: All state and union territory governments will constitute a Medical Board. The Board will decide if pregnancy may be terminated after 24 weeks due to substantial foetal abnormalities. Each Board will have a gynaecologist, paediatrician, radiologist/sonologist, and other members notified by the state government.
Privacy: A registered medical practitioner may only reveal the details of a woman whose pregnancy has been terminated to a person authorised by law. Violation is punishable with imprisonment up to a year, a fine, or both.

THE HEALTH ISSUES

2. WHO CLASSIFIES MONKEYPOX AS ‘PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCY’

THE CONTEXT: The World Health Organisation has declared the global monkeypox outbreak a ‘public health emergency of international concern’ (PHEIC), one step below that of a ‘pandemic.’
THE EXPLANATION:
• A PHEIC, according to the WHO, constitutes “…an extraordinary event, which constitutes a public health risk to other States through the international spread, and which potentially requires a coordinated international response.”
• On January 30, 2020, the organisation had categorised COVID-19 as a PHEIC, when about 7,500 cases of novel coronavirus were reported. On March 11 that year, the agency elevated it to ‘pandemic.’
• Recently, the International Health Regulations Emergency Committee to discuss the monkeypox outbreak in several countries. It is this Committee of the WHO that decides on the seriousness of a public health crisis.

Guidelines to follow
• As part of the PHEIC declaration which is said to be “temporary” and reviewed every three months, countries are expected to follow guidelines.
• They are grouped into three categories: those with no reported cases or where the last case was from 21 days ago; those with recently imported cases and experiencing human-to-human transmission and finally, countries where cases are being reported and have a history of the presence of the virus.
• The guidelines direct countries to step up surveillance, spread awareness on the pandemic, and ensure that at-risk groups aren’t stigmatised.
• The WHO said that so far 14,533 probable and laboratory-confirmed cases (including 3 deaths in Nigeria and 2 in the Central African Republic) have been reported to WHO from 72 countries across six WHO regions; up from 3,040 cases in 47 countries at the beginning of May 2022.
• The majority of reported cases of monkeypox currently are in males, and most of these cases occur among males who identified themselves as gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men (MSM), in urban areas, and are clustered in social and sexual networks. Early reports of children affected include a few with no known epidemiological link to other cases, the WHO stated.

VALUE ADDITION:
Monkeypox
Monkeypox is a viral zoonotic disease with symptoms similar to smallpox, although with less clinical severity. The CDC’s monkeypox overview says the infection was first discovered in 1958 following two outbreaks of a pox-like disease in colonies of monkeys kept for research — which led to the name ‘monkeypox’.
How it spread?
Monkeypox spreads in different ways. The virus can spread from person-to-person through:
• direct contact with the infectious rash, scabs, or body fluids
• respiratory secretions during prolonged, face-to-face contact, or during intimate physical contact, such as kissing, cuddling, or sex
• touching items (such as clothing or linens) that previously touched the infectious rash or body fluids
• pregnant people can spread the virus to their fetus through the placenta

What are the key symptoms of monkeypox?
• According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), monkeypox begins with a fever, headache, muscle aches, back ache, and exhaustion. It also causes the lymph nodes to swell (lymphadenopathy), which smallpox does not.
• The World Health Organisation underlines that it is important not to confuse monkeypox with chickenpox, measles, bacterial skin infections, scabies, syphilis and medication-associated allergies.

What is the treatment?
• There is no proven treatment for monkeypox yet. The WHO recommends supportive treatment depending on the symptoms. Those infected are advised to isolate immediately.
• According to the Ministry of Health guidelines on supportive management of monkeypox, skin rashes should be cleaned with simple antiseptic, and covered with light dressing in case of extensive lesions. Oral ulcers should be managed with warm saline gargles
• Doctors say monkeypox is a very well-understood condition that can be managed efficiently with available clinical remedies.

THE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

3. OTHER COUNTRIES CAN JOIN CPEC FOR MUTUAL BENEFITS: CHINA, PAK.

THE CONTEXT: Recently, Pakistan and China decided to welcome any third country joining the multi-billion dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) for “mutual beneficial cooperation”.
THE EXPLANATION:
• The third meeting of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Joint Working Group (JWG) on International Cooperation and Coordination (JWG-ICC) was held in virtual mode. During the meeting, both sides reviewed continued implementation of CPEC and its expansion to jointly agreed priority areas.
• It was noted that as a flagship of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), CPEC had broken new ground in strengthening international and regional connectivity, especially in the context of its extension to Afghanistan.
• It was also agreed that CPEC’s development had reached a new point, with increasing emphasis on high-quality development of industry, agriculture, IT, and science and technology, while ensuring tangible socio-economic benefits for the people.
• According to the sources, “the timely completion of CPEC projects and steady progress on realising important projects in the pipeline was energising bilateral cooperation and further strengthening the foundation for Pakistan’s economic modernisation and enhancing the capacity for sustained progress and prosperity”.

VALUE ADDITION:
• CPEC (China-Pakistan Economic Corridor) is clutch of projects valued at $51 billion project which aims at rapidly expanding and upgrading Pakistan’s infrastructure and strengthening the economic ties between the People’s Republic of China (China) and Pakistan. It includes building roads, laying railway lines and pipelines to carry oil and gas.
• CPEC eventually aims at linking the city of Gwadar in South Western Pakistan to China’s North Western region Xinjiang through a vast network of highways and railways.
• The proposed project will be financed by heavily-subsidised loans, that will be disbursed to the Government of Pakistan by Chinese banking giants such as Exim Bank of China, China Development Bank, and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.
• The ‘China-Pakistan Economic Corridor’ violates India’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. India’s principal objection was that CPEC passed through Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (PoK)

THE ENVIRONMENT, ECOLOGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

4. ‘BAT HABITATS IN SOUTH WESTERN GHATS LIE PREDOMINANTLY OUTSIDE PROTECTED AREAS’

THE CONTEXT: A recent study indicates that more than 50% of habitats suitable for 37 species of bats in the Southern Western Ghats lie outside protected areas, potentially increasing threats faced by the animals due to poaching for their meat, habitat loss and stigma from local communities, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic.
THE EXPLANATION:
• The study area around 1,600 km of the Southern Western Ghats, encompassing biodiverse regions in Kerala, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. Six major biodiversity hotspots— Agastyamalai, Periyar Tiger Reserve, Anamalai, the Nilgiris, the Wayanad-Mudumalai complex and Brahmagiri— were part of the study area.
• According to the researchers, the Southern Western Ghats was home to rare and endangered bat species such as Salim Ali’s fruit bat (Latidenssalimalii) and the Pomona roundleaf bat (Hipposiderospomona).
• “Different species had different percentages of their ranges protected: five had less than 10% protection; six had between 10% and 20% protection; 10 had between 20% and 30% protection; 14 had between 30% and 40% protection; and two had between 40% and 50% protection. Moreover, potential suitable areas of forest-dependent species were mostly found to be in unprotected areas,” the researchers noted.
• “The study will hopefully help local governments and forest departments come up with conservation plans to protect bat species across the Western Ghats”.

Rising threats
• Researchers also noted that threats to bat species were increasing. “While bats like the Salim Ali’s fruit bat continued to be hunted for their meat, there have also been reports of people’s attitudes towards bats deteriorating since the COVID-19 pandemic due to misplaced concerns of having bat colonies near human settlements.
• People are increasingly coming to believe that the chances of them contracting zoonotic diseases increases due to presence of bats near their houses. Identifying these populations of bats outside protected areas could help forest conservation authorities spread awareness among human communities on the importance of bats to ecology and the environment”.

THE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

5. KERALA RESEARCHERS DETECT FUNGAL DISEASE IN JACKFRUIT

THE CONTEXT: Recently, the researchers at the Integrated Farming Systems Research Station (IFSRS), a Kerala Agricultural University (KAU) have reported the emergence of a new fungal disease in jackfruit.
THE EXPLANATION:
• It is perhaps the first time that fruit rot caused by the fungus Atheliarolfsii is being reported in jackfruit (Artocarpus heterophyllus) in India, according to a researcher’s IFSRS.
• A soil-borne fungal pathogen, Atheliarolfsii is a major threat to several crops and, hence, the new development warrants immediate attention, a research paper describing the IFSRS findings published in the latest edition of the Journal of Plant Pathology warned.
• The disease-infected samples were of mature jackfruit collected from Thiruvananthapuram, Kottayam and Pathanamthitta districts. While fruit varieties introduced from elsewhere can bring new diseases with them, the fruit rot caused by Atheliarolfsii does not fall into this category.
• “Atheliarolfsii with a wide host range which attacks various commercially cultivated crops belonging to different families. But this is the first time it is being reported in jackfruit in the country. One disease which is found in immature jackfruit is the Rhizopus fruit rot, but it does not affect mature fruit, “a researcher highlighted.

THE PRELIMS PERSPECTIVE

6. HENLEY PASSPORT INDEX 2022

THE CONTEXT:Japan has the world’s most powerful passport, followed by Singapore and South Korea, as per Henley Passport Index 2022. The holder of Japanese passport will get visa-free access to 193 countries. India has slipped from 85th place to the 87th with visa-free access to 60 countries.
THE EXPLANATION:
Performance of the countries in index:
• Among the 199 countries, Japan was ranked first. It is followed by Singapore and South Korea.
• These three countries have reversed the pre-covid-19 pandemic rankings, in which European nations were dominating.
• Japan’s passport provides entry to 193 countries without prior visa. On the other hand, Singapore and South Korea allows hassle-free entry to 192 countries.
• Top 10 countries in World’s most powerful passports list include-Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Germany, Spain, Finland, Italy, Luxemburg, Austria and Denmark (in the order).
• European nations, US and UK are among other top-ranked countries.
• Passport holders from Afghanistan have access to just 27 countries. On the other hand, Iraqi passport provide hassle free entry to 29 countries. These two countries have been ranked at lowest position.

Performance of India and its neighbour:
• Among Asian countries, India, Mauritius and Tajikistan share the 87th position, with hassle-free entry to 67 countries, without prior visa.
• China and Bolivia are ranked at 69th Their passports allow access to 80 destinations.
• Bangladesh is at 104th position.
• Pakistan has the fourth worst passport worldwide, with access to 32 destinations.

VALUE ADDITION:

What is Henley Passport Index?
• The Henley Passport Index is the original ranking of all the world’s passports according to the number of destinations their holders can access without a prior visa.
• Originally created by Dr Christian H. Kaelin (chairman of Henley & Partners), the ranking is based on exclusive data from the International Air Transport Association (IATA), which maintains the world’s largest and most accurate database of travel information.
• It was launched in 2006 and includes 199 different passports.
• The Henley Passport Index comes when countries are easing travel rules for international visitors after almost two years since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.
• The index ranks countries’ passports according to the number of destinations their holders can visit without a prior visa. The rankings are based on the analysis of the International Air Transport Association (IATA) data.




Ethics Through Current Development (25-07-2022)

  1. Education is alive when it teaches life itself READ MORE
  2. All Are One READ MORE
  3. SUKHA AND DUHKHA are temporary READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Sociology (25-07-2022)

  1. Check population growth, but without coercion READ MORE
  2. National Rural Livelihood Mission: a game changer READ MORE
  3. Children’s education READ MORE
  4. How Stigmas Impact Refugee and Migrant Health READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Geography (25-07-2022)

  1. Freshwater plunge~I READ MORE
  2. Why India Needs a ‘Gati Shakti’ Scheme for Its Wildlife READ MORE
  3. Explainer: What is causing the mass death of fish in India’s water bodies? READ MORE



Today’s Important Articles for Pub Ad (25-07-2022)

  1. A shot in the arm for the rule of law: The Supreme Court’s recent observations on indiscriminate arrests and the reluctance to give bail are pertinent READ MORE
  2. Out of bounds: Unusual or onerous bail conditions ought to have no place in judicial orders READ MORE
  3. Regulations should not be onerous READ MORE
  4. Expanding the right to privacy READ MORE
  5. Right to be forgotten: SC expands the ambit of informational privacy READ MORE
  6. Occupational Safety and Health: Why India should endorse the ILO’s Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work READ MORE



WSDP Bulletin (25-07-2022)

(Newspapers, PIB and other important sources)

Prelim and Main

  1. Thrissur scientist makes breakthrough in Alzheimer’s drug research READ MORE
  2. Rise and fall of cholera-causing bacteria lineage READ MORE
  3. Monkeypox declared a global health emergency; here’s what WHO has recommended READ MORE
  4. Ukraine works to resume grain exports, flags Russian strikes as risk READ MORE
  5. China launches second space station module, Wentian READ MORE
  6. Explained: Making use of forex reserves READ MORE
  7. India’s bio-economy likely to touch $300 billion by 2030, says report READ MORE
  8. The Marburg virus, a close cousin of Ebola, causes severe viral haemorrhagic fever READ MORE

Main Exam

GS Paper- 1

  1. Check population growth, but without coercion READ MORE

GS Paper- 2

POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

  1. A shot in the arm for the rule of law: The Supreme Court’s recent observations on indiscriminate arrests and the reluctance to give bail are pertinent READ MORE
  2. Out of bounds: Unusual or onerous bail conditions ought to have no place in judicial orders READ MORE
  3. Regulations should not be onerous READ MORE
  4. Expanding the right to privacy READ MORE
  5. Right to be forgotten: SC expands the ambit of informational privacy READ MORE
  6. Occupational Safety and Health: Why India should endorse the ILO’s Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work READ MORE

SOCIAL ISSUES

  1. National Rural Livelihood Mission: a game changer READ MORE
  2. Children’s education READ MORE
  3. How Stigmas Impact Refugee and Migrant Health READ MORE

INTERNATIONAL ISSUES

  1. MC12 over, it’s ‘gains’ for the developed world READ MORE
  2. The key to US-India partnership: Defence and technology cooperation READ MORE

GS Paper- 3

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

  1. Weighing in on India’s investment-led revival: Prospects of sustaining investment recovery are likely to get harder with a depreciating rupee and rising inflation READ MORE
  2. Unplug politics from Discom privatization READ MORE

ENVIRONMENT AND ECOLOGY

  1. Freshwater plunge~I READ MORE
  2. Why India Needs a ‘Gati Shakti’ Scheme for Its Wildlife READ MORE
  3. Explainer: What is causing the mass death of fish in India’s water bodies? READ MORE

GS Paper- 4

ETHICS EXAMPLES AND CASE STUDY

  1. Education is alive when it teaches life itself READ MORE
  2. All Are One READ MORE
  3. SUKHA AND DUHKHA are temporary READ MORE

Questions for the MAIN exam

  1. ‘Humans forget, but the internet does not forget and does not let humans forget India’. In the light of the statement, discuss the need for a law on the right to be forgotten?
  2. ‘Rural unemployment remains a crucial factor responsible for lower-income and skills and bad socio-economic conditions’. In the light of the statement, discuss how National Rural Livelihood Mission would be a game changer for the rural economy?

QUOTATIONS AND CAPTIONS

  • It is the power of our democracy that a daughter born in a poor house and born in a remote tribal area can reach the highest constitutional post of India.
  • In 75 years as a parliamentary democracy, India has carried forward the resolve of progress through participation and consensus.
  • At the heart of every major political upheaval lies a fiscal revolution.
  • India, which found itself on the losing side at the 12th Ministerial Conference of the WTO, needs to course correct.
  • The Supreme Court’s recent observations on indiscriminate arrests and the reluctance to give bail are pertinent.
  • Prospects of sustaining investment recovery are likely to get harder with a depreciating rupee and rising inflation.
  • Dehumanisation is likely when trust and humane aspects of governance get outsourced to opaque technologies.
  • US and India are, and should be, closely aligned in addressing the threat posed by an authoritarian party controlling the state of China.
  • When education moves towards real knowledge and real peace, a new man and a new humanity will be born. Our future depends on this.
  • The aim of an authentic education must be to teach this art and the art of becoming one with God. The goal of education must be life itself, not merely providing instruction in how to earn a livelihood.
  • Humans forget, but the internet does not forget and does not let humans forget India, said the Supreme Court this week. India must bring a law on the right to be forgotten.
  • The Supreme Court decision to allow abortion to unmarried women is both progressive and timely.
  • Rural unemployment remains a crucial factor responsible for lower-income and skills and bad socio-economic conditions.

50 WORD TALK

  • The right to be forgotten, also known as the right to erasure, was established in the European Union in 2014. In India, the Personal Data Protection Bill provides for a mechanism to implement this concept, though it is by no means an absolute right. Such a law will go a long way in addressing genuine cases, but only with sound evaluation guidelines in place.

Things to Remember:

  • For prelims-related news try to understand the context of the news and relate with its concepts so that it will be easier for you to answer (or eliminate) from given options.
  • Whenever any international place will be in news, you should do map work (marking those areas in maps and exploring other geographical locations nearby, including mountains, rivers, etc.) applies to the national places.)
  • For economy-related news (banking, agriculture, etc.) you should focus on terms and how these are related to various economic aspects, for example, if inflation has been mentioned, try to relate with prevailing price rises, shortage of essential supplies, banking rates, etc.
  • For main exam-related topics, you should focus on the various dimensions of the given topic, the most important topics which occur frequently and are important from the mains point of view will be covered in ED.
  • Try to use the given content in your answer. Regular use of this content will bring more enrichment to your writing.



Day-251 | Daily MCQs | UPSC Prelims | SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

[WpProQuiz 295]




TOPIC: WOMEN WORKERS AND ISSUE OF THEIR RECOGNITION

THE CONTEXT: The Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) reported that the labour participation rate of rural women was 9.92% in March 2022 compared to 24% for men.According to CMIE, millions who left the labour market stopped looking for employment “possibly [because they were]too disappointed with their failure to get a job and believed that there were no jobs available. In this write-up, we will analyse in detail the status of women workers and their issues.

SCENARIO OF WOMEN’S WORKFORCE PARTICIPATION

  • Only 18.6% of working-age women in India participate in the labour force, three times lower than men, says the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) 2020.
  • According to the World Bank, Indian women’s participation in the formal economy is among the lowest in the world—only parts of the Arab world fare worse. Even as the economy has grown, educational attainment has increased, fertility rates have fallen, and women are not participating in the formal economy. In fact, their participation is declining.
  • In some places, the presence of women is appreciable; for instance, female participation in projects under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme is about 50%.
  • India also boasts of the highest share of female airline pilots at 15%, while the world average is barely 5%.
  • Also, not too long ago, half of India’s banking assets were under institutions headed by women.
  • Despite this, the participation of women in the workforce in India has still remained low. India’s female LFPR is now among the world’s lowest at around 20%, on par with countries like Saudi Arabia. As per a report by the International Labour Organisation, India ranks 121 out of 131 countries on female LFPR.

CHALLENGES FACED BY WOMEN WORKERS

MECHANIZATION OF RURAL ECONOMY

  • With the arrival of hi-tech machines in the agriculture sector, operations have become less labour intensive and resulted in a decrease in working days to less than 3 months/year.
  • It forced many rural women to migrate and become part-time construction workers.

ABSENCE OF PAY PARITY

  • In the field of manual labour work, women are being paid less than men in terms of piece-rate due to physical constraints in lifting heavy weights.
  • One particular project in the Kalaburagi district of Karnataka focuses on the creation of percolation ponds.
  • Since the digging of ponds required lifting about 3,000 kg of mud a day and women were not able to meet the targets, they did not get the piece rate of ₹309; they got only ₹280 to ₹285

DISCRIMINATION AT WORKPLACE

  • Indian women still face blatant discrimination at their workplaces. They are often deprived of promotions and growth opportunities at workplaces but this doesn’t apply to all working women.
  • A majority of working women continue to be denied their right to equal pay, under the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 and are underpaid in comparison to their male colleagues. This is usually the case in factories and labour-oriented industries.

LIMITATION OF MGNREGA

SEXUAL HARASSMENT

  • Most of working women are prone to sexual harassment irrespective of their status, personal characteristics and the types of their employment. They face sexual harassment on way on transport, at workplaces, educational institutions and hospitals, at home and even in police stations when they go to file complaints.
  • It is shocking that the law protectors are violating and outraging the modesty of women. Most of the women tend to be concentrated in poor service jobs whereas men are in an immediate supervisory position, which gives them an opportunity to exploit their subordinate women.

LACK OF NUTRITIOUS FOOD

  • The high prices of essential commodities have led to a huge cut in women’s consumption of vegetables and pulses.
  • The deprivation of nourishment that women face due to high prices and low incomes is another dimension of the ‘compulsory’ woman worker’s life.
  • Due to a patriarchal society, boys are given relatively more nutritious food as they are deemed breadwinners of the family, especially if the family is poor and is not in a position to provide nutritious food to all the children.

REASONS FOR DECLINING WOMEN’S EMPLOYMENT IN INDIA

OCCUPATIONAL SEGREGATION

  • Between 1977 and 2017, India’s economy witnessed a surge in the contribution of services Between 1977 and 2017, India’s economy witnessed a surge in the contribution of services (39 percent to 53 percent) and industry (33 percent to 27 percent) to GDP. The proportion of rural men employed in agriculture fell from 80.6 percent to 53.2 percent, but rural women only decreased from 88.1 percent to 71.7 percent (NSSO data). Between 1994-2010, women received less than 19 percent of new employment opportunities generated in India’s 10 fastest-growing occupations and industries (33 percent to 27 percent) to GDP.
  • The proportion of rural men employed in agriculture fell from 80.6 percent to 53.2 percent, but rural women only decreased from 88.1 percent to 71.7 percent (NSSO data). Between 1994-2010, women received less than 19 percent of new employment opportunities generated in India’s 10 fastest-growing occupations.

INCREASED MECHANISATION

  • In agriculture, and as the use of seed drillers, harvesters, threshers and husking equipment increased, men displaced women. In textiles, power looms, button stitching machines and textile machinery phased out women’s labour.
  • Nearly 12 million Indian women could lose their jobs by 2030 owing to automation, according to a McKinsey Global Institute report.

GENDER GAPS IN HIGHER EDUCATION AND SKILL TRAINING

  • Tertiary-level female enrolment rose from 2 percent in 1971 to only 30 percent in 2019 (World Bank data). As of 2018-19, only 2 percent of working-age women received formal vocational training, of which 47 percent did not join the labour force (NSSO, 2018-19).
  • Consequently, women form only 17 percent of cloud computing, 20 percent of engineering, and 24 percent of data/artificial intelligence jobs (WEF, 2020).

SOCIAL NORMS

  • Unpaid care work continues to be a women’s responsibility, with women spending on average five hours per day on domestic work, vs. 30 minutes for men (NSSO, 2019).
  • Women face inordinate mobility restrictions such that only 54 percent can go to a nearby market alone (NFHS, 2015-16). Women regularly sacrifice wages, career progression, and education opportunities to meet family responsibilities, safety considerations, and other restrictions.

IMPORTANCE OF WOMEN IN THE WORKFORCE FOR INDIA

IMF:According to the International Monetary Fund, India’s GDP might grow by 27% if the proportion of women working equals that of males.

Micro-level:

  • They are more financially self-sufficient and have more control over their life.
  • They will not succumb to physical or emotional assault.
  • They will take care of themselves when it comes to social concerns and pressures.

Macro-level:

  • Good for the economy.
  • According to a 2016 analysis by the McKinsey Global Institute, attaining gender parity in India might add $700 billion to the global GDP.
  • Because women contribute fresh abilities to the office, the benefits of adding women to the workforce in terms of productivity and growth are numerous.
  • Men’s salaries will rise as a result of the increased participation of women in the work field, as productivity rises.
  • Women contribute to the creation of exciting work culture by creating healthy competition, teamwork, and camaraderie, and thereby assisting the organisation in reaching its full potential.

STEPS TAKEN BY THE GOVERNMENT TO IMPROVE WOMEN’S LABOUR FORCE PARTICIPATION

LEGAL PROVISIONS

  • The Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 provides for payment of equal remuneration to men and women workers for the same work or work of similar nature without any discrimination. Further, under the provisions of the Minimum Wages Act, 1948, the wages fixed by the appropriate Government are equally applicable to both male and female workers and the Act does not discriminate on the basis of gender.
  • The government has targeted the issue by taking various prominent steps to increase the female labour participation rate which includes the enactment of the Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Act, 2017 which provides for enhancement in paid maternity leave from 12 weeks to 26 weeks and provisions for mandatory crèche facility in the establishments having 50 or more employees.

e-Shram portal

  • The Ministry of Labour and Employment launched the e-Shram portal.
  • The aim is to register 38 crore unorganised workers such as construction labourers, migrant workforce, street vendors, and domestic workers, among others.
  • If a worker is registered on the e-shram portal and meets with an accident, he will be eligible for Rs 2.0 Lakh on death or permanent disability and Rs 1.0 lakh on partial disability.

The Mahila Kisan Sashaktikaran Pariyojana (MKSP)

  • The Ministry of Rural Development launched MKSP in 2011.
  • The aim is to impart skill development and capacity-building programmes for rural women.
  • This scheme was introduced as a sub-component of DAY-NRLM (Deendayal Antyodaya Yojana — National Rural Livelihoods Mission) and implemented through State Rural Livelihoods Mission (SRLM) across India.
  • Under the DAY-NRLM scheme, training on the use of the latest agriculture, allied techniques, and agro-ecological best practices are being imparted to women farmers through the community resource persons and extension agencies.

Biotech-Krishi Innovation Science Application Network (Biotech-KISAN) Programme

  • The Department of Biotechnology (DBT) under the Ministry of Science and Technology initiated the Biotech-KISAN Programme.
  • It provides scientific solutions to farmers in the northeast region to link available innovative agriculture technologies to the farm with the small and marginal farmers, especially women farmers of the region.

Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY)

 THE WAY FORWARD:

SYSTEMIC CHANGES NEEDED

  • Government has to make an all-out effort to enrol more and more girls in primary education while arresting the high dropout rates among female students, this will enhance female education, which in turn will help more women to become part of the workforce when they enter the working age.
  • The government has so far looked at female social security from the lens of the organised sector, which is very narrow,  Focus should be to enhance social security, including medical benefits, health insurance and old-age benefits through a gender-oriented universal social security.

PROVIDING SKILL TRAINING

  • Skill training of women in job roles aligned to the gig, platform and care sectors as well as other emerging sectors such as those covered under the Production-Linked Incentive Scheme needs to be encouraged.
  • Online skill training can also be beneficial to women who face constraints in physical mobility due to social norms, domestic responsibilities or concerns over safety.
  • We need training programmes with well-defined outcomes for women’s digital access and to mentor them to take up employment opportunities in emerging sectors.

MORE INVESTMENTS

  • Greater investment in better health and care facilities would not only improve the well-being of India’s people and hence their economic productivity but will also lead to more employment opportunities for women.
  • The ILO Report on Care Work and Care Jobs for the Future of Decent Work: Key findings in Asia and the Pacific (2018) indicated that increasing investment in the care economy has the potential to generate a total of 69 million jobs in India by 2030.
  • Enabling women to acquire both physical assets (through credit facilities, revolving funds, etc.) and employable skills is crucial for them to take up employment opportunities in new and emerging sectors.

MINIMUM WAGES

  • There should be strict implementation of minimum wages with piece rates fixed for different types of women’s labour.

BRINGING WOMEN INTO LEADERSHIP ROLE.

  • Subdued gender participation emanates from social-economic issues, which can be treated by bringing behavioural change. This can be changed if more women are given leadership positions.
  • Thus, there is a need to ensure equal representation– from company boards to parliaments, from higher education to public institutions — through special measures and quotas.

IMBIBING GENDER EQUALITY

  • There is a need to remove barriers to women’s full inclusion in the economy, including through access to the labour market, property rights and targeted credit and investments.
  • Women-oriented government initiatives such as Beti Bachao Beti Padhao, and Knowledge Involvement in Research Advancement through Nurturing (KIRAN) Scheme, represent steps in the right direction.

MGNREGA STANDARDS

  • The performance standards set under MGNREGA should be established gender-wise and the work sites made more worker-friendly.
  • The ‘compulsory’ woman worker must be recognised and protected by laws and policies that address her issues.

 THE CONCLUSION: Recognising the role of women will lead to a more egalitarian society. Even though there has been a significant change observed in the sharing of gender roles, there is an urgent need for reducing and redistributing unpaid work. Governments can play an important role in doing so. Change in the social and cultural setup is also important so that the burden reduces on those who are provided with the sole responsibility of carrying out unpaid work. Concerted efforts towards ensuring enabling conditions for women to be employed including transport, safety, and women’s hostels along with social security provisions for all in the form of maternity benefits and child care arrangements are required for providing a level playing field for women entering the labour market.

QUESTION FOR MAINS EXAMINATION:

  1. “Increasing Female LFPR in India is crucial not just to achieve economic growth but also to promote inclusive growth and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals”. Comment.
  2. Women’s labour force participation in India is continuously on a declining trend and is a cause for concern in achieving India’s developmental aspirations. Analyse the reasons for the decline and suggest measures to improve the condition.
  3. Despite the government’s continuous efforts to uplift women’s status in the rural economy, the traditional struggle for women to perform temporary jobs at a lower wage rate still prevails. Discuss.



DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (JULY 23, 2022)

THE INDIAN POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

1.WHY DGCA AMENDED RULES FOR BOARDING SPECIALLY ABLED PEOPLE ON AIRCRAFT

THE CONTEXT: The Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) amended its rules on carriage of disabled passengers to say that airlines cannot deny boarding to specially abled people without seeking the medical opinion of a doctor at the airport on a passenger’s fitness to fly.

THE EXPLANATION:

What does the new DGCA regulation say?

  • The DGCA said it has amended its regulations to improve accessibility of boarding and flying for the specially abled.
  • In its new Civil Aviation Requirement (CAR), the DGCA has said that if an airline decides to deny boarding after getting medical opinion, it will have to immediately inform the passenger in writing and mention the reasons.

The clause added to the CAR on “carriage by air – persons with disability and/or persons with reduced mobility” states: “Airline shall not refuse carriage of any person on the basis of disability. However, in case an airline perceives that the health of such a passenger may deteriorate in-flight, the said passenger will have to be examined by a doctor, who shall categorically state the medical condition and whether the passenger is fit to fly or not. After obtaining the medical opinion, the airline shall take the appropriate call”.

What were the old rules?

  • According to the earlier rules, airlines could deny boarding to any person on the basis of disability if it opined that “transportation of such persons would or might be inimical to the safety of flight”. The airlines, however, were bound to specify in writing the basis of such refusal.
  • Notably, IndiGo, which stood by its ground staff’s decision to deny boarding saying it was done in the interest of flight safety, later said it planned to conduct an internal case study on how to better serve passengers with disabilities, especially when they are feeling distressed.

VALUE ADDITION:

About Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA)

  • It is a statutory body of the Indian Central Government to regulate civil aviation in India.
  • It was Formed under the Aircraft (Amendment) Bill, 2020.
  • Functions: It investigates aviation accidents and incidents, maintains all regulations related to aviation and is responsible for issuance of licenses.

THE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

2.WHAT ARE EU’S OPTIONS IN PALM OIL ROW WITH MALAYSIA AND INDONESIA?

THE CONTEXT: The World Trade Organization (WTO) could soon rule on two cases brought against the European Union over its decision to phase-out the import of unsustainable palm oil by 2030.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The complaints were filed by Indonesia and Malaysia, the world’s two largest palm oil producers, who slammed Brussels’ Renewable Energy Directive II as unfair and “discriminatory.”
  • The EU has been sending mixed signals on the controversial issue. On one hand, its officials have made clear that oil production is a leading cause of deforestation and so cannot comply with renewable energy targets. There is also an issue of pollution — palm oil diesel releases up to three times as many emissions compared to traditional petroleum-based fuel.
  • In early July, EU lawmakers adopted draft rules for the ReFuelEU initiative, which would mean 85% of all used aviation fuel would have to be “sustainable” by 2050. Palm oil by-products would not be acceptable. There is now talk in the European Parliament of bringing forward the final phase-out date for palm oil imports, currently set at 2030.
  • Indonesia and Malaysia accounted for 44.6% and 25.2% of those imports, respectively. EU imports from Indonesia were up 9% last year, compared to 2020, according to Indonesian government data. The Ukraine war, which started in February this year, put additional pressure on Brussels to secure its fuel supply.

What if the WTO rules against the EU?

The WTO decision seems to be drawing near. The panel to decide Indonesia’s case was formed in November 2020. A panel of the same members was formed for Malaysia’s case in July 2021.

If the WTO panels were to rule against in favour of Indonesia and Malaysia, Brussels has three options, explained Stefan Mayr, a senior scientist at the Institute for Law and Governance at Vienna University of Economics and Business.

  • First, the EU could appeal against the panel report. But that could set back a final ruling by years, as any decision would have to come after new members are appointed to the WTO’s Appellate Body. The body is currently not functioning due to the US blocking new appointees.
  • The second option, Mayr noted, would be for the EU to comply with the WTO ruling and adapt the environmental policies established by the Renewable Energy Directive II. Whether the EU could make cosmetic changes to its palm oil phase-out, while keeping the essence of the policy, is unclear.
  • Lastly, the EU could simply carry on regardless and accept any retaliatory measures imposed by Indonesia and Malaysia.
  • This last option, however, doesn’t seem too likely. A senior EU source with knowledge of this issue, who requested anonymity, said: “we will, of course, abide by whatever the WTO decides.”

Geopolitics and palm oil

  • If the EU was to ignore the ruling, Indonesia and Malaysia would struggle to retaliate economically, analysts reckon. According to European Commission data, Malaysia is only the EU’s 20th largest trading partner in goods; Indonesia is 31st.
  • But another EU official, also not authorized to speak, speculated that Brussels would not want to unnecessarily frustrate two key actors in Southeast Asia, where the EU is keen on boosting its reputation and signing new free trade deals. Because of the energy crisis caused by the Ukraine war, the official also expects EU imports of palm oil to continue growing in the coming years.

POINTS TO REMEMBER

  • India, the world’s leading vegetable oil buyer, imported 7,80,741 tonnes of palm oils in January 2021.
  • The country’s total vegetable oil imports rose 16 per cent to 12.70 lakh tonnes in January, 2022 compared to 10.96 lakh tonnes in the year-ago period.

3.WHAT’S THE SIGNIFICANCE OF UN-BACKED GRAIN EXPORT DEAL SIGNED BY UKRAINE, RUSSIA?

THE CONTEXT: Russia and Ukraine signed separate agreements with Turkey and the U.N., clearing the way for exporting millions of tons of desperately needed Ukrainian grain — as well as Russian grain and fertilizer — ending a wartime standoff that had threatened food security around the globe.

THE EXPLANATION:

Why was the grain export deal signed?

  • Ukraine is one of the world’s largest exporters of wheat, corn and sunflower oil, but Russia’s invasion of the country and naval blockade of its ports have halted shipments. Some grain is being transported through Europe by rail, road and river, but the prices of vital commodities like wheat and barley have soared during the nearly five-month war.
  • Ukrainian and Russian military delegations reached a tentative agreement last week on a U.N. plan that would also allow Russia to export its grain and fertilizers.

What is the grain export deal?

  • The deal makes provisions for the safe passage of ships. It foresees the establishment of a control center in Istanbul, to be staffed by U.N., Turkish, Russian and Ukrainian officials, to run and coordinate the process. Ships would undergo inspections to ensure they are not carrying weapons. According to sources, no Russian ship would escort vessels and that there would be no Russian representative present at Ukrainian ports. Ukraine also plans an immediate military response “in case of provocations.
  • Ukraine was expected to export 22 million tons of grain and other agricultural products that have been stuck in Black Sea ports due to the war.

Why was the movement of grains halted till now?

  • Moscow accused Ukraine of failing to remove sea mines at the ports to allow safe shipping and insisted on its right to check incoming ships for weapons. Ukraine has argued that Russia’s port blockade and launching of missiles from the Black Sea made any shipments unviable.
  • Ukraine has sought international guarantees that the Kremlin wouldn’t use the safe corridors to attack the Black Sea port of Odesa. Ukrainian authorities have also accused Russia of stealing grain from eastern Ukraine and deliberately shelling Ukrainian fields to set them on fire.

THE ENVIRONMENT, ECOLOGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

4.MOST NEW PASSENGER VEHICLES IN 2050 WILL BE ELECTRIC: STUDY

THE CONTEXT: Electric passenger vehicles could comprise 30%-75% of the new vehicle sales in India by 2030 and 2050 respectively, according to a study by Delhi-headquartered think tank, Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW).

THE EXPLANATION:

  • Experts say that investments in the EV ecosystem, to enhance the charging infrastructure and expand the local supply chain development, would help convince customers to adopt EVs over traditional vehicles.
  • Close to half of the new two-wheelers and over a quarter of new three- and four-wheelers sold in 2030, the study projects, could be electric. Therefore, Centre and state governments would need to invest significantly more in charging infrastructure and support local supply chain development to support this rapid growth in electric vehicle sales.
  • CEEW’s ‘India Transport Energy Outlook’, as the study is called, underlined that in the next three decades, ownership of four-wheelers could grow by nine times. The ownership of two-wheelers though would saturate with rising income levels. The overwhelming shift to four-wheelers, aided by rising income levels, would significantly impact the transport sector’s energy demand and emissions. At present, India’s transport sector accounts for around 21% of the total energy consumed and produces fewer emissions compared to developed countries.
  • “Energy demand from India’s transport sector is set to grow manifold over the next 30 years, in line with the expected rise in the per capita income. Therefore, decarbonising the transport sector, especially the hard-to-abate aviation sector and long-distance freight transport, is crucial for India’s short and long-term climate goals”.
  • At the same time, India should also seek global partnerships to develop an ecosystem to promote research and development for green hydrogen in the transport sector.”

  • The CEEW study also highlighted that a decline in the share of public transport due to a surge in ownership of private vehicles and rapid growth in air travel would pose significant challenges to India’s efforts to decarbonise the transport sector.
  • “India is poised to witness rapid urbanisation in the coming decades and demand for houses in the cities is likely to grow substantially by 2050. With increased pressure on land as a resource, restricting ownership and use of personal vehicles would be necessary.
  • To avoid a surge in energy demand and space from the transport sector, policymakers should encourage adoption of public transport, especially in major cities with high penetration of personal vehicles. Further, investments in the EV ecosystem would help convince customers to replace their traditional vehicles with EVs.

VALUE ADDITION:

Government steps:

  • FAME (faster adoption of electric and hybrid vehicles) scheme in its phase 2 has been going on.
  • EV policy – individual states are coming with EV policies. Eg. Recently the Maharashtra government came up with its policy till 2025.
  • Green colored number plates – the government has decided to use green colored number plates for EVs.
  • The Ministry of Power has issued a policy on charging infrastructure and has issued a notification clarifying that charging electric vehicles will be a service, not a sale of electricity.
  • Decision to promote aluminium batteries as an alternative to lithium batteries.
  • Electricity regulatory commissions have also brought out special tariffs for EV charging, and ARAI has introduced standards for AC & DC charging.
  • MoHUA has amended Building Bye-laws and Urban and Regional Development Plans Formulation and Implementation Guidelines to make charging infrastructure development as an integral part of urban planning, development and construction.

THE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

5.NEW RESEARCH: A NEW SPRAY COATING TO PROTECT SURFACES FROM VIRUSES, BACTERIA

THE CONTEXT: According to a new study in Advanced Science, At the beginning of the pandemic, before it became widely accepted that respiratory particles are the primary mode of transmission of Covid-19, the focus was on transmission via contact with surfaces. The disinfectants used to guard against that have become less effective.

THE EXPLANATION:

  • The study describes an alternative: a sprayable coating. This “can prevent the surface spread of infection from bacteria and viruses, including Covid-19, over a sustained period”. It said the coating is also safer than existing alternatives to disinfectant, with no harmful side effects.
  • The study said the coatings “register an 11-fold decrease in viral contamination compared to the noncoated surfaces”.
  • The spray works in two ways: repelling viruses and bacteria through an air-filled barrier, and killing pathogens through microscopic materials if the layer becomes damaged or submerged for extended periods. It uses a combination of plastics.
  • “The coating provides a reliable alternative to standard disinfectants, which are becoming less effective and require regular reapplication, and is the only permanent surface layer proven to protect surfaces from contamination by viruses.
  • The coating can be applied to surfaces in public settings such as lift buttons, stair rails, surfaces in hospitals, nursing homes, schools and restaurants.

THE PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

ANSWER FOR 22ND JULY 2022

ANSWER: B

EXPLANATION:

MURBURG VIRAL DISEASE

  • According to WHO, Marburg virus disease (MVD), is a severe, often fatal hemorrhagic fever.
  • It was earlier known as Marburg haemorrhagic fever.
  • Marburg, like Ebola, is a filovirus; and both diseases are clinically similar.
  • This outbreak is only the second time that the disease has been detected in West Africa.
  • It was first detected in 1967 after simultaneous outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt in Germany; and in Belgrade, Serbia.

 




TOPIC : INGENIOUS CYBERCRIMES – LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES ILL-EQUIPPED TO DEAL WITH MENACE

THE CONTEXT: New-age crimes in the cyber world are leaving the cops huffing and puffing as thieves seem to run miles ahead of them with smarter and ingenious methods of breaching and misusing digital data to loot more and more vulnerable victims. As reliance on technology, remote work and automation picks pace and billions of people become digitally savvy, the scope for online trickery and scams has grown exponentially. This article presents various aspects of cybercrimes and how law enforcement agencies can keep a check on them.

CYBERCRIME

Cybercrime is defined as crimes committed on the internet using the computer as a tool to target the victim for the execution of the desired crime. Though it is difficult to determine where the particular cyber crime took place because it can harm its victim even sitting at a far distance. Cyber crimes are quite different from traditional crimes as they are often harder to detect, investigate and prosecute and because of that cyber crimes cause greater damage to society than traditional crimes. Cyber crimes are broadly classified into different groups:

CRIME AGAINST THE INDIVIDUALS

  • Harassment, cyber-stalking, deformation, indecent exposure, cheating, email spoofing, fraud, etc.

CRIME AGAINST PROPERTY

  • Transmitting viruses, net trespass, unauthorized control over computer systems, internet thefts, infringement of intellectual property,etc.

CRIME AGAINST ORGANIZATION

  • Cyber terrorism within a government organization, possession of unauthorized information, distribution of pirate software, etc.

CRIME AGAINST SOCIETY

  • Child pornography, financial crimes, sale of unlawful articles, trafficking, forgery of records, gambling, etc.

DATA AND RECENT INCIDENTS:

  1. Cybercrimes in the country have increased four times or 306 per cent in the past four years. In 2016, 12,317 cases of cybercrime were registered and in 2020 this number increased to 50,035. This means that India registered 136 cybercrime cases every day in 2020, according to the National Crime Records Bureau.
  2. India witnessed over 18 million cyber-attacks and threats, with an average of nearly 200,000 threats every day, in the first three months of 2022, according to US-based cyber security firm, Norton. The company states in its Cyber Safety Pulse Report that the quarter spotted nearly 60,000 phishing attempts through this quarter, as well as over 30,000 tech support scams in this time.
  3. Another aspect is the increasing trend of cyber criminals gaining access to corporate email addresses. In the year 2015, an oil and gas company was hacked whereby the cyber criminals duplicated the email ids of the senior officials in order to ploy one of the clients to transfer the amount to the hacker’s account leading to losses to the tune of a few hundred crores. E.g. The Cosmos Bank was destructively hit by a cyber-attack in the year 2018, where the hackers hacked into the ATM server of the bank and stole details of many visa and Rupay debit card owners.
  4. Recent incidents like Pegasus WhatsApp snooping, a cyber attack on India’s nuclear power plant etc. have shown India’s vulnerability.

ISSUES IN INDIA’S CYBER SECURITY

  1. Service Providers: Rush towards digitization in almost every sector has led to increased collaborations with application service providers. This is done to provide customers with the best apps and services in the shortest possible time. Hardware and software being of foreign origin or the terabytes of data that is parked on servers outside India serves as a potential threat to National Cyberspace.
  2. Wide Coverage: India has now more than 700 million internet users which makes it a large pool of digitally vulnerable targets. Considering our nation’s size and scale, it serves as a challenge to monitor and suspect digital threats. Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) is heavily understaffed. Although Gov. has set up National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre (NCIIPC) but it is yet to identify and implement measures to protect critical information infrastructure
  3. The continued perception has been that cyber security is optional. This led to an increase in threats of cyber-attacks.
  4. The international threat of a cyber war from neighbouring countries has increased in recent times. Lots of equipment in India are imported. It is unknown whether these devices are tampered with or programmed for control processes
  5. Cyber-attacks have grown in terms of sophistication and reach in recent times. The countries are witnessing growing cybercrime ranging from fraud calls to malware that brings banking systems to a standstill. Attacks are often anonymous and difficult to attribute to specific actors, state or non-state. Advanced Precision Threats (APTs) carried out by anonymous hackers are often silent and go unnoticed for long periods.

WHAT HAS INCREASED INDIA’S CYBER SECURITY THREAT?

DIGITAL INDIA VISION

  • India is one of the fastest-growing markets for digital technologies fuelling the government’s push toward actualising its Digital India mission.
  • Whether creating broadband highways or rolling out services such as DigiLocker and e-governance schemes like the Jan Dhan Yojana, the government has pushed for as much digital adoption as possible.
  • Under Pradhan Mantri Jan Dhan Yojana 45 crore new accounts have been opened and 32 crore RuPay Debit Cards have been distributed in the last 8 years.
  • BharatNet is also developing very fast, 5.75 lakh km of fibre cable has been laid and work has been done to connect 1.80 lakh villages in the last 8 years which was less than 10000, 8 years ago.

INCREASING FOOTPRINT OF DIGITAL ACTIVITIES

  • India now has over 1.15 billion phones and more than 700 million internet users which makes it a large pool of digitally vulnerable targets.
  • In January 2020, India had the second-largest Internet user base with over 550 million Internet users.
  • In 2021, 40% of the total global digital payments took place in India.
  • Digital Inclusion increases the potential of digital threats leading to cyber-attacks and crimes.

TECHNOLOGY SHOCKS

  • Technologies like the internet, social media, and smart phones allow individuals and groups to commit crimes across international borders. The digital illiteracy and fear psychosis that was evident in Indian masses after the demonetization in 2016 made them more susceptible to cyber frauds.
  • The Jamtara cyber con artists made news in 2017, for phishing attacks and duping people of large amounts.
  • Silly mistakes by gullible people make them an easy prey to hackers, tele-phishers and other cheats using devices to steal debit and credit card details.
  • This has forced one to think that whether the technology upgrades are faster than the general awareness of the people and law making process to handle such crimes.

 LAWS RELATED TO CYBER SECURITY IN INDIA

INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ACT, 2000

  • The act regulates the use of computers, computer systems, computer networks and also data and information in electronic format. The act lists down among other things, the following as offences:

ü  Tampering with computer source documents.

ü  Hacking with computer system

ü  Act of cyber terrorism i.e. accessing a protected system with the intention of threatening the unity, integrity, sovereignty or security of the country.

ü  Cheating using computer resources etc.

STRATEGIES UNDER NATIONAL CYBER POLICY, 2013

  • Creating a secure cyber ecosystem.
  • Creating mechanisms for security threats and responses to the same through national systems and processes.
  • National Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-in) functions as the nodal agency for coordination of all cyber security efforts, emergency responses, and crisis management.
  • Securing e-governance by implementing global best practices, and wider use of Public Key Infrastructure.
  • Protection and resilience of critical information infrastructure with the National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre (NCIIPC) operating as the nodal agency.
  • NCIIPC has been created under the Information Technology Act, of 2000 to secure India’s critical information infrastructure. It is based in New Delhi.
  • Promoting cutting-edge research and development of cyber security technology.
  • Human Resource Development through education and training programs to build capacity.

 GOVERNMENT INITIATIVES TO TACKLE CYBER CRIMES

CYBER SURAKSHIT BHARAT INITIATIVE

  • It was launched in 2018 with an aim to spread awareness about cybercrime and build capacity for safety measures for Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs) and frontline IT staff across all government departments.

NATIONAL CYBER SECURITY COORDINATION CENTRE (NCCC)

  • In 2017, the NCCC was developed. Its mandate is to scan internet traffic and communication metadata (which are little snippets of information hidden inside each communication) coming into the country to detect real-time cyber threats.

CYBER SWACHHTA KENDRA

  • In 2017, this platform was introduced for internet users to clean their computers and devices by wiping out viruses and malware.

INFORMATION SECURITY EDUCATION AND AWARENESS PROJECT (ISEA)

  • Training of 1.14 Lakh persons through 52 institutions under the Information Security Education and Awareness Project (ISEA) – a project to raise awareness and provide research, education and training in the field of Information Security.

INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION

  • Looking forward to becoming a secure cyber ecosystem, India has joined hands with several developed countries like the United States, Singapore, Japan, etc. These agreements will help India to challenge even more sophisticated cyber threats.

CYBERCRIME PORTAL

  • It aims to enable citizens to report online content pertaining to Child Pornography/ Child Sexual Abuse Material or sexually explicit content

NATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CYBER SAFETY

  • In June 2022 the National Conference on Cyber Safety and National Security was held in New Delhi. The conference is part of the efforts to create mass awareness for the prevention of cybercrimes in the country.

INTERNATIONAL MECHANISMS

  • The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is a specialized agency within the United Nations which plays a leading role in the standardization and development of telecommunications and cyber security issues.
  • Budapest Convention on Cybercrime: It is an international treaty that seeks to address Internet and computer crime (cybercrime) by harmonizing national laws, improving investigative techniques, and increasing cooperation among nations. It came into force on 1 July 2004. India is not a signatory to this convention.
  • Internet Governance Forum (IGF): It brings together all stakeholders i.e. government, private sector and civil society on the Internet governance debate. It was first convened in October–November 2006.
  • Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN): It is a non-profit organization responsible for coordinating the maintenance and procedures of several databases related to the namespaces and numerical spaces of the Internet, ensuring the network’s stable and secure operation. It has its headquarters in Los Angeles, U.S.A.

BUDAPEST CONVENTION

  • The Council of Europe’s (CoE) Cybercrime Convention, also known as the Budapest Convention is the sole legally binding international multilateral treaty on cybercrime. It coordinates cybercrime investigations between nation-states and criminalizes certain cybercrime conduct.
  • It was open for signature in 2001 and came into force in 2004.
  • The Budapest Convention is supplemented by a Protocol on Xenophobia and Racism committed through computer systems.
  • India is not a party to it. India recently voted in favour of a Russian-led UN resolution to set up a separate convention.
  • The resolution seeks to set up new cyber norms considered as a counter alternative to the US-backed Budapest Accord.

NEED FOR INTERNATIONAL LAW TO DEAL WITH CROSS-BORDER CYBERCRIMES

  • Technology develops much more quickly than the domestic and international laws that apply to its use across borders. Some countries argue for greater control over citizens’ data, with localization requirements for storing data inside national borders.
  • As new technologies like the internet of things continue to evolve, the ability of international law to combat their negative uses becomes increasingly important to protecting critical infrastructure like power plants and dams.
  • But one of the most persistent hurdles remains:International law is designed for sovereign nations to work through legal mechanisms to address grievances with other sovereign nations. Some technology companies have now become key international players, but as non-state actors and they are still governed by national laws and regulations. Until international law catches up with this reality, accountability to international human rights norms also remains elusive.
  • Technology empowers governments and non-state actors alike to reach far beyond their own national borders. Combatting transnational issues such as cyber attacks, terrorism, and propaganda requires developing new rules to address the negative consequences of technology.
  • The phenomenon of increase in cyber espionage by corporate, by hostile governments to steal trade secrets and information to gain economic advantage or military advantage (most recently seen in Russia – Ukraine war) also demands for a comprehensive law governing all nations on the issue of

THE ANALYSIS OF THE ISSUE

  • The media is full of horrifying stories of the common and even highly-placed people being duped of their money through a wide array of online scams. Even as criminals are inventing newer tools to defraud companies and individuals of their assets, the old and common ways like phishing, malware, ransomware etc via scam emails, mobile phone calls and messaging continue to trap thousands of unsuspecting prey.
  • At present, in the context of cross-border cyber security threats India needs to review its cyber-defence policies and the country also needs to give equal attention to building a deterrent cyber-offensive capability. The government is taking far too long in finalising a National Cyber Security Strategy.
  • There are two limitations to India’s present approach toward cyber security. The country’s policy is defensive and has a narrow focus. It aims to harden vulnerabilities only in civil government and military assets. However, a substantial amount of critical infrastructure in India is built and managed by the private sector.
  • Private corporations also hold troves of sensitive personal data. Therefore, any new strategy must ensure the private sector has the necessary cyber-security cover. The new strategy must also acknowledge that the capacity to counter-attack is often the best defence in a cyber war.

THE WAY FORWARD:

  • The law enforcement agencies’ cyber security arena is inadequately equipped with expert manpower and resources needed to counter this specialised menace and the very real and growing risk of online fraud and thefts. India should update and upgrade its computing environment and IoT with current tools, patches, updates and best-known methods of the day in a timely manner.
  • The instances of cyber financial fraud also call for increased budget allocations in the field of cybersecurity in every district to improve the detection and prevention of the crime.
  • The government should also develop core skills in cyber security, data integrity and data security fields while also setting stringent cyber security standards to protect banks and financial institutions.
  • Effective use of the knowledge gained from actual attacks that have already taken place in the past for building an effective and pragmatic defence.
  • Emphasizing digital literacy is the first requirement for increasing awareness about cyber threats.A public awareness campaign can also prove to be effective to curb cybercrime.
  • The university and school curriculum must also emphasize cyber security as a high-decibel awareness
  • Pressure also needs to be put on officials in the public domain to carry out regular vulnerability assessments and create necessary awareness of the growing cyber threat.
  • A dedicated industry forum for cyber security should be set up to develop trusted indigenous solutions to check cyber-attacks.
  • While international cooperation among different countries is necessary to tackle cyber crimes, it is difficult to have universally accepted law on cyber security because there are different approaches, cultures, history on how we think about freedom of speech; the right to privacy and freedom & security. While no country wants to be deprived of benefits of technological advancements we need to build on and improve international cooperation until a comprehensive and pan global law is in place.

THE CONCLUSION:

Emerging trends in cybersecurity indicate that nearly all future global conflicts will have a cyber component. Whether it is for spying on governments, targeting defence forces, hitting power and communication grids, crippling transport networks, subverting financial systems or sabotaging flights, the next war will begin in cyberspace. It may even be waged largely there, yet it will wreak havoc in the everyday lives of common people unless a robust defence is put up. To achieve the goal of a cyber-secure nation, India will require a robust cyber security strategy that safeguards government systems, citizens, and the business ecosystem. This will not only help protect citizens from cyber threats but also boost investor confidence in the economy.

Mains Practice Question:

  1. India is witnessing ingenious cyber crimes every day. What should be the approach of the government and law enforcement agencies to deal with such menace?
  2. Discuss different types of cybercrimes and measures required to be taken to fight the menace. (GS-3 Mains 2020)
  3. Digital India’s dream requires a strong focus on digital security. Comment.



DAILY CURRENT AFFAIRS (JULY 22, 2022)

THE INDIAN POLITY AND GOVERNANCE

1. NITI AAYOG’S INDIA INNOVATION INDEX, 2022

THE CONTEXT: According to Niti Aayog’s India Innovation Index Karnataka has bagged the top rank in NITI Aayog’s India Innovation Index, 2022, which determines innovation capacities and ecosystems at the sub-national level.
THE EXPLANATION:
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE REPORT:
• Karnataka was followed by Telangana, Haryana, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Bihar and Gujarat were at the bottom of the index.
• Manipur secured the lead in the Northeast and Hill States category, while Chandigarh was the top performer in the Union Territories and City States category.
• Pointing out that India’s average innovation score is arguably insufficient, given the country’s ambitious targets to be named among the top 25 nations in the Global Innovation Index, the report by the government think tank has recommended measures, such as increasing Gross Domestic Expenditure on R&D (GDERD), promoting private sector participation in R&D and closing the gap between industry demand and what the country produces through its education systems.
• The report went on to state that countries that spend less on GDERD fail to retain their human capital in the long run and the ability to innovate is dependent on the quality of human capital; India’s GDERD as a percentage of GDP stood at about 0.7%.
• “Therefore, GDERD needs considerable improvement and should touch at least 2%, which would play an instrumental role in India achieving the goal of a 5 trillion economy and further influence its innovative footprint across the globe,” it suggested.
• It added that the private sector needs to pick up pace in R&D. Taking the evidence from countries like South Korea, USA, and Germany, where the presence of private players is quite evident, the report noted that public expenditure is productive up to some extent; once the growth follows a trajectory, it is desirable to shift to R&D mostly drive by the private sector. “Therefore, it is important for India to find that inflexion point after which private sector takes over the government sector”.
• The report also noted that the country has not performed well in the knowledge worker pillar, as much as it has in the human capital pillar. “…the expenditure on human capital has been unable to create that knowledge base in the country…Moreover, it was also observed that innovation is skewed against the manufacturing sector due to the problems pertaining to and the missing middle. This requires inexorable efforts to overcome challenges and make the best use possible.
VALUE ADDITION:
The Gross domestic expenditure on R&D (GERD) as the percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) is around 0.7%. The percentage expenditure for the last couple of years has shown a downward trend.
1. Low Cost Indigenous solutions: R&D is desired in order to create tailor made solutions for the Indian population; such solutions that are cost effective and easily accessible to the poor sections like the Jaipur Foot.
2. Improve Learning Outcomes: The best teaching and learning process at the higher education level occurs in environments where there is a strong culture of research and knowledge creation. This is testified from the experience of the world’s best universities like the Harvard, Stanford, Oxford etc.
3. Reducing Imports: India spends considerable money for importing high end technologies from countries like the U.S, South Korea etc. which raises the import bill and increases fiscal deficit.
4. National Security: Relying on foreign countries for domestic R&D needs increases vulnerability of modern digital economies to cyber attacks and espionage. Experts have raised caution against the use of semiconductor chips imported from China. Further India is still one of the largest defense importers of the world as per data of Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
5. Climate Change: The Sixth Report of IPCC has cautioned the world towards the approaching climate change. This warrants creating eco friendly technologies to reduce GHG emissions like building low cost solar panels, EVs, lithium batteries etc.

THE INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

2. EXPLAINED: CAN EUROPE LIVE WITHOUT RUSSIAN NATURAL GAS?

THE CONTEXT:Europe faced an energy crisis even before drama emerged about the Nord Stream 1 pipeline reopening from Russia to Germany.
THE EXPLANATION:
• There are growing concerns in European countries that Russia would extend the temporary suspension of gas supplies in retaliation against the current sanctions levelled against Moscow.
• While there have been attempts to reduce the dependence on Russian gas, Germany, which is Europe’s biggest economy, continues to heavily rely on it. The Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which was completed in September 2021 and would double the flow of direct Russian gas to Germany, was suspended in February, (2022) in response to the invasion of Ukraine.
• The Nord Stream 1, however, continued to be used, whose flow of gas was slashed by 60% in mid-June by Moscow. Russia had blamed the reduction of supplies on the delayed return of a turbine, which was being serviced by Germany’s Siemens Energy in Canada.
What is Nord Stream 1?
• Nord Stream 1 is a 1,224 km underwater gas pipeline that runs from Vyborg in northwest Russia to Lubmin in northeastern Germany via the Baltic Sea. Majority owned by the Russian energy giant Gazprom, the pipeline is the primary route through which its gas enters Germany, as reported by Reuters.
• It transports 55 billion cubic metres of gas a year, of which most goes directly to Germany, while the rest travels west and southwards through onshore links to other countries and into storage caverns.

Germany is Russia’s biggest European gas consumer, and most of it comes through the Nord Stream Pipeline. Its share of Russian gas supplies was 55% in 2021, and currently lies at 35%.
What are Europe’s alternative sources of energy?
There have been growing concerns that there could be further restrictions to European gas supplies, well beyond the scheduled maintenance that has been imposed. European countries rely on Russian energy for their cold winters, but now believe that Russia could weaponize their dependency as a response to their sanction due to the conflict in Ukraine. If Nord Stream 1 does not resume its supply to Europe, it will not have adequate gas supply by the end of the year.
How has Canada stepped in to help Germany?
• To assist Berlin’s energy crisis, the Canadian government announced it would circumvent its own sanctions and return a repaired Russian gas turbine to Germany that is required for the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline.
• While the Canadian government announced that it would introduce fresh sanctions on Russia’s industrial manufacturing sector, that it was introducing a “time-limited and revocable permit” to allow the return of the key component.

THE ENVIRONMENT, ECOLOGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE

3. REVISION SERIES: OBJECTIVES OF PM-KUSUM

THE CONTEXT: According to the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy,the provisions of PM-KUSUM Scheme to increase country’s solar water pump manufacturing capacity.
THE EXPLANATION:
The objectives of the Pradhan Mantri Kisan Urja Suraksha evam Utthaan Mahabhiyan (PM-KUSUM) include de-dieselisation of the farm sector, providing water and energy security to farmers, increasing the income of farmers and curbing environmental pollution. To achieve these objectives, following targets have been kept under the Scheme:
Component-A: 10,000 MW of Decentralized Ground Mounted Grid Connected Solar Power Plants.
Component-B: Installation of 20 lakh standalone Solar Powered Agriculture Pumps.
Component-C: Solarisation of 15 Lakh Grid-connected Agriculture Pumps including through Feeder Level Solarisation.
Following provisions of the PM-KUSUM Scheme aim to increase country’s solar water pump manufacturing capacity:
• Target of installation or solarisation of 35 lakh pumps through central financial support under the Scheme provides visibility of demand in the coming years.
• Condition of domestic content requirement for participation in Component-B and Component-C.
• Direct participation of manufacturers of solar pumps/ solar photovoltaic modules/ solar pump controller either as sole bidder or member of a Joint Venture, in bidding under Component-B and Component-C.
To avoid disruption of the groundwater table, particularly in the districts with depleted levels of ground water, installation of new solar pumps is not allowed under the Scheme in the dark zones/ areas notified by Central Ground Water Board (CGWB), which monitors and regulates groundwater development and extraction.
Only the existing diesel pumps can be replaced with solar pumps under Component-B and existing electric pumps can be solarized under Component-C in these areas provided they use micro-irrigation techniques to save water.
Additionally, to conserve groundwater, the following provisions are included in the PM-KUSUM Scheme:
• Preference for installation of standalone solar pumps and solarisation of existing agriculture pumps is given to the farmers using micro irrigation systems or covered under micro irrigation schemes or those who opt for micro irrigation systems.
• The size of the standalone solar pump is to be selected on the basis of the water table in the area, land covered and quantity of water required for irrigation.
• Farmers have the option to monetize the surplus power generated under individual grid-connected pump solarisation by selling it to the DISCOM. Further, under feeder level solarisation, farmers are incentivised for electricity consumption below the benchmark consumption.
The steps taken/being taken by the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy for decentralised solar power production include the following:
• Installation of grid-connected solar power plants up to 2 MW capacity under Component A of PM-KUSUM Scheme
• Installation of standalone solar pumps under Component-B and solarisation of grid-connected agriculture pumps including through feeder level solarisation under Component-C of PM-KUSUM Scheme by providing Central Financial Assistance (CFA).
• Promotion of rooftop solar under Solar Rooftop Phase II Programme by providing CFA in the residential sector and incentives to DISCOMs.
• Off-Grid & Decentralised Solar PV Applications Programme implemented during the years 2018-21 provided financial support for the installation of Solar Street Lights, Off-Grid Solar Power Plants and distribution of Solar Study Lamps.

4. STEPS BY GOVERNMENT OF INDIA TO PROMOTE RENEWABLE ENERGY IN THE COUNTRY

THE CONTEXT: According to the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, the Government has taken several steps to promote renewable energy, including wind energy, in the country.
THE EXPLANATION:
India is anticipated to be the biggest contributor to the renewables boom in 2021, with the country’s annual growth in renewables doubling from 2020. Prime Minister of India mentioned about having huge renewable energy deployment plans for India for the next 10 years which are likely to create business opportunities of around $20 billion a year.
What is renewable energy?
• It is an energy that is generated from the renewable sources – the ones that can be replenished quickly on par with human demand.
• The examples of renewable energy sources include solar energy, wind energy, tidal energy, etc.
• These sources, if used to produce energy, can reduce the amount of carbon emitted into the atmosphere.
Renewable energy is often used in the following areas:
• Electricity generation
• Heating/cooling of air and water
• Transportation
• Stand-alone power system or Remote Area Power Supply (RAPS) for rural areas.
Measures taken to Promote Renewable Energy:
• Permitting Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) up to 100 percent under the automatic route,
• Waiver of Inter State Transmission System (ISTS) charges for inter-state sale of solar and wind power for projects to be commissioned by 30th June 2025,
• Declaration of trajectory for Renewable Purchase Obligation (RPO) up to the year 2022,
• Setting up of Ultra Mega Renewable Energy Parks to provide land and transmission to RE developers on a plug and play basis,
• Laying of new transmission lines and creating new sub-station capacity for evacuation of renewable power,
• Setting up of Project Development Cell for attracting and facilitating investments,
• Standard Bidding Guidelines for tariff based competitive bidding process for procurement of Power from Grid Connected Solar PV and Wind Projects.
• Government has issued orders that power shall be dispatched against Letter of Credit (LC) or advance payment to ensure timely payment by distribution licensees to RE generators.
• Conducting skill development programmes to create a pool of skilled manpower for implementation, operation and maintenance of RE projects.
In addition to the above, the following steps have been taken specifically for promoting wind energy:
• Concessional custom duty exemption on certain components required for manufacturing of wind electric generators.
• Generation Based Incentive (GBI) is being provided to the wind projects commissioned on or before 31 March 2017.
• Technical support including wind resource assessment and identification of potential sites through the National Institute of Wind Energy, Chennai.

THE SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

5. NEW STUDY THAT SUGGESTS DEPRESSION IS NOT CAUSED BY SEROTONIN IMBALANCE IN BRAIN

THE CONTEXT: Researchers from University College London who carried out a “comprehensive review of the major strands of research on serotonin” have now reported that “there is no convincing evidence that depression is associated with, or caused by, lower serotonin concentrations or activity”.
THE EXPLANATION:
• Researchers from University College London who carried out a “comprehensive review of the major strands of research on serotonin” have now reported that “there is no convincing evidence that depression is associated with, or caused by, lower serotonin concentrations or activity”.
• For decades, a “chemical imbalance” in the brain, especially that of a chemical called serotonin, has been widely seen to be responsible for depression — a view that has promoted the use of antidepressants as part of the treatment for the condition.
What exactly is serotonin?
• Serotonin is a chemical that carries messages between nerve cells in the brain and throughout your body. Serotonin plays a key role in such body functions as mood, sleep, digestion, nausea, wound healing, bone health, blood clotting and sexual desire

What is the serotonin theory of depression?
• “The idea that depression is the result of abnormalities in brain chemicals, particularly serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine or 5-HT), has been influential for decades, and provides an important justification for the use of antidepressants,” the authors write in the paper.
• Depression was first linked to lowered serotonin levels in the 1960s, according to researchers theory gained wide acceptance in the 1990s with the advent of Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants, which temporarily increase the availability of serotonin in the brain.
What is the conclusion of the new research?
• Over the years, several studies have questioned the serotonin theory. The new study conducted an “umbrella review”, collating existing overviews of the principal areas of relevant research on serotonin and depression. The intention was to establish “whether the current evidence supports a role for serotonin in the aetiology of depression, and specifically whether depression is associated with indications of lowered serotonin concentrations or activity”.
• The conclusion of the study: “The serotonin theory of depression has been one of the most influential and extensively researched biological theories of the origins of depression. Our study shows that this view is not supported by scientific evidence. It also calls into question the basis for the use of antidepressants.”
• According to the researchers, there are other explanations for the effect that antidepressants have on a person. Drug trials show they are “barely distinguishable from a placebo (dummy pill) when it comes to treating depression,” and antidepressants appear to have more of a generalised emotion-numbing effect on people’s moods.
What causes depression, then?
• Several experts have said that the findings of the study should not lead anyone to immediately stop taking prescribed antidepressants. This ‘study of studies’ does make some important points, such as depression being a result of multiple factors, but more research is needed to confirm some of its big claims.
• The authors have concluded that it “is impossible to say that taking SSRI antidepressants is worthwhile, or even completely safe”, and that this study is “critical” for making informed decisions about whether or not to take antidepressants.

THE PRELIMS PERSPECTIVE

6. ONE WORD A DAY – MARBURG

THE CONTEXT:The first two cases of the Marburg virus disease, a highly infectious Ebola-like disease, have been confirmed officially by Ghana after test results were verified by a Senegal laboratory.
THE EXPLANATION:
• This outbreak is only the second time that the disease has been detected in West Africa.
• It was first detected in 1967 after simultaneous outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt in Germany; and in Belgrade, Serbia.
• Due to its detection in Marburg, it got its name.
What is the Marburg virus disease?
• According to WHO, Marburg virus disease (MVD), is a severe, often fatal hemorrhagic fever.
• It was earlier known as Marburg haemorrhagic fever.
• Marburg, like Ebola, is a filovirus; and both diseases are clinically similar.
What are the hosts for the Marburg virus?
• Rousettus fruit bats are considered the natural hosts for the Marburg virus.
• According to WHO, African green monkeys imported from Uganda were the source of the first human infection.
• It was first detected in 1967 after simultaneous outbreaks in Marburg and Frankfurt in Germany; and in Belgrade, Serbia.
• The disease has an average fatality rate of around 50%.
• However, it can be as low as 24% or as high as 88% depending on virus strain and case management, says the WHO.
What are the challenges with Marburg virus disease?
• It is difficult to clinically distinguish MVD from diseases such as malaria, typhoid fever and other viral haemorrhagic fevers.
• However, it is confirmed by lab testing of samples, which like Coronavirus and Ebola are extreme biohazard risks.
• There is no approved antiviral treatment or vaccine for MVD as of now.
• It can be managed with supportive care.
• According to the WHO, rehydration with oral or intravenous fluids, and treatment of specific symptoms can help prevent death.

THE PRELIMS PRACTICE QUESTIONS

QUESTION OF THE DAY

Q.Consider the following statements with respect to Marburg viral disease:

1. This outbreak is only the second time that the disease has been detected in South America.
2. Rousettus fruit bats are considered the natural hosts for the Marburg virus.
Which of the following the above statements is/are correct?
a) 1 only
b) 2 only
c) Both 1 and 2
d) Neither 1 nor 2

ANSWER FOR 21TH JULY 2022

ANSWER: A
EXPLANATION:

• The government of India sets the MSP twice a year.
• The Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) which advises the minimum price, and the recommendations are not binding on the government.




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